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Shenango I have an urgent desire, almost a need, to write a novel called Shenango, a novel (from the
Latin, novus ordo seclorum) in the sense of a book-length work of new imagination that would read like a fluent translation of a true story about the western lands where emigrants go, seeking fulfillment but discovering a waste space where some people have found fulfillment. Never be desperate. Let the darkest birds unfold their wings and clack their puppet beaks. Though their frightening unlikeness seems to require you to disintegrate, you must breathe back through your soft lips and nostrils as if in their minds you were incapable of either anger or depression, cloud-filled and blue-grounded as winter wildness from the height of a generously peopled mountain where finally there is nothing for you to long for, only the pleasures of the other birds' aerial shenanigans. With each iteration the cloud mass became spiffier, hollyhocks bloomed as delicate blue as hydrangeas and lilacs, only so subtly different from the explosion that is, or ought to be, pure white, drier and airier than powder, a limited number of monkeys in a tobacco box, the association being tales and iterations, charged by a beautiful armature of fine copper wires like incredibly attenuated claws, or better yet, cross-hatching on a drawing of the Gordian Knot (yes, there was only one). I say "claws" because jackdaws are all but (or anything but) unheard of here on Sullivan T. Coney's island, where the hares are gulls and take any pitch you toss them. The rest (a rest, rest) occurs across the wide Missouri. And what could seem emptier than air, more likely to arouse happy laughter than despair at your complete freedom of movement, except for the subtle pressures all around you, mounting as you mount higher, never looking up.
Speech, Speech To speak of fleeting Percivals The hall will, on that An uncanny wind blows through Whose canoe, one is not Thank you, thank you,
A Catalog of Ponies of the Pyrenees 1. Help! The seawall has caved. 2. One of the oceans threatens to engulf us. 1. Sand can only do so much. 1. Sand is a victim. 2. I chased death all over. 4. The soul is the size of a transparent granule 4. The soul is the size of a transparent granule. 3. The Upanishads mention a fat candle flame. 4. I wrapped it but the old postage took up too much space. 4. After the floods subside, the crowbar will be useful. |
Thomas David Lisk's fiction, poems, and essays have appeared in many little magazines and newspapers. His most recent work has appeared in Hayden's Ferry, Review, Porcupine, Boulevard and Slide.
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| Copyright © 2002 by Thomas David Lisk, all rights reserved. This text may be used and shared in accordance with the fair-use provisions of U.S. Copyright law, and it may be archived and redistributed in electronic form, provided that the editors are notified and no fee is charged for access. Archiving, redistribution, or republication of this text on other terms, in any medium, requires the notification of the journal and consent of the author. |