Window shopping with the familiar stranger

Like a stranger
who shows you a little kindness,
the chess master of Täby strolls with you
amongst the mannen
in a tournament where every game
is one too many,
and the only name allowed
is Cartaphilus.

But as you walk
through the granite burg—
never sure
if the next cross street you turn onto
is a boulevard or a cul-de-sac,
yet feeling compelled to step forward,
even when in zugzwang
you realise you’ve missed
the difference between a shop window
and a mirror.


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Perfectly forgettable

I recently got new neighbours.
After the energetic magpie family moved out,
the tree outside my window was quiet for a while.
Now a pair of pigeons has appeared—
though not high up in the tree like the magpies,
but on a branch right next to my window—
yet they’re barely noticeable, without fuss
taking shifts in performing
their incubation duties.
Even their cooing is a rare occurrence.
They are perfectly forgettable
breeding machines
some call a symbol of love.


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A letter to young me

Do you remember the day you learnt
the difference between epistemology and epistolography,
and the fountain pen with emerald green ink
you chose because it seemed more appealing
than the serenity blue?

You couldn’t have known that the letters
would turn out to be a sentence
with a costly parole on the fleeing horizon
and a bitter aftertaste
that would stay with you as you go.

So, ditch the pimp king from Stratford
with his lovey-dovey quarto
and Veronese balcony,
and embrace the Frankfurt recluse
while you still can.


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Confession

There is none but one certainty,
expressed by the simple ‘I am’—
everything else, like the nine extra floors,
contemplated with that achromatic I of mine,
is a possibility; though if I pretended
to be anything but a curmudgeon on a rainy day,
delighted that the gentle patter of raindrops
on the leaves of the tree outside my window
replaced the song of Malebolge rising
from the school yard across the street at lunch,
I would be lying.


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Reading the Apology

[…] not by wisdom do poets write poetry, but by a sort of genius and inspiration; they are like diviners or soothsayers who also say many fine things but do not understand the meaning of them.
Plato, Apology

Although not without its jocosities,
as well as its tragedies, life is mostly filled
with a farrago of inconveniences,
so, with a soft spot for magpies,
while mastering the implements
of idle chatter and flamboyance of gesture,
being the reserved ignoramus I am, I shrug
in front of it, just as I did
when I first met Platocrates—
not with resentment but relief.
After all, he gave me a dispensation
from intellectualism.


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Candour

When I was a boy, we often played
war—a bunch of kids in shorts
with Kalashnikov sticks. It was fun
until I read ‘Ravens and Crows
Will Peck Us to Pieces’.

When I was a boy, we often tracked
squirrels in the school yard
like the would-be Winnetou and Old Shatterhand,
still free of the consequences
of Indianertümelei.

When I was a boy, we never imagined
someone could say with a straight face,
‘I have never given up on life
because I’ve never embarked on it
in the first place’—yet I just did.


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Sensitive

They say you have to find
your inner child.
Well, mine is called Lupilu—
suitable for sensitive skin,
flushable,
fragrance-free—
kids’ moist toilet tissues,
a bag of which sits on top
of my toilet’s tank.
After all, I’ve always been
a sensitive man.


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The Book of Nachash

It’s not worth the bother of killing yourself, since you always kill yourself too late.
E. M. Cioran, The Trouble with Being Born

How do you kill a man
who was created immortal
as a whim—
just like you once were—
to suffer;
for the seventh day
was his first one
in the watercolours
of the garden?

Never alone
until he opened his eyes,
the man was yet to know
but Eden’s meanders
he would wander now
and again—
the moss-lined floor
of a padded cell
and the out-of-reach cerulean
of a window.

He couldn’t have foreseen
the entangled
in the tedium of shape
change next to none
in that wretched yard
where even time
is a derivative entity.
Besides, knowledge was forbidden
to him
by an implacable decree.

And so he practised
breaking stupor, with breaks
for physiology and sleep.
But it was only
when he discovered
the sharp edges of obsidian
that the divine physician
brought him a rib
as a distraction
from carving his arms.

* * *

Grass as bed linen
won’t ever remember
what the preuve du sang
had to remain silent—
substitutes bear no tears,
so she didn’t cry.

It was a very revealing night—
one of many to come:
for her to withstand,
for him to endure
(as odd as that may sound),
before the age of small talk.

And though gravely mistreated
by tautologies,
they somehow managed
to keep their faith
in progress,
albeit with clashing definitions.

But the aeons I watched them,
something was amiss.
Only when I finally faced them
did I realise—no one had ever told them
there was life
beyond the panopticon.

* * *

The world of things
as they are in themselves
awakens a thought
born of disbelief—
whether it’s an eviction notice
or a stray stanza.

But what does one do
when one stands
in the middle of an orchard-
themed wallpaper with a bag
of Golden Reinette
and a supermarket receipt?

At least they appreciated
the home delivery—
the man and the woman
in the Eden suburb,
where mowing the lawn
and washing windows
is life’s liturgy.


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