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The Old Poet, Dying

August Kleinzahler, 6 September 2001

... He looks eerily young, what’s left of him, purged, somehow, back into boyhood. It is difficult not to watch the movie on TV at the foot of his bed, 40ll colour screen, a jailhouse dolly psychodrama: truncheons and dirty shower scenes. I recognise one of the actresses, now a famous lesbian, clearly an early B-movie role. The black nurse says ‘Oh dear’ during the beatings ...

An Englishman Abroad

August Kleinzahler: For Christopher Logue, 1 November 2001

... For Christopher Logue The talk-radio host is trying to shake the wacko with only a minute left to get in the finance and boner-pill spots before signing off, the morning news team already at the door and dairy vans streaming from the gates of WholesomeBest, fanning out across the vast plateau. Fair skies, high cumulus cloud – the birds are in full throat as dawn ignites in the east, rinsing the heavens with a coral pink ...
... And thus did the Atmospherical Theatre play out, with its transmutations & shifting of vapours, whether the rain-bearing clouds of January riding over our heades like vast Carracks or Bulging, dull-swelling Bas-Releive clouds bloated & pendulous, ubera caeli fecunda: sky cubbies or udders clouds; Enclosed & stufft ye whole visible Hemisphere in colour like Lead-vapours or a tall Frescoo ceiling, or marbled veined grotto ...

A History of Western Music Chapter 63: Whitney Houston

August Kleinzahler, 13 September 2012

... They follow you around the store, these power ballads, you and the women with their shopping carts filled with eggs, cookies, 90 fl.oz. containers of anti-bacterial dishwashing liquid, buffeting you sideways like a punishing wind. You stand, almost hypnotised, at the rosticceria counter staring at the braised lamb shanks, the patterns those tiny, coagulated rivulets of fat make, both knees about to go out from under you ...

When the Barocco

August Kleinzahler, 24 September 2009

... When the Barocco came over the hill with its cerulean vaults and golden exhortations Otto in the tower took leave of his fleisch, attending to the rumble in the near beyond. Up the staircase of the Dolomites and along the length of the turquoise river, streaming in channels of differing hue, it bounded like a beach ball across the great passes, the summer pastures, flattening all that came before it, down the slopes, through woodland and paddock, coming to rest but a furlong from the thorned hedge of Otto and his forbears’ village, and there, sweating dew, matted with pine needles, grape mash, insects, rodents, all manner of grasses, like a vast, lopsided globe, opalescent, trembling, a planet unto itself, very like a planet, there it sat, a colossus, a visitation, blocking what remained of the afternoon light and emitting a kind of tuneful bleating, two parts piccolo, one, perhaps, trombone ...

A History of Western Music: Chapter 88

August Kleinzahler, 18 February 2021

... The river craft moves slowly upriver in the heart of Terra Magellanica,this forest land of earthquakes, hurricanes and volcanic eruptions,sitting low in the mud-coloured water, laden with its cargoof appoggiaturas, mordents, sarabandes, gavottes and trills,along with Domenico Zipoli in his black cassock, lately of Rome, Florence, Bolognaand Naples, scene of his famous contretemps with Scarlatti, père ...

Self-Portrait

August Kleinzahler, 6 February 1997

... It was a lost dream, a bridges and heights and headed home dream, but too long, far too long and mazey and all the wrong tone. And then there was that station, so massive, with its tiers, platforms, girders and steps, trains rushing through on the express track, filled to bursting, commuters illuminated, each face vivid, highlighted – is that you? – exasperation, fatigue, concern at the time ...

Three Poems

August Kleinzahler, 2 November 1995

... West An apocalyptic crack spreads like thunder over sintered gorges and alkali flats. The junco is knocked sideways then drops as if shot onto a granite bed, turning slowly mahogany there – wild peony. Somewhere in the bleached sky and cirrus a Phantom is at play, singeing cattle, lifting shingles off farmhouse roofs. An enormous ball of phosphorus bounds across the Carson Sink ...

A History of Western Music: Chapter 60

August Kleinzahler, 10 March 2022

... A good lad, Christopher, a tad pensive, or watchful, for one so young.A bookworm too, if ever there was one: perhaps a career in lawor some sort of scholarly pursuit or other, but surely a hopeless fitfor the give and take of Fleet Street or the City or as an estate agent.Still, a well-behaved and temperate child, pleasant enough company,but just this very moment struggling, and failing, to squelch a giggle10,000 feet above the Persian Gulf in one of only eleven seatson a de Havilland 104 Dove, which will presently be passingover the rocky terrain, salt pans and limestone formations of Qatar,beginning its descent only fifteen minutes after having taken off,the hydraulic whine of the landing gear making ready to extend ...

Two Poems

August Kleinzahler, 4 January 2007

... Retard Spoilage Animalcules heave their tackling, ladders of polysaccharides, onto meatmilkshrimp&creamy emulsions, sticking like putrefactive velcro. The refrigerator switches on in the darkness, a murmuring, perfervid sadhu close at hand. Turbidity, gases, a silky clouding over – gray slime spreads across hot dog casings, a sour reechiness transpires below ...

Two Poems

August Kleinzahler, 5 October 2006

... Traveller’s Tales: Chapter 13 The bicycle paths of this Social Democracy are busy with pedallers, humourless and good, speeding down their privileged corridors, kinetic emblems of an enlightened state, efficient, compassionate, and on the go. Our visitor shuffles to the fine arts museum and sits there, mildly hungover, before the Delvaux, not one of his best, as if that really mattered, finding refuge in the moonlit porcelain breasts of the recumbent, homely maja, de maja van het noorden and the old locomotive that waits, steaming fitfully in the middle distance ...

Three Poems

August Kleinzahler, 30 September 1999

... Citronella and Yellow Wasps Before the heat and after The little pink beeper shop and the flamingo In the logo Same colour as the icing on the cookies inside And the votive candles that heal bad sprains Also, the billboards overhead Through the dusty branches Big square decals mounted against sky A bit of nose here, some lettering Jesus or barbecue Exit 205 Cobalt blue background cut out of sky ‘Clouds with Hanging Panels’ When the light is right at that place it finds For 20 minutes or so Only that So many fugitive spaces – You give us 22 minutes and we’ll give you the world ...

Four Poems

August Kleinzahler, 3 February 2000

... The Swimmer For Brighde The japonica and laurels tremble as the wind picks up out the west-facing wall of the old natatorium, made wholly of glass. The swimmer takes her laps, steady and sure through a blur of turquoise and importunings of chlorine. The large room itself now darkens, lit as it is by natural light, as the storm clouds press closer toward land ...

Over Gower Street

August Kleinzahler, 1 September 2005

... Rain a cab you Standing there on the sidewalk, in the dark The gathering thrum as the city awakens A field of clouds below Below the clouds the sea On the screen overhead a movie Across the great city They are moving, the two of them The freeways nearly empty In pursuit, being pursued Down ramps, among warehouses A girl in jeopardy A beautiful young woman in jeopardy Before dawn, before the city awakens On wet streets The melting greens and reds of traffic lights A cinematographer’s trick with a lens An access road, the belly Of a jet, so low overhead You can read, within its logo A message: Why am I here? Who are you? Because you chose to be here I am who I appear to be Across the great city No, not that one, another They are moving Not those two, we Not you and I A friend and me, on foot – Am I not a friend? We are moving slowly You can track us from on high An aerial shot Moving across the plaza The river to our left, winding As it does to the Bay And the giant tower, the sleek green tower Ahead of us and to the right Six miles above Godthåb The scent of you Blooms in the aftertaste Of the complimentary pretzels Helio, the deep Atlantic Titanium white, Iqualiut Cornerbrook a burnt umber The Labrador Sea cerulean It is impossible to find a cab When it rains like this Come back inside with me The lighting in the hotel lobby The black wood panelling and frosted lamps The darkness outside I recall this from somewhere I, other, outside this mise-en-scène A movie, perhaps – Who are you? Night: burnt umber mixed with ultramarine Cadmium moon Clouds a zinc white Quebec, on the screen overhead, green umber Ground speed: 1042 km/hr Weather at destination: windy Brick sky pastureland The train moves north from the city Viridian with burnt umber Prussian blue with raw sienna Oxide of chromium green with light red My friend there waiting, as always By his car at the station Ready to drive me back to his valley With its apron reefs of limestone Its rucks and folds, its ancient lows Terra verte/phthalocyanine green His cat and his piano – Am I not your friend, as well? – Hello ...

Tuq-Tuq

August Kleinzahler, 2 August 2012

... Thass me, your jibber-jabbering Sulawesi booted macaque, most amused to be braining rodents with fig buds from up high, near the tippy top branch of my tuq-tuq tree, and that’s no lie, when you passed by below wearing I forget now which look. You gazed up and smiled, sweet-like: ‘Why not c’mon on down, Joe?’ How’d you get onto all that? And we’re talking not just ‘Joe’ but the local macaque lingo ? No one else could possibly know but Mommy Catawba and Sorella-si, who’d prefer not to – know ...

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