Authors: Mark Z. Danielewski
— For
a Captain.
Greece.
August
23, 1988
The
Reason
(II)
Your place is
secured.
So the promise.
So Jacob’s
death.
But the
line
hasn’t
decided
your name.
Skip. Skip.
Daily-ho. Esau.
“Sold” cried the blackfaced man
with
a tarnished gavel,
and two
men went forth to retrieve
what Pelican deemed to be the ugliest
phonograph he’d
ever
seen.
“k’s an
Edison”
And
so
itwas.
And
so that
name also
had something
to do
with
currents
—right?
—
For the Captain’s wife. Greece.
August
23, 1988
The Lie (III)
Heavy,
heavy blues
are
absinthe for me
tonight.
“It’s
the
notes
and the black
and
white photographs
with tattered edges
that go together so well
—Don’t you think so?—
with brass.”
“You’re lost.”
“I
know”
“Again.”
“Again.”
Putting out his hat
Pelican catches a coin
and delights in the fact
that it’s not brass but gold:
could be turned into a cufflink
or could be used to buy something.
Though to tell you the truth
there never really was any coin
nor for that matter a hat,
— For Spiros and Tatiana. Greece.
August 23,
1988
Human light
gone
from Human light at dawn
Does pain
always human bolt the door,
misunderstanding
the difference between untouched nerves and hollowness?
Perhaps, for instance,
Pelican’s afraid.
(it
happens)
The matter he claims
is that there’s no one
“for all to see no one”
can’t see
can’t
hear
can’t find
But I still can feel this,
all of this,
like an ulcer in the gut.
— For a waitress in Athens.
August
25, 1988
The Price of the Tenement
having,
to do with
Previous
Questions having to do
with
Residence
.
The complaint had to do
with
whether or not
Pelican was a
uxorious man,
“A
s
if
that were a question
that played by the rules of today.”
“A
nd what,”
inquired a fiendish Stave,
seeking perhaps to catch
a contradiction.
“What are those?”
Yesterday’s fools
for historical fiction
who rent my palms.
But there is always
renting
and ravings
and
various degrees to
saving
and
Pelican
knows
he never
really
rented.
He just bought
outright.
— For
a young
French
woman. Mycenac, Greece.
August
28, 1988
The Inner Whisper of
Breezes Brushing over Fields of Color
The catechism
followed a violent protest
which
foll
owed the innocent
expression
of a wandering idea.
E
asle
refused to tell
its
nature but
did
end up saying—
“Now that,
that is
an
unforgivable tric
k.”
The commotion
mounted,
Zenethic in climate,
leaving the sane
wonderfully disparate.
Meanwhile Pelican intended to go
on a
mild
wandering
through
colorful weeds,
but the weeds were
tinder
alight
in his eyes
and God what a formidable
headache.
What will I do?
— For a French man in
Mycenae.
August
28, 1988
The Principle
that
Swung—Rocking
Back
and Forth—Like
a Bead on a
String—Hung
Between
Paintings
The price failed to respect
the effect
that four flat
bills
two
flat gold coins
along
with three
smaller
copper ones
had on the counter.
“Pelican turn off
the
lamp”
and he clicked off
the fortyfive watt
bulb
used for reading,
for lighting
his
way.
“Shakespeare’s
troublesome.
Why Why simply
because
when I was young I couldn’t understand.
I never knew what
was
going on.”
—
For another French man in
Mycenae.
August
28, 1988
A Pelican Wish
The ruminations
are mine,
let
the world
be yours.
—
For no one, Olympia, Greece.
August
31, 1988
Before Him reuniting
story lines
he never knew but was freshly told of then
The passing promise
was just an
eyef
ul
glance
promising just that
—
and I saw more,
usually
do
—
the
kept oblation
for
razor’d sight —
“I
really believe you’re
shredding boundaries”
The
light.
Dear
Elihu,
Just wondered if you
might
reconstruct
some wisdom
regarding
the
journeyman’s decision.
But another
journeyman’s
passage
cut
the
scape and
broke Pelican quickly
with
a genuine
embrace,
— For Camille
at the Youth Hostel.
Naples,
Italy.
September 2, 1988
More
than
a café —u
n vent d’eau
If there were a clue worth holding onto it was the nail,
the strongest point that alone,
at first,
fixed
and
recreated,
the house.
But Pelican was not a detective
and did not follow the process.
His eyes were old and full
and after all the house
his friends had spoken of
still stood.
He tapped his fingers playfully
on the wall
—tap! tap! tap!
He smiled a bit.
It seemed right to him,
not at long last
but right along the way.
‘Where I’ve been.
Where 1 am,’
he said and then sighing
added—
“I’d like to return
one
day
if only for
a little while
to drink something warm.”
— Le Clou
Dc
Paris. Rue Danton, Paris.
August 12,
1990
C.
Collages
#1
#2
D.
Obituary
At Mr. Truant’s request, we have omitted
the last
name
of
his
father as well as
several
other details.
—
The Editors