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[JUNE 2023.]

Rigidly

royal

Sans

I guess this has been some sort of penetration testing backed by a dictionary file, and not an Oulipo attempt to communicate, but it was still a nice little story. Steely morning, tall pines waving, dark. Thinking of seacliffs. No one’s on your frequency when you age backward.

Another little story: the summer I was nineteen, late, drunk in the grocery with my friend M., we bought a pair of handcuffs that came as part of some “Li’l Bandit” costume ensemble (in July? Why was it there?), and I wore the handcuffs all night, and at the end of the night composed a mass email in the person of Isaiah, crying out in the wilderness about how handcuffs didn’t help. Things had gotten so weird after that many years in outer space.

That was the summer I walked around humming Candy says / I’ve come to hate my body / And all that it requires, and honest to God I didn’t even know who the song was about.

It’s like King Haggard and the unicorns. Isn’t it enough that there’s beauty in the world? Who needs to possess it all?

I dyed my hair magenta and ordered some fishnets. Yes I did. A serious moment.

From our yard we can see the pink triangle on Twin Peaks, a bit hazy but still—it’s a very large triangle. J. has an uneasy feeling, Silence=Death in mind.

Is my passion perfect? / No, do it once again. That your reward for doing it right would be permission to stop.

Hmph

supposing

considering

It’s so good to see you so much happier now, says my visiting mom. Of course that’s the impression one wants to give, and it’s not even wrong, to the extent any of this is commensurable. I asked J. about it and she said, well, you smile much more now. It’s part of how your presentation changed.

My mom mentioned that. And also that apparently I no longer dissociate and stare off into space all the time.

J. was quiet a moment, then said, yes. But when you used to do that, it was because you were writing.

Are you condemned to do this? Still a good question, all these years on.

Patiently

Sidewalk sage plant glutted on rain, blown out to a mad plump hemisphere, purple-flowered.

Finished with love? my heart murmured.

Astrud Gilberto singing “Fly Me To the Moon” makes me think of “All Summer in a Day,” convinces me that I got into the sun for an hour, once, and the greed of wanting more than that.

und hinter tausend Stäben keine Welt

Elaine Scarry: “Physical pain, then, is an intentional state without an intentional object... if the sun is too bright for a woman’s eyes, she moves into the shade, and as she does, her eyes again fill with seeable objects rather than aversive sensation... the less there is an object for the state and only the state itself, the more it will approach the condition of pain.” I remember reading that and thinking, okay, but what about pleasure? A naive question, especially from someone who never found pleasure in the world anyhow, who was always turning away from it, forgetting it, forswearing it. Who lacked patience to see the other souls there.

Fitti nel limo dicon: “Tristi fummo
ne l’aere dolce che dal sol s’allegra,
portando dentro accidïoso fummo:
or ci attristiam ne la belletta negra.”

“Der Gedanke an den Selbstmord ist ein starkes Trostmittel,” writes Fritz in Beyond Good and Evil; “mit ihm kommt man gut über manche böse Nacht hinweg.” Just so. Patchy old security blanket, clutched at whenever things got bad, worried over, wept into, worn through. And now no longer available, for political reasons; because there’s a whole whispering gallery who’d love the chance to say, we knew this thing was never going to work out, who’d love me as a statistic to immiserate others. No one wants to hear that it would have been worth it even so. For an hour in the sun.

μήτε μοι μέλι μήτε μέλισσα

(neither honey nor Melissa)

ἀμάχανον

“…how sad you feel after banging a ghost”

Outside the zendo a young couple, probably a couple, it’s how they smile, the close stance at parting. I would have envied them once. Now it’s a wish to bequeath… what exactly? Everything outlived.

Bob Hass of all people, 1980s Bob Hass, writes about Rilke and I'm jarred.

I don’t think Rilke ever made a plainer statement of what he wanted art to be: cessation of desire; a place where our inner emptiness stops generating that need for things which mutilates the world and turns it into badly handled objects, where it becomes instead a pure, active, becalmed absence.... There is a personal subtext here, of course: Rilke’s jealousy of Otto Modersohn. (How could you have married that man?) And a deeper and more troubling one than that. He has tried to imagine himself inside a woman’s body because of his own identification with what is female.

This needs looking at. It is a famous fact of Rilke’s childhood in that apartment in Prague that his mother, having lost a baby girl in the year before his birth, raised her baby son as a girl. She gave him a first name, René, which was sexually ambiguous (he changed it to Rainer after meeting Lou Andreas-Salomé), dressed him in beautifully feminine clothes, and called him, in coy games they played, “Miss.” These practices ended when he went to school—the latter part of his schooling occurred at a particularly brutal military academy of his father’s choosing. Far back in Rilke’s childhood—and farther back than that, in his mother’s unconscious wishes—there is a perfect little girl, brought into this world to replace a dead one.

[...]

Almost all of Rilke’s close friends were women. He was deeply sympathetic to the conflict which the claims of art and family caused in a woman’s life. When those social claims seemed to kill Paula Becker, it confirmed his belief that life was the enemy of art, that sexuality and the world were the enemies of eros and eternity.... It would be wrong to conclude from this, as some readers have, that Rilke was simply narcissistic, if we mean by that a person who looks lovingly into the shallow pool of himself. He was, if anything, androgynous. The term has come to stand for our earliest bi- or pan-sexuality, and this is not quite what I mean. Androgyny is the pull inward, the erotic pull of the other we sense buried in the self. Psychoanalysis speaks of the primary narcissism of infants, but in the sense in which we usually use that term, only an adult can be narcissistic. Rilke—partly because of that girl his mother had located at the center of his psychic life—was always drawn, first of all and finally, to the mysterious fact of his own existence. His own being was otherness to him. It compelled him in the way that sexual otherness compels lovers.

I think this is why, in “Requiem” and the Elegies, he has a (for me tiresome) reverence for unrequited love and writes about sexual love as if those given over to it were saints of a mistaken religion.... No one has ever composed a more eloquent indictment of fucking: if it is so great, why hasn’t it catapulted all the dead directly into heaven, why is the world still haunted by the ghosts of so much unsatisfied desire?

There are a few things here. To start with, of course it’s the etiology game; we love our origin stories, and Hass really seems to believe that Rilke’s earliest environment broke him in the same way that, if you like, I was born broken. Which flows into the next thing: are they really the same? Is it possible to subsume the two cases under a single concept, and if so, would it be of any use? Would it help with the ghosts?

Neither the origin story nor the terminology is all that interesting, but I can’t deny what’s in the poems. Sometimes the phrase does fall right off the page and sit there, true as anything. The first time I read the Fire Sermon and couldn’t say if it was everyone’s world, only that it was mine.

Getting vatic all the time is of course a symptom. For Rilke and for me.

All this pathology is productive of beauty, but it’s best gotten beyond at some point, in the interest of health and human life: so thinks Hass, and even takes a brave stand in favor of sexual congress, which might be the only thing he and Robert Glück would agree on. He doesn’t want to write a case history (Rilke’s art, he says, saves him from that fate), but he can’t help reading the poems from outside, with a botanist’s eye. Consider this strangely formed flower.

Seen from within the flower is a fire. I can write that; I can write that one sits in it, year in year out, and is not consumed. Again, is it helpful? Does it lay the ghosts?

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