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Song of the Andoumboulou: 1661/2

Nathaniel Mackey on

Published in Poem Of The Day

Decapitism stuck to the end of my
tongue. What to do but call it names
I thought. It wasn't thought I was
think-
ing I'd have answered had I been
asked, not even thinking I thought...
I sat brooding, tracking a feather's
drop,
plummet my lush regard. I sat
brooding, hen's heat yogic so bent
my hickory legs were, hickory
stiff
transcendent so flexed it was. So it
will have been said absentmindedly
rolled off my tongue. Least thought,
last
thought I mock made-believe I
believed, prophet shod in castoff
tread... Profitry rolled off as well,
jelly-coated pill I bit. Bitness rolled
with
it or might as well have, qu'ahttet's
broken jaw. Change was the law I
sat reflecting, right foot nested on
my
left inner thigh, left leg pointed
straight ahead. I sat, Buddhistic
hurdler, musing, mouth open, ip-
seities arrayed in a row... I sat, I
was
thinking thought's province re-
ceded, beauty's provocation revoked
as our loins contracted, Itamar,
Anun-
cio, all us men. Tantric hoist I was
thinking, thought's adumbration,
what ached and what resigned itself,
dis-
placed... We sat checking out the
yogis in leotards, Ahdja, Eleanoir,
Anuncia, Sophia, every womanly
wisp under the sun. I dreamt again we
were
away with no way home, this or that
plane waiting, this or that takeoff
missed, sweet crease loaded with ore
but
to be absconded with, gold we'd've
otherwise been. Bent intonation inter-
vened, a reed off away in the distance,
Net-
sanet's name I no sooner gave than
was given back, Brother B's wild ox
moan... I sat dejected, thought's
ap-
pointment missed, disappointed,
abscondity's eviscerate redoubt. I
was thinking thought had yet to be-
gin, thought's far emblem a star too
frail
for sight, leotarded crux and cur-
vature's ignition, thought's due ad-
vent I thought no such arrival, what come-
liness it wore wore thin. No ideas but
in
them I thought, cloak and conni-
vance the lords of that house, abode
we
abided
by

About this poem
"In this installment of the ongoing 'Song of the Andoumboulou,' the poem's transient 'we' stop at the Stick City Ashram. They rename capitalism 'decapitism,' rename prophecy 'profitry,' rename business 'bitness' and revisit poetic dicta, all in the service of 'thought's due ad- / vent.'"
-Nathaniel Mackey

About Nathaniel Mackey
Nathaniel Mackey is the author of "Blue Fasa" (New Directions, 2015). He teaches at Duke University and lives in Durham, N.C.

***
The Academy of American Poets is a nonprofit, mission-driven organization, whose aim is to make poetry available to a wider audience. Email The Academy at poem-a-day[at]poets.org.


(c) 2015 Nathaniel Mackey. Originally published by the Academy of American Poets, www.poets.org. Distributed by King Features Syndicate





 


 

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