Read Come on All You Ghosts Online
Authors: Matthew Zapruder
wearing a suit of light.
It's too easy to be
strange. I glow
reading a few pages
of an ancient Chinese poet
to calm me, but soon
I am traveling down
terrible roads
like an insect chased
by golden armies.
Then I am tired in a little boat
filling with smoke.
Then in the seasonably
cold morning I am
once again missing my friends.
Some have been sent
to the capital to take
their exams or work for a while
or be slowly executed. I
cannot help them, I am trying
to build a straw hut
beside the transparent river.
The sky is a perfect
black dome, with stars
that look white but
are actually slightly blue.
I have two precious candles
to last me a night
that has suddenly come.
I feel the lives of cities
drift through me,
I am a beautiful scroll
on which the history
of a dynasty has been written
in a dead language
not even one lonely scholar knows.
I see sad crushed plastic
everywhere and put
some thoughts composed
of words that do not
belong together
together and feel
a little digital hope.
Oh this Diet Coke is really good,
though come to think of it it tastes
like nothing plus the idea of chocolate,
or an acquaintance of chocolate
speaking fondly of certain times
it and chocolate had spoken of nothing,
or nothing remembering a field
in which it once ate the most wondrous
sandwich of ham and rustic chambered cheese
yet still wished for a piece of chocolate
before the lone walk back through
the corn then the darkening forest
to the disappointing village and its super
creepy bed and breakfast. With secret despair
I returned to the city. Something
seemed to be waiting for me.
Maybe the “chosen guide” Wordsworth
wrote he would even were it “nothing
better than a wandering cloud”
have followed which of course to me
and everyone sounds amazing.
All I follow is my own desire,
sometimes to feel, sometimes to be
at least a little more than intermittently
at ease with being loved. I am never
at ease. Not with hours I can read or walk
and look at the brightly colored
houses filled with lives, not with night
when I lie on my back and listen,
not with the hallway, definitely
not with baseball, definitely
not with time. Poor Coleridge, son
of a Vicar and a lake, he could not feel
the energy. No present joy, no cheerful
confidence, just love of friends and the wind
taking his arrow away. Come to the edge
the edge beckoned softly. Take
this cup full of darkness and stay as long
as you want and maybe a little longer.
In Burma right now people are screaming.
Inside their monasteries the monks are sealed.
“Blood and broken glass.”
I feel I would drink a glass of poison,
In order to help,
But that's probably a lie.
Another perfect day filled with perfectly vertical light and crickets.
I feel the presence of lithium.
They are pumping it into our waters.
I want to do important work.
People not places are haunted.
Who is in that chair?
I want to stop pretending.
I don't feel like I'm pretending,
But I want to be free
Of this important feeling:
To love each other more
Than we currently do
Is a terrible violence
To our future selves.
Which is not what I want.
Drunker than Voyager 1
but not as Voyager 2 I rode my blue
bike back through the darkness
to my lonely geode cave of light
awaiting nothing under the punctured
dome. I had achieved escape
velocity drinking clear liquid starlight
at the Thunderbird with a fingerless
Russian hedge fund inspector and one
who called himself The Champ. All
night I felt fine crystals cutting
my lips like rising up through
a hailstorm. And the great vacuum
cleaner that cannot be filled moved
through my chest, gathering
conversation dust and discharging
it through my borehole. During
one of many silences The Champ
took off his face and thus were many
gears to much metallic laughter
revealed. Long ago I forgot
the word which used to mean in truth
but now expresses disbelief. So
quickly did my future come. You who
are floating past me on your inward way,
please inform those glowing faces
who first gave me this shove I have
managed to rotate my brilliant
golden array despite their instructions.
All day I've felt today is a holiday,
but the calendar is blank.
Maybe it's Lamp Day. There is
one very small one I love
so much I have taken it everywhere,
even with its loose switch.
On its porcelain shade are painted
tiny red flowers, clearly
by someone whose careful
hand we will never know.
Because it's Lamp Day I'm trying
to remember where I got it,
maybe it was waiting for me
in the house on Summer Street
I moved into almost exactly
17 years ago. I think
without thinking I just picked it
up from the floor and put it
on my desk and plugged
it into the socket and already
I was working. So much
since that moment has happened.
On Lamp Day we try
not dreamily but systematically
to remember it all. I do it
by thinking about the hidden
reasons I love something
small. When you take
a series of careful steps
to solve a complex problem,
mathematicians call it an algorithm.
It's like moving through
a series of rooms, each with
two doors, you must choose one,
you can't go back. I begin
by sitting on a bench in the sun
on September 21st thinking
all the walks I have taken
in all the cities I have chosen
to live in or visit with loved ones
and alone make a sunlit
and rainy map no one
will ever be able to hold.
Is this important? Yes and no.
Now I am staring
at clean metal girders.
People keep walking past
a hotel, its bright
glass calmly reflecting
everything bad and good.
Blue boots. Bright glass.
Guests in this moment. A child
through the puddles steps
exuberant, clearly feeling the power.
I am plugged in. I am calm.
Lamp Day has a name.
Just like this cup
that has somehow drifted
into my life, and towards which
sometimes for its own reasons
my hand drifts in turn.
Upon it is written the single
word Omaha.
The tiny bee on its mission
died before it felt a thing. Its
body rested for a moment
on the railing of my sunny
porch in California. Then
wind took it away. You
are an older sister now so
it's true the world owes you
massive reparations. Also
you have special alarm
pheromones implanted
in your nose that explode
with
Phacelia distans
i.e. wild heliotrope each time
what they say will happen
turns out to be a compendium
of what can never exactly
be. Today the electric bus
full of humans listening
through tiny flesh colored
earbuds to the music news
or literature perfectly calibrated
to their needs kneels before
the young man in his gleaming
black wheelchair. Inside
green laboratories experiments
in the realm of tiny particles
are being for our vast benefit
completed. Already I can see
the same little wrinkle I have
appearing on your brow.
You were born to feel a way
you don't have a word for.
With those two words in my mouth
I woke up laughing, for only the second
time in my life. Before bed I had been
reading a book about the Renaissance.
All they really know is it was dirty.
I slept and dreamt of complicated
financial arrangements. Then
the Midwest. I have always loved
the loneliness of those midsized cities
strewn along the plains, in them
it seems to me my heart would at last
be that open field where an entirely
new love could snow. Dobby lives
in Minnesota and seems basically happy.
I believe I've never seen him
wear a sweatshirt. I'm not even sure
that's his real name. Is he a ghost?
Probably. A ghost of happiness. Dobby's
sweatshirt. It's where I want to bury
my face when lonely possibility comes.
Last night I heard faint music moving
up through the floor. The thought
I could be one who falls asleep and dreams
some brave act and wakes to actually
do it flapped through me, brief breeze
through a somnolent flag. Across
the room my cell phone periodically
shone a red light indicating someone
was failing to reach me. Your body
kept barely lifting the sheet. I think
my late night thoughts and feelings
about my life are composed
of fine particles that drift far from me
to periodically settle on apartment
or office buildings. Feel the heat
and pulsation within. A man sits
in the Institute of National Memory
examining files. They contain accounts
of what certain people believed other
more powerful people would want
to permit themselves to believe
regular people were choosing to do
all through the years that like terrible
ordinary babies one after another
crawled, grasping daily acts and placing
them into these files anyone now
can hold. Read about the life
of the great ordinary Citizen Z. How
he attended funerals and horrible boring
literary parties, aging and thinking
of his anonymity and writing journals
he later felt he must destroy, and calmly
against his will periodically meeting
in hotel bars with the sad men who asked
questions that along with the answers
they all knew would end in these yellow files.
Each has a label marked with three
or four obscure numbers followed by
a dash followed by three initials.
Europe you had your time. Now
it is ours to drag everyone into a totally
ghost free 21st century whiteness.
Today a ladybug flew through my window. I was reading
about the snowy plumage of the Willow Ptarmigan
and the song of the Nashville Warbler. I was reading
the history of weather, how they agreed at last
to disagree on cloud categories. I was reading a chronicle
of the boredom that called itself The Great Loneliness
and caused a war. I was reading mosquitoes rode
to Hawaii on the same ship that brought the eucalyptus
to California to function now as a terrible fire accelerator.
Next to me almost aloud a book said doctors can
already transplant faces. Another said you know January
can never be June so why don't you sleep little candle?
A third one murmured some days are too good,
they had to have been invented in a lab. I was paging
through a book of unsent postcards. Some blazed
with light, others were a little dim as if someone
had breathed on the lens. In one it forever snowed
on a city known as the Emerald in Embers, the sun had
always just gone behind the mountains, never to return,
and glass buildings over the harbor stayed filled with
a sad green unrelated light. The postcard was called
The Window Washers. In handwriting it said
Someone left an important window open, and Night
the black wasp flew in and lay on the sill and died.
Sometimes I stop reading and find long black hairs
on my keyboard and would like you to know that in 1992
I mixed Clairol Dye #2 with my damaged bleached hair
to create a blue green never seen before, my best look
according to the girl at the counter who smiled only once,
I know less than I did before, and I live on a hill where
the wind steals music from everything and brings it to me.
II
Go we must in search of searching
not very helpfully said the little red ant
attached to the golden chain attached to
my wrist. He was no bigger than a
molecule, the chain was a quantum chain.
It was Sunday morning, we were
following the restless backpackers into
the city guidebooks called a manageable
fountain of leisure. Unbeknownst they
carried dark lanterns, they were
Nameless ones. The inhabitants into
various churches emptied leaving only
scattered women in multicolored house
coats feeding pigeons and a boy skater
performing slenderly his fabulous tricks.
Some parks are small, perfect for falling
asleep. Then you can wake and leave
them for someone who needs to find
out what happens when you build
a grand arcade of your finest thoughts
to shimmer, waiting for no one. I lay on
my back. Light with the faintest tetrophene
hint touched lightly my blue metallic skin.
A bike leaned against a wall. I thought
of my first day planner, turquoise and
laminated not unlike the calm and glassy
lake I broke the surface of as a child
those days everyone was equal. So much
architecture, said my russet friend. He
was a menshevik, red but also transparent.
If you bent and looked very closely
you could see the pulse behind each of
his black ventricular eyes. A golem
stopped to check his touristical map.
He wanted to see a few more rooftops
against the sky before he sighed and
took the funicular up the long curved
path that leads to the castle and turned
totally unlike me into dust.