Follow Mumbling Jack, my new blog

  • Crocuses - Outside now, rain falls,Smearing crocus in our eyesAs April arrivesTo weave, with tentative hands,Green through yellow mats of grass
    2 weeks ago

Tuesday, October 11, 2005

If I could bite into the whole earth (audio)

Just an audio version of the poem in the previous post.
this is an audio post - click to play

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

Ah, the voice to the poem. "And that's how is."
I, for one, love it. Wonderful transalating.

Anonymous said...

transalating! I think that's like salivating!

Translating!!!!!!!

John said...

Ain't it more like salalivating?

Anonymous said...

Thanks for taking the time to find, sign up and comment me, John. There isn't a word I commit to paper that I don't think, "I wonder what John is doing and how he might say this instead..." Seriously.

I've added you to my daily reads... Great to see you online.

John said...

Hey Judd, I was just damn pleased to find out you were kicking about.

John said...

Well, yeah, he sure is. Whistling right past the graveyard, even. Trying to tell himself that because he acknowledges the graveyard is right there, and he can still pucker his lips and blow, he's okay with it being there. He's a liar.

As he says himself in Autopsicografia:

The poet is a liar who lies so well
that he can pretend to feel the pain
which is the pain he really feels.

And those who read the poet's lies
on paper, feel in the dark ink tears,
not the two pains the poet felt,
but a single pain they'll never feel.

And so on its one short loop of track,
round and round, beyond reason, he starts
the wind-up train we call the heart.

John said...

Hmm, I think that second stanza would read better as

And those who read the poet's lies
feel, in the dark ink of tears,
not the two pains the poet felt,
but a single pain they'll never know.