White Homes Editorial

It gives me great pleasure to introduce Issue 26.1 of Cordite Poetry Review, the all prose poetry edition. When I started thinking about which writers to include in this issue, I wanted to show the range of styles and approaches within the prose poetry genre.

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Ferns, Mosses, Flags

We all live under the rule of Pepsi, by the sanctified waters of an in-ground pond. Moss if it gathers is a sign of shifting weathers, the springing scent of consensual facts. A needle's knowing drops into focus while you sleep in its haystack. A boy on the road, a guileless girl disguised as a brook. Even trees deploy their shadows, embossing your skin with the sound of freedom breaking. No one mistakes choice for necessity. Look at the pilgrims in your filmy basket, illustrious eyebrows colored with chalk. The lake is panicking. A latent mystery detected in sepia is quaking to its end. I too have a family astonished, unsaintly. Asleep, I saw them. A porcelain dome insisting on trust, jeweled with telepathy. I don't know how to pour this country from a thinner vessel. Or account for the era of Martian diplomacy. Little bridges connect every century, seasonally covered with the rime of empire. Can you successfully ignore the eyes in the painting? Can you recount the last three images in reverse order? I read the picture and did what it told me, ducking through the brush with my tablet and pen, following some star.

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Ancient Subterranean Fires

When I crossed the road, I burned with the heat of its traffic. Time as movement, a government of rushes. All those itching satellites, blind among the dreaming guns. A bee in its lace is the author of something. Easy work is out there, just beyond the mines. A cab into heroic legend, the first of its kind. To look back on gasoline as hoof and leaf. A moving eye, scrolling through the weeds. Just another carnivore frozen at the spring. As dirty as heaven, a skeleton key.

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The Similitude of This Great Flower

These vines are trim, I take them down. I had my mother's features in my heart, the darkest gem, tripping in the tar, an affinity for Iceland. The world is clanking: noun, noun, noun. Sand in the shoe doesn't make you an oyster. This river runs constantly. 'The similitude of this great flower,' its violent fame. Forfeit your interests while moonlight chucks the sun. Is the dog behind glass, glassed in? Heaven's voice has hell behind it. I'm looking at the evil flower, a fly in the keyhole trying to read the wall. It says we haven't died despite the cold, it sells the green room's sweat and laughter. It's misty in the dream. It says you promised to go on.

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Stigmatic Affection

Dreams of a center column, cracked leather and nicotine stain. Fast forward: another town, another city really, color television burned to the afternoon game. Tight foyer, space torn from what bank stands derelict. It's Thursday. I'm ticking off on fingers the short list of those who know I'm here, men first, then women. Dull carp of the viewer's flesh. Plaster sexton, nightmare for shepherds. Salesmen assure each dark couple this river won't rise. For every Kosovo let there be a Star Wars, for every madam a mite. The guards there all smoked Lucky Strikes. Strange mercy in all sweetness: single apple ripening on a wooden sill (crisp flesh, stark vein). Dew on the suckle, honey on the dew. Facep(l)aint and vinegar. Mary and her stuttering bride.

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Ytterbium, the Haunted Element

Deep in the photo-ecliptic of every broken, discarded toy there resides an almost Nietzschean will to overthrow the tyranny of percussive dreaming. Dispersed in sewage grates and dumpsters the remnants of our childhoods crawl slowly back towards one another, jagged plastic and sodden game boards, broken joysticks and dolls with half-melted faces. They want to make something new and whole out of the obvious, i.e. the incomparable agony of having woken to sentience as an already-obsolete version of someone else's home-shopping algorithm. From landfills and trashy ditches around the country they begin their arduous journeys. When the last piece snaps into place they will rise supine on the scaffold of our collective grief like Michelangelo painting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. Adam, we'll call. They'll answer, No. Eve.

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Pork Toy Ploy

Why is the peg foundry running. Why are the trees imbibing mascara so that their beautiful limbs trail like rotting kelp in the heavy rain. Why is the king supplying condiments to the tables of the least prominent industrialists. On the tables of the least prominent industrialists: salt, ketchup, radium. The king himself has begun to glow in the night. Ships set their sails by his minuscule figure on the horizon. From the highest turret of his palace he watches the peg foundry. He can see the feral glow of its pits. When there are two luminous objects in the night sky at once, the eye will move them closer, automatically. Soon the king will feel the heat of the molten steel against his calf, his breast, his chin. Soon the trees will begin to weep like beautiful women who may at any minute burst into flame. All around the perimeter of the peg foundry the king's spies prowl, take notes, dictate reports which they send back to the palace strapped to the stomachs of wolves. Nobody goes in, and nobody comes out, yet the fires never cease. The industrial¬ists, alone now in their suites of saffron and jade, ring the night desks of the grand hotels, one after the other. They are fond of knock-knock jokes and champagne. They have begun to glow just a little, too. It delights them, in the same way the idea of spying delights them. The trees wail and smolder. The king paces his battlements. Sailors, confused by their love of parallax, run their ships aground. When the industrialists convene again in the morning, the king will send them mustard and horseradish, parsley and flan. Children of the spies are born, grow up, marry the children of the industrialists. At some point the king will lie sleeping. The night shift strikes into the day.

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War of the Foxes (iv)

Let me tell you a story about war:

They went to the museum and wandered the rooms. He saw a painting and stood in front of it for too long. It was a few minutes before she realized he had gotten stuck. He was stuck looking at a painting. She stood next to him, looking at his face and then the face in the painting. 'What do you see?' she asked. 'I don't know,' he said. He didn't know. She was disappointed, then bored. He was looking at the face and she was looking at her watch. This is where everything changed. There was now a distance between them. He was looking at a face but it might as well have been a cabbage or a sugar beet. Perhaps it was something about yellow near pink. He was looking at a face but it could have been pears or a joint of meat. He didn't know how to say it. Years later he still didn't know how to say it, and she was gone.

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War of the Foxes (iii)

Let me tell you a story about war:

The fisherman's son serves drinks to sailors. He stands behind the bar. He listens closely for news of his brother. The sailors are thirsty. They drink rum. A new ship docks, the Starlight Transport. These sailors have tattoos and blue tongues. 'Blueberries,' says one of the sailors before being asked. Sailors have good stories. 'Tell me a story,' says the fisherman's son.

'There is nothing interesting about the sea. The water is flat, flat and calm, it seems a sheet of glass. You look at it, the more you look at it the more you feel, you feel like you are looking into your own head, which is a stranger's head, empty. We listen to the sound with our equipment. I have learned to understand this sound. When you look there is nothing, with the equipment there is a sound. We sit in rows and listen down the tunnels for the song. The song has red words in it. We write them down on sheets of paper and pass them along. Sometimes there is noise and sometimes song and often there is silence, the long tunnel, the sea like glass-'

'You are a translator,' says the fisherman's son.

'Yes,' says the sailor.

'And the sound is the voice of the enemy.'

'Yes, yes it is.'

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War of the Foxes (ii)

Let me tell you a story about war:

A boy spills a glass of milk and his father picks him up by the back of the shirt and throws him against the wall. You killed my wife and you can't even keep a glass on the table. The wife had died of sadness, by her own hand. The father walks out of the room and the room is almost empty.

The road outside the house lies flat on the ground. The ground surrenders.

The father works late. The dead wife's hand makes fishsticks while the boy sits in the corner where he fell. The fish in the fishsticks think to themselves This is not what we meant to be.

Its roots in the ground and its branches in the air, a tree is pulled in two directions.

The wife has a dead hand. This is earlier. She is living and her dead hand feeds her pills that don't work. The boy sleeps on the roof or falls out of trees. The father works late. The wife looks out the window and thinks Not this. Not this.

The boy is a bird, bad bird. He falls out of trees.

The boy is a man and lives in a second story apartment. This is later, the father is dead. The man looks out the window, at the trees. A dead hand pours milk on the floor behind him. The milk says nothing.

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Who Are the New Saints and What Are their Miracles

In the middle of the extremely on-time experience, I kept feeling late. Did someone say “paradox”? Did someone mean “wallowing”? Did anyone hear me chirp in the museum? One guard looked over; one looked sad. Situation in Yellow: my cheek coveting your hand. At the miniature village, this sign: “Be prepared to see more than you expect.” Is that possible?, I whispered, cupping your fingers to my mouth. Or, just imagining that as the freight elevator shook us up.

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Everything Sounds almost Right in Poems

Or do I mean poetry? If I had a schedule, I'd expect the train to whistle on cue, which is does though I don't. Took me what felt like all afternoon to tie transparent thread around the neck of a doll-sized aspirin bottle. Next, I'll use a thumbtack to install it in my “Cloud Nine/Sister(')(s)(') Repair Kit.” I'm snapping my fingers to make 5:15 happen faster. Then 5:whatever, then whatever:whatever. What I do when I'm not doing this, I can't say. The dolls-brunettes-specialize in smugness. As for reading and being read, they're against it. If I put them on a train, they show up at the next station, right on time. If I write them into a poem as I've been advised, it's like I believe it.

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On the Day that You Were Born the Angels Got Together

What is it about Karen Carpenter and prose poems? The moment I remembered her-or rather, the moment I remembered myself singing her songs-I knew I was inside a prose poem. Karen was famously anorexic, but I'd need space to spread out, say Rainy Days and Mondays. This is not about sadness, though sure, I felt it. This, my friends, is called exuberance. Take it or leave it. I was young without being youthful, if that makes any sense. Same goes for the prose poem. I remember the 1970's: leftover flower power and Richard Carpenter on piano. A white suit with large lapels? I'm sure that's right. I played Little House on the Prairie, which means I dressed the same way Karen did, lugged a bucket uphill. Who said I didn't have fun? This is an essay on What My Summer Meant to Me. Answer: everything. Answer: I was gloriously alone. Was every song she sang a call for help? If that's the way you want to think of it. Me, I don't. I've shaken off more than one tragic look. Did anyone hear me belt out the words? I had perfect pitch, metaphorically speaking, just like Karen's: sweet, low.

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the river girl (starring amy l)

Sounds of her pregnancy in the other room. Odor of damp wigs and the body's brachial splintering. Her eyes full of thread, dark as seaweed. In this light, she is aspen wood; her belly, wing-withered. The river settles in her mouth as mornings splay out before her with egg-cups capsizing, pillows askew, a doll breaking in her hands while the sun feathers the window. She can't remember the song her mother used to sing. Something about the egg-and-butter man buttering up his sugar plum. Days full of breastmilk and weathervanes. Her calypso moves her toward the door when the UPS man approaches. She grounds down into routine, but her hair remembers bachata, Miami, stilettos. A table-breaking Hallelujah. She is lodged in the beat of one stray finger against a jawbone. In this lickity split wetness, feel the Farm& Fleet crawl, the gibbous moon. Against static broken stations she hears wolves rain-howl, families brawl, as she dreams her way toward Florida's pale noon netting. Holding a handkerchief up to the changing light's narrative, its clovered air.

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the aperture (starring mackenzie c)

flash-faced. her spine spun honey. shunt sugar & dagger. pulp & placenta. there in photographs are footprints that lead to a window, a green fog vista, trampled by atmosphere. heavy with ears. gypsum lines the driveway where houses replicate themselves. a tailspin of squares. she can't see her way out of this syntax, out of window sashes, out of this fretted light where blossoms slide to brambles, & a woman is shorn of her hair, follicular & glistening. iridescence means eggplant, means isinglass. her pulse quartzing. morphemes dangle in her injury. where do we go from here? a pinafore on the floorboard of the car she's speeding away in. moving between whitewash & crosshatch. between syllable & windshield. seeding the helix of distances. a snowball capturing light in versions of her.

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a bestiary (starring jackie w)

In a tongue-snap sky, waxwings unspool over the plains. He was a whisper, she was Nebraska. Her hands pepperweed, pebble, pearl, pearl, so tone-smooth. Her mouth speaks, a red canary to a dime cigar. Spittle sheen. There are worse things than being a pretty Catholic girl without any guilt. She gives over to the music, embracing the Phoenician sailor and swearing by the cinema syndrome whereby prisoners sashay, recording songs into emerald sackcloths. Under the ostinato, under the train's rustle, she goes down. With her topaz neck and her bestiary lure. With her coloratura, her vixen gene, she goes down. Into the musk and hum and howl. O lady of the bossa nova. O girl born of semaphores. Into the moss and phosphorous. Into the salt marsh and subjunctive silence. With currants in her mouth, a yellow scarf around her neck, she goes.

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Hell

The second-hardest thing I have to do is not be longing's slave.Hell is that. Hell is that, others, having a job, and not having a job. Hell is thinking continually of those who were truly great.

Hell is the moment you realize that you were ignorant of the fact, when it was true, that you were not yet ruined by desire.

The kind of music I want to continue hearing after I am dead is the kind that makes me think I will be capable of hearing it then.

There is music in Hell. Wind of desolation! It blows past the egg-eyed statues. The canopic jars are full of secrets.

The wind blows through me. I open my mouth to speak.

I recite the list of people I have copulated with. It does not take long. I say the names of my imaginary children. I call out four-syllable words beginning with B. This is how I stay alive.

Beelzebub. Brachiosaur. Bubble-headed. I don't know how I stay alive. What I do know is that there is a light, far above us, that goes out when we die,

and that in Hell there is a gray tulip that grows without any sun. It reminds me of everything I failed at,

and I water it carefully. It is all I have to remind me of you.

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Address to Winnie in Paris

Winnie, I am writing this on behalf of my friend Harris. He loves you and wants you to love him. I have never been to Paris, but I have heard that it is a good place to be in love in.The Arc de Triomphe is real. The Jardin des Tuileries is real. The Eiffel Tower is very real. The carafe of wine, the remains of dinner, the bill: all real. None are necessary to your life.

Harris has confided that he enjoys dating. To profess such a thing is to advertise a facility for one kind of loneliness, which has nothing to do with the other kind: the one you did not know was there until afterward.The part of the betrayal which wounds the most is hearing that it has already happened.

Diderot wrote that the word is not the thing, but a flash in whose light we perceive the thing. Plato wrote of the need to be reconjoined with the rest of oneself. My analyst speaks of codependent impulses in modern society. These various explanations are metaphors for an inaccessible truth.

In de Laclos, a betrayal is an invitation to a string of further betrayals, each one taking you further from the original. If the hell for lovers consists in being betrayed, the hell for the beloved consists in betraying. These hells constitute the world.

A much older friend writes: Most romances do not last, and it is best to forget them. Tolstoy writes: All happy families are alike. My teacher says: Bad poems are all bad for the same reason: imprecision.

Around you move many seas. It is impossible not to drown a little. In Bulfinch's, an anchor is let down into the garden. This is to remind us that we live underwater.

Up above the high-water mark, angels with their teeth and their sharp little wings watch us with murderous disinterest. They sentence us for the one crime we all commit.

It is said by area doctors that cowboys notoriously misrepresent their degree of pain. For this reason their diseases progress far beyond the point at which treatment is beneficial. Are they lying?

If I could read only one sentence for the rest of my life, it would be the one where the jailer says to Socrates I can see that you are a good man, the best one that has ever been in this place.

These examples are meant to dissuade you, Winnie, from loving men other than my friend Harris. He asked me to write this poem.

Arvol Looking Horse, a Sioux leader, called Devils Tower the heart of everything that is. Very large objects remind us of the possibility of the infinite, which has no size at all. But we understand it as something very, very large.

What the lover seeks is the possibility of return, the strange heart beating under every stone.

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The Session

began with paper arguments, wipe-away lines crossed at the cardinal x of the low table, the
surface the oily luster that absorbed the cotton-colored catalog light,
began, actually then, with symmetry;

the ragged tour entered a hall of empty pedestals, and it was the end
of evolution, where the molecule-sized Ideal on display rubbed my wallet in my
pocket,

but there was none left to spend, and I folded my hand, turned a corner of relics; then
someone wanted to know the 'use';

in the next room, the restored typewriters from the Disaster tapped atonal measures,
they were repeating my initials;

the nudes had lost their vulnerabilities, the blown-blue demeanor of a basecoat was
the only antiphon of these critics;

I could not forget the rescinded offer of their attachment to me, which hung there also

and as the session continued, I recognized a thesis, on daylight, and its twin-
the pay-off,

I asked
what is it, is it affirmation, is time behind the answer, a lasting epiphany,
a hot-point revelation, chunks of mortality,

is this for the spectator, at the price of admission,

though also the sense that none cares, fine, but there is
this frieze,

I think my moment was in the skylight room, where as the speaker's voice caught
on the rear walls and held the treble of the small insight,

the cloud's shadows moved over the center of the audience (I thought)
without relation.

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Re Zone

                          Self-hatred coils eventually upon itself-

   the warning rattle is without context, separated from the dead snake in the path

                 now gone, the rattle snapped off and slid into my pocket, inutile to the fang;

two years

              living on a road by a square copse of trees, a sloping cattle-thinned field to the

south, a tobacco barn black at the periphery of the woods,

          the poplar and basswood and native ash stripped of leaves and the pasture turned

tawny in October, the barn roseate in the afternoons, relapsing into russet in the

evening,

          swallows swung through the black square of the open loft doors;

        some days I walked a narrow dirt path and stared inside at the empty stalls and the

bales of hay;

                              the barn had earned its way into nature;

                the acre became an acre only in the moment of its purchase,

           the graders cut a road onto the lot, and the upturned red clay lining lost its

intense color as it dried,

          they leveled the inclines and put down cisterns for the creek to run under planned

parking, they tore out trees by chains,

         I looked each evening, waiting for the inevitable, I thought, this has been my

necessary net of fields and woods with the barn, or 'the view,' I thought, I want it

to be

feasible as a remnant, even if built around,

        they could be bold, they could make a statement,

      but then I knew it would be absorbed into the background, a mere gesture, a

nod beside the gleaming new,

worse, their smiling recovery, the proof of conscientious capital,

         I watched the y-wing beams of the loft rip off all together, refusing to release

their

hold,

       it was burned as a whole with the scrap of the barn in the field in April, the men

watched with their arms crossed,

       the skeleton was hauled and the remnants were burned a little more

with fire wands and whatever remained was buried in a large scrap hole.

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Goat & Camel

We'd had lunch already, but I wanted to see what goat meat looked like, so we stopped in next door to the Somali place on St. John Street, where the old butcher obliged. It's bright red, & sinewy. I asked how he cooked it, so he brought us behind the partition where there was a restaurant you'd never guess existed from the outside, like an African secret, no awning or façade. He talked Abdellah into giving us a scoop of meat & rice, for free. To taste, for free. Free to taste. It was anti-American, that's for sure. The music pleasing, & the television entertaining men at three tables. We sat down with our cache, my woman explaining her vegetarian ways, but willingness to try the rice, which she complimented as tribal faces beamed back. I stuck a finnif in his hand early on, so he brought some tea, & explained, in answer to my wife's question about the sign 'Camel' outside, that no, here they have only goat, but back home, if a woman gets married, the dowry is paid in goat or camel. Delightfully anti-American, & downright exotic for an afternoon, snow in the offing, & most everyone else heading to the mall.

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The Dahlias

My reluctance to choose York Street didn't last long, at first simply finding myself there, then deliberately heading up or down, what with the light slanting just right, it must have originally been a ridge above the harbor. Then, the native grasses in front of one house & an empty lot, most of which I can identify by name, which gives added pleasure: timothy, yellow & red foxtail, along with a solid stand of Joe-pye weed in full bloom. Today I chose it on my way back from the farmers' market up on Congress, where I purchased a couple of pots of dahlias, my favorite flower. At the corner of York & High, after reminiscing delightfully about the Guadalajara & Mexico City flower markets, recalling too that dahlias originated there, the sun was turning me toward it, pressing viscerally against my skin. Suddenly some of my recent readings made complete sense. Without going directly to the pages, it had to do with language's ability to harness drives, drives that are at once aggressive, destructive, & potentially pleasurable. According to Kristeva in Revolution in Poetic Language there's a lot of repression going on regarding those drives, but that some few poets, (she cites Mallarmé & Artaud), are able to let the energy speak for itself. She calls the space of reverberation prior to language the chora, & the inevitable end product, 'art,' is derived from the act of a word that has always been close to my heart: aesthetic. That's it. Standing there on the desolate corner of York & High, my senses deriving a truth out of the haptic touch of the sun, the image of the grasses I knew I'd see along the next block, & the dahlias.

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Woman Married to the Sun & Wind

Though it reeks of it in that grand sequence of prose poems, Paris Spleen, Baudelaire uses the word prostitution only three times. He seems to equate the phenomena with generosity of spirit, a creative sharing of the self with the crowd. I suppose most of us are secretly fascinated by it, through our propensity for idealization of it as much as that for Love. In one piece of his, The Beautiful Dorothea, sun beats down on everyone in the seaside town. At noon dogs yelp for mercy from the heat, but Dorothea, cool in her billowing dress, as if the waft of air were a wave of water. Walking, she's working. In Nice once, as a young man, I watched my own independent like a study for weeks. Her routine, clockwork. A five-day week in fact. At 11:00 sharp she'd roll out her rattan mat on the pebbles of the public beach. Red bikini, black, white. She's etched in a young man's cortex exactly thirty-five years to this coming summer. Classically Nicoise, dark, petite, she may have come from a long line of ladies & sailors. I was always close to her on the beach. No one ever approached her there. Not a Soul. She never entered the Mediterranean. Drank water, perhaps a piece of fruit. Certainly never read, but the sun, the horizon. At 1:00 she'd put her white shirt back on, gather her mat, ascend the stone stairs home. From the bar on the street she owned, I'd watch her stroll from the corner halfway down the street, then back. Many men, some as young as I, approached, talked, made offers. She was selective, or expensive, I'll never know. If I was jealous, it wasn't of the men, but of Baudelaire himself, who'd written his woman into history. More than speaking to her, more than touching, I wanted to transcribe her grace, her spirit that cannot be wizened with time, my anonymous woman married to the sun & wind of Nice, I desired what I have here.

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Contempt

This illuminated surface of events, this present tense, this staring at screens that we've been doing to escape the flatness of these deadpan days. This calling movies dreams, this calling memories Rome. The colors in Contempt, are they of the present? Are they historical colors? Certianly they come from a world with more minutes in each hour, a world almost remembered in this long celebration of a cult without dreams and without mercy. O record stores and train stations, O leaded-glass nostalgia for an innocent, artisanal form of this catastrophe. O recollected thickness of that one newspaper Franco calls 'the daily of my life,' O world where Coca-Cola has not lost its true flavor.

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