telekinetics.

Month

March 2011

8 posts

Chocolate paleontology?! → janneinosaka.blogspot.com
Feb 28, 2011

February 2011

17 posts

Play
Feb 24, 2011747 notes
“It seems that the instrument is almost incapable of producing a strong and full note, no matter how vigorously it is played; its tones at once die away and in a moment have faded to a tender historical echo. Expressed morally: you are no longer capable of holding on to the sublime, your deeds are shortlived explosions, not rolling thunder. Though the greatest and most miraculous event should occur — it must nonetheless descend, silent and unsung, into Hades. For art flees away if you immediately conceal your deeds under the awning of history.” —Nietzsche, “On the uses and disadvantages of history for life”
Feb 23, 2011
(in Indonesian, is the word for "water" "air"?) → indonesia.poetryinternationalweb.org
Feb 15, 2011
Borderline: Safia Elhillo → borderlinepoetry.tumblr.com

borderlinepoetry:

Questions for John Coltrane, from his saxophone

dear John,
what greater love is there
than that between sweat 
and brow?
what lullabies nest in your breath
when you are silent?
what am I without your breath?
what am I when you are silent?
a sword
is only as powerful as its swordsman
I have no voice without your whispers
my dear John,

what other women have known the notes traced into your palms?
did Alice’s fingers coax from you
the same songs you loosened from my throat?
who is Naima?
and why does the melody in her memorial
spill such a longing out of me?
please don’t tell me that you love her,
but do you not?

dear John,
what greater love is there
than that between raw lips and gleaming brass?
how Hamlet, North Carolina
is our Harlem these days?
how hometown are your fingers in their dance along my neck?
what languages did you find swarming in my pulse?
what solace did your hands know when they unraveled from my throat?
do you remember the smudged bruises traced down the length of me?
in a masterpiece of fingerprints from bow to bell
you claimed every slope, every key. i was yours. 
weren’t we happy?

before our Trane trekked all those Miles, all those Monks,
wasn’t it always just us two?
before the women who loved you mortal,
who knew not the blue shades of your breath
knew nothing of the maps at the tips of your fingers
knew nothing of our love.
how was I to have known that
out of me you would coax the greatest love song
titled in the name of another
and never mine?

who else could have known that
the birthplace of your breath was not your lungs
but my hollowest parts of my belly?

when they booed you in France,
who stood unflinching at your lips?

when the heroin swirled radioactive in your blood,
who poured its beams out into sound?

when the cancer thrust its roots into you and made a fossil of your body,
who remained the only vessel of your breath?

dear John,
tell me please,
why mothers dread losing their daughters to jazz men
tell me,
why my voice lost all its melody when you left
tell me,
how is it that you could have left
when we had the greatest love of all,
a love of brass and sore lips
a love of exhale, of molding stories from an empty cavity
a love immemorial
a love supreme 
of a music man
and his saxophone

Feb 15, 20118 notes
“…Of course, with all poets who write directly from their personal experience and emotions— their ideal rises to the surface and floats like the bell of the waterlily. The roots and the muddy water are subaudita, you know— as surely there, as the flower.” —Elizabeth Barrett Browning to Robert Browning (05/26/1846)
Feb 13, 2011
Feb 12, 2011
#syntactic ambiguity
Feb 11, 2011
“The average pencil is seven inches long, with just a half-inch eraser - in case you thought optimism was dead.” —Robert Brault (via libraryland)
Feb 10, 2011146 notes
Hey Buds

thebaffled:

Feb 8, 20115 notes
“Anybody who writes me who expects to become famous should keep carbons.” —Serena, reppin’ Metropolitan’s UHB (Urban Haute Bourgeoisie) 
Feb 7, 2011
"New York is a furnace that runs on fantasy" → newyork.citypudding.com
Feb 7, 2011
“Shame upon him who can look on calmly, and exclaim, ‘The foolish girl! she should have waited; she should have allowed time to wear off the impression; her despair would have been softened, and she would have found another lover to comfort her.’ One might as well say, ‘The fool, to die of a fever! why did he not wait till his strength was restored, till his blood became calm? all would then have gone well, and he would have been alive now.’” —Goethe
Feb 5, 2011
Feb 5, 2011116 notes
—time is a tree(this life one leaf) → poetryfoundation.org
Feb 4, 2011
Feb 2, 20114,353 notes
Feb 2, 20111,358 notes
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