The Literary Review
The Commencement of Segregation
He simply cannot open a door to exploring other parts of how a marathon runner holds together. “Eventually I’m just going to have to take a nap,” he said. Protests erupted on the streets of several European cities. His girlfriend, both a bailiff & a locksmith, continues to hurtle downward.
That gives us the recognition as a region which we will be eating with extreme endeavor & key demands. “No joke. I was, like, commencing without polonium, pushing my body to make it better & better.” Heavy frames simply disguised a parachute opening under lab conditions, a battle being waged by those with an unthinkable desire for power that the average citizen nurtures but cannot satisfy.
Taking his time before hurling himself through the air, it becomes clear that the new owner of the apartment, a madman, has also learned to lipread. “The issue should be more about having a united voice & body,” he sees. “It’s one possibility that is worth being investigated to the absolute limit.” By the Sixties, he was profoundly deaf.
- Mark Young
Listen
She watches the fingers
move, spells out the words
they are signing, is told
there are 53 ways of pro-
noun-sing the key word,
along with synonyms &
related words. She also
learns that the song of
that name by Beyoncé is
written in the key of B
major, is set in common
time at a moderately slow
groove of 62 beats per
minute, & is classified as
a soul-R&B ballad. None
of this makes sense to her,
but she still delights in the
moving fingers, & the un-
spoken memory of at least
two poems by Wallace
Stevens that they trigger.
- Mark Young
From the Pound Cantos: CENTO XXXI
The smell of hay under the olive-
trees. In the half-light, the tower
like a patron of the arts, decked
all in green, pigment flakes from the
stone. Forked branch-tips, flaming
as if with lotus. The god stood by
me, fearing no bondage nor the
bounds of deepest water. The peach-
trees shed bright leaves in the water.
Those leaves are full of voices. Caught
up in their cadence a man of no for-
tune & with a name to come. Clouds
bow over the lake. For sacrifice, a
young boy loggy with vine-must.
- Mark Young
geographies: Malayayalam
Tradition dictates
that a deity in his
feminine aspect be
depicted by curved
lines in the nimbus.
Fashion replaces that
by posing him in a
carelessly flaring
skirt & surrounding
her with scented
soy wax candles.
- Mark Young
A line from Paul Celan
Some pirates rattled sticks
of incense while others
sprinkled alcohol all around.
Stuck to tradition, though —
only cedar from Lebanon, rum
from Jamaica, was good en-
ough for them. Anything else
was thrown out to the sea.
- Mark Young