Michael Jauchen

 

 

 

 

What We Do With Everything We Know

 

And he reared up the court round about the tabernacle and the altar, and set up the hanging of the court gate. So Moses finished the work. Then a cloud covered the tent of the congregation, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle. And Moses was not able to enter into the tent of the congregation, because the cloud abode thereon, and the glory of the LORD filled the tabernacle. (Exodus 40:33-35)

 

We place everything we know

into a box, packing it so

tight, locking it away,

labeling it with a name

we will recognize when we finally

get there. And why not? History

supports us in this.

The Israelites did it.

The tabernacle. That ark of the covenant.

All those divine laws packed away into that mnemonic,

tiny Decalogue (and am I wrong to covet

my neighbor for being such an organized gett?).

And so we do it too. We form boxes too.

Cf. all those poems I’ve given to you.

Those serieses of stringing

words hopefully holding something

perfect and worthwhile inside, those perfect in-

side rendered serieses of Jack in the Heart words able to wind,

then spring, then hopefully send

out warm meaning showers when

the box opens to

empty out among us (but ‘specially among you).

But there’s a well-known beware

lying somewhere in there,

because those great ceremonial openings are always a little too much,

remember? And each box must

have its lid.

Moses’s did,

veiling his face on that Sinai descent.

He knew the released contents

of that box (that particular one marked “God’s Parading

Backside”) would enter those thirsty Israelite mouths, deteriorating

the muscles in their chests, aging them, akin

to those Germans when they in-

vaded that relic later without divine authorization

in the Spielberg dark of an excavation

chamber instead of ceding it to the museum like a good

Indiana would.

And the same goes

for the stories of my own heart, those

kept tight under the lock and key of scribbled etchings.

Raise the lid off that darkness and hear the retchings

of grackles in the heavy

Texas mid-morning. It’s funny really. They’re such heavy

boxes, aligned

there on that sole powerline

(a long box of voices and light) leading to the mouth

of the box on the pole stuck in the box named South

Dallas Dirt (“Across that river is everything ‘Not

Dallas’”) which lies in the box

named Texas, a state

sitting on the bottom of box States

United and the earth is a box marked Land

and Sand

and Oceans and Waves and even our

universe, though it is expanding at each of our

outbreathings (but really,

expansion implies

edges, doesn’t it? implies that the great sight

I fear when I look up at night

on my Grandmother’s Iowa farm is only a great

exaggeration), is only an unfrightening light year x light year x light year crate.

But why is that so? I mean it’s always the same.

It all goes in a box with a locked lid and a name.

I think the point is that whatever is

inside there hurts more than hurt because

it’s both hurt and laughter, see?

And in every

box, they’re in there together.

And the two of them in there at once is too much for us ever

to want to remember. We can’t open those boxes because

inside them is the vision of God’s great glory, true, but it is also his great anus,

far from us in the distance and hurrying

away too fast. And just the thought of one little lick of that sight sends us scurrying

back inside the cleft to our toolbenches,

sanding wood and screwing hinges,

assembly-lining those boxes

complete with quickly forgotten combinating locks.

You sent back the diary I stitched for you

because you did not want to

remember me

anymore, and, like every

other Christmas

for the last

six years, to avoid a silly argument

with my parents, I went

to church. The pastor there,

Pastor Randy he wants me to call him, declares

the Devil lives in overhead projectors on the fritz

and a mouse running mid-prayer across the candlelit

sanctuary floor, disturbing a somber silence. And as much as I try to grin

(and I do, it’s a mouse, it’s so silly) I can only sit wondering again

if there really can be

belief or love without geometry or mathematics. I think I can see

those mousefeet now,

making their way, random and slow,

across that vast sanctuary wilderness of sand, and

those prints behind him remain as a record, a constellation, an ever expand-

ing relic. And look! Hurry! Look close! I want to say

I can see them spelling out the letters in your name.

 

 

 

 

After Sneaking Into The Museum of the Moving Image In Queens

 

for Patrick McNamara and Tommy Two Times

 

L’Arrivéê [d’un train en gare] was a visual tour de force, and audiences are said to have stampeded at the sight of the locomotive barreling toward them from a distant prospect into the foreground of the screen. (David A. Cook, A History of Narrative Film)

 

 

 

Where are the days of the lone harlequin juggling knives passed hand to

   hand with a bookkeeper’s precision?

The cadenced bend to unbend in his left knee (a retraction into the push

   up of retrace) completes the aesthetic line

of the whirring steel arc, knighting our jester with a counterpoint sharpness

   of his own. Here’s an amazing thing:

on the museum’s third floor the phenakistoscope slowed, and I think I

   remember wondering if the, it was

only for a second, knives might fall, the ceased whirring then spawning its own

   second sequence, some new melodrama

involving a severed thumb, his left foot run through by a falling blade, a rumbling

   ambulance of some kind. Enter the mumbling

ringmaster pissed-off at the compensations coming out of his pocket. The wheel

   slowed, the fool’s knee straightened and bent again a

last time. And the knives rested mid-toss, any notion of their capacity

   for brutal amputation remained only a stored potential

energy per square inch per square inch. The sign beside the display can explain

   better than I can how animation works. I read

it then but I’ve semi-forgotten what it said. We’d smoked a lot of marijuana

   that morning and I was convinced I was losing my front tooth.

 

On the F train home, we talked about taking a headshot of either you or me,

   done right complete with the noir

of a glamorous hollywood chiaroscuro, framing it, adding it to the empty slot

   I saw in the floor to ceiling mosaic of movie

stars lining the entry hall on the second floor (the spot just to the left of Dana

   Andrews), just to see how long it might stay

there. You thought it would be a week before anyone noticed. I thought

   it would only take minutes, some woman, some

valued East Side donor, walking in, her quick double take, and then her boast to the

   curator four minutes later:

“I knew all along that one was missing something. I could tell all along

   it was lacking that certain magic.”

 

 

 

 

Something I’ve Written About the Future

 

Darlene and I (and I write with a tear gaining strength in the corner of my right eye) were fated by a porcelain vase dropped and shattered on the linoleum of a suburban Wal-Mart floor. The source of need for the vase in the first place was this: On our seven-month anniversary I forgot to buy the double decaf caramel mochachino which would commemorate our first meeting (Darlene then saying, “It’s a double decaf caramel mochachino,” and I answering back, “You need a linguistics degree just to order that,” and then finally her laughing and taking my hand for the very first time). And I, on a day overcast, had forgotten it all. I instead errantly set foot into the bookstore and was introduced to Camus for the first time by pure accident. Returning home at eight that evening, half-read copy of Myth of Sisyphus in hand, I saw Darlene there, alone, dejected. She said, “I am going now.” It took about 45 minutes for her to put her things into garbage bags and throw them into the bed of her pickup truck and drive away. And this is where the vase enters the story. Darlene was an avid fan of smelling flowers in the afternoon and I figured she would like something to hold them. So I perused the aisles of Wal-Mart, which was the perfect place for finding things that I did not know had specialty shops. And taking a vase down from the shelf, the time seemed too short before it slipped from my hands and shattered in pieces on the floor. And I could only stand there looking at those broken pieces, thinking, There is something important in that breaking of the vase by me. I don’t know what, but there is something important there.

 

A tel dig occurs in the hills of Israel to prove, once and for all, where the city of Kiriath-Jearim really was. Spades spade, brushes brush, and it’s all performed to the barked rhythm of our none too kindly dig administrator. And through all these layers of dug clay come broken shards of pottery that tell stories. And oh, how they talk. Not in the large grandiloquence like they did for James Michener, but instead through the smallest and delicate kissing whispers and sideways him-haws. This shard here tells of a brother in love. That shard tells of a dowry delivered just in the nick of time. This one here tells of a reconciliation and an eventual birth. And, as he picks up a shard that is over 3,000 years old, that is when it all hits our single, unshaven, archaeologist hero (now delicately wiping the dust from his eye) in the body of his body. He thinks, There have been bodies before me that were not thinking of me and there have been glances exchanged over the flickering light of some generic oil lamp bought at a markdown where I was neither buyer nor seller.

 

P.S. Darlene, if I could, I would freeze my tears for you and make them into ice that would not melt. Or, if they did melt, I would wish that the salt would remain forever on these broken vase pieces lying in front of me, one day to be chanced upon by a single, unshaven apprentice archaeologist who could see and recognize in them my own small and delicate (and completely unmindful of the future) him-haw scrawls.

 

 

 

 

Poem Written After Writing a Long and Sloppy Free Verse Poem About Mourning

 

I need to write a shorter poem

one that isn’t overgrown

with young ideas grown too long

and extra space to wind out wrong.

 

(Besides it almost always seems

the only songs those long ones sing

are tears and haunts and saddest gleanings

from all my lonely, baddest dreamings.)

 

 

 

 

After a Drunk Reading of Pablo Neruda, I Walk Along the Beach and Think of You

 

I would recite “Buscar” for you but I’ve

forgotten the first two lines. My drunken

words make tra la las! I’ll find a trunk and

force them inside! I will send them by night

in waves coursing the ocean to islands

far away where idle birds nest in silence;

where along the sweat troughs of your ribcage,

my mouth, a slow kettle exhaling fire-

salt and rain and dumb laughing desire,

will spell an actor’s fright. Somewhere offstage

to his gone alchemy beats a clear vision.

Its sounds make our hero cough his admission:

“Dithyramb, loneliness, both held within her.

The motion in sex swerves poems to splinters.”

 

 

 

 

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