#ClassicPoetry #NationalPoetryFoolMonth
#poetry

Yesterday I posted about a poem in which I consider whether poetry requires a human voice, humanity, or a voice, and conclude no. My next poem is about another radical consideration: does a poem really require a beginning or an end? (Like the law of headlines: also no.)

This untitled poem was written as a moebius strip. Every time I read I start at a different place. It does not formally end: sometimes I read more of it sometimes less.

1/n

The poem itself follows in the next post:

When I was reading the poem once
(or speaking it from memory, no
one is really sure which comes first)
I paused

And started up again later
But how much later?
There is no set time for
a break in a poem

We read them as if they are
trains bumping over railroad ties
But
that is a convention

Once I paused

and people thought it was done
the poem was over
and it wasn't
Will I have to die for them to be sure it's done?
But I've already died,

any time I start
speaking, I could have stopped in mid-poem
years ago, and be about to continue

Or anyone else
could be about to continue a poem
this one or some other
Is there really another?
This wouldn't be
without words read in the past
back through what I've heard, read
what everyone near me did
back to other languages and dim time

It won't be
without people to wonder why
a pause brings a poem, not conversation
People in the future

It includes all that by reference
The poem is the world, by reference
It only has pauses

I'm pretty happy with it
This is the first draft
I'm not sure if there could be another draft
once I started
It

doesn't terminate
except through the usual processes
of death or sleep or boredom
What does it mean
it doesn't end?

When I was reading the poem once
(or speaking it from memory, no
one is really sure which comes first)
I paused

The poem continues here:

https://mastodon.social/@richpuchalsky/116352725301756653

but that is it in this thread for the text of the poem

This poem presents special difficulties. It was written in 2013. Since then, it has been in some sense ongoing, although not mechanically ongoing. So... should I edit it? This is the first draft. When I think of the poem, I think of

"Will I have to die for them to be sure it's done?
But I've already died,"

and I think of it as "But I'm already dead," which is usually a sign that I should edit. But do I really want two versions of a never-ending poem?

This problem is because in some sense (although I do not believe in magic literally) the poem is a spell. I was sure to include "I'm pretty happy with it" because I am and because if I want to do Nietzsche's eternal return with a poem then happiness is the emotion I want to dwell on.

Maybe @impermanen_ might have something helpful to say about that aspect: this seems somewhat like a meditative practice.

In any case, the poem also presents publishing difficulties. When it was published I specified no title, not even "Untitled", and no page numbers, because that would imply priority of one page of the poem over another in a this-comes-first way.

@richpuchalsky some meditation practices (in mantra paths) definitely involve casting of spells, at least in some sense of that word. The more shamanic practices almost anyone could agree are such. These spells can thin the veil that keeps us from recognizing the spell-like nature of ordinary dualistic consciousness. If a poem has a similar intent or function, sure, it could be considered a kind of meditation. In fact, mantra rituals are usually in verse.

@richpuchalsky on a very different note, the poem reminds me of a thing my little brother and I used to do starting when we were kids. It was inspired by a running gag throughout various Loony Toons about the name “Cucamonga.” We loved saying “Cuc… [ridiculous pause]… amonga!” Sometimes the pause would last hours, days, eventually months and years into our adulthood.

I waited too long to finish my last “Cucamonga” with Pete: he died in a freak accident.
https://youtu.be/UWHYRjYYLqY

Looney Tunes Cucamonga References

YouTube