Often trees are conductors of the absolute, the sidereal cuss
eternity. the blow escapes the rehab and into the fire as known
but
lost coupons short of your toaster of existence. the mind needs consciousness,
consciousness does not need mind. Bon Voyage.. when the body revolts within itself, and parts battle
parts,
it's the last revolution, the last pogo, follow the few that
have wisdom, don't let it deceive with knowledge, the brass ring of annihilation, you'll be recognized by a chip, and maybe it will be all that's left..

Wednesday, November 26, 2014

B.H. Fairchild

Share on facebook Share on twitter Share on tumblr Share on email
  • Print

  • Early Occult Memory Systems of the Lower Midwest

    By B. H. Fairchild b. 1942
    In his fifth year the son, deep in the backseat   
    of his father’s Ford and the mysterium
    of time, holds time in memory with words,
    night, this night, on the way to a stalled rig south   
    of Kiowa Creek where the plains wind stacks   
    the skeletons of weeds on barbed-wire fences   
    and rattles the battered DeKalb sign to make   
    the child think of time in its passing, of death.

    Cattle stare at flat-bed haulers gunning clumps   
    of black smoke and lugging damaged drill pipe   
    up the gullied, mud-hollowed road. Road, this   
    road. Roustabouts shouting from the crow’s nest   
    float like Ascension angels on a ring of lights.   
    Chokecherries gouge the purpled sky, cloud-
    swags running the moon under, and starlight   
    rains across the Ford’s blue hood. Blue, this blue.

    Later, where black flies haunt the mud tank,   
    the boy walks along the pipe rack dragging
    a stick across the hollow ends to make a kind   
    of music, and the creek throbs with frog songs,   
    locusts, the rasp of tree limbs blown and scattered.   
    The great horse people, his father, these sounds,   
    these shapes saved from time’s dark creek as the car   
    moves across the moving earth: world, this world.

    No comments: