Michael Palmer
Will the fires yes the
fires will consume us.

We will scatter our own
ashes, scatter them in a spiral

between lake and sky,
cadmium yellow sky.

The lovers, intertwined,
will speak of this

at lakeside, will say nothing
of this by water’s edge.

They will taste the salt
on each other’s lips

and discover the pain
of the salt light,

salt where the sculptor
once signaled with his hands

a little to the left,
a little to the right,

amid the tides.
Is it he or I

who would say,
Out of salt we are made?

Only a fool
like myself

would write of this
at midnight

among the fires
when all

should be left
in silence. 
from the book LITTLE ELEGIES FOR SISTER SATAN / New Directions
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Two images, or perhaps memories, conjoin at the source of this piece: the first from Chris Marker’s post-apocalyptic masterpiece, La jetée (The Jetty), constructed almost entirely of still photographs; the second, my wife, Cathy Simon, scattering her brother’s ashes in the form of a spiral at the site of Robert Smithson’s Spiral Jetty on the Great Salt Lake (which is tidal). The poem takes off from there, invoking lovers, invoking Smithson, invoking the fires that have become virtually omnipresent as part of our new reality during climate change (the coming apocalypse?).

Maybe I should add that thirty-two “Midnights,” all written late at night during the COVID-19 lockdown, form the third and final section of my latest book, "Little Elegies for Sister Satan." It seemed a good time to receive “visitors.”


Michael Palmer on "Midnights: La jetée"
Black-and-white portrait photograph of Kaveh Akbar
"Kaveh Akbar Finds Meaning in Misunderstanding"

"Akbar is exquisitely sensitive to how language can function as both presence and absence. In his most recent collection, Pilgrim Bell (Graywolf), words assume physical, palpable form—as reverberations in the mouth and ear—but can just as easily take on a spectral aura, reminding us of worlds and selves no longer within reach."

via THE NEW YORKER
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