product profile – a fine piece of real estate
for silent investors
or
this would be
entered into the guiness book of infinite records
lift-off
the
surface
peer
underneath
to
seek
a
one-time
harvest
leave
a hole
sunk
deep
as a
legacy
could
colonize
the
surface
with
an s.a.
erect
a great
walled city
an intricate
elaborate
movable
mode
of
efficiency
covering
each livable and lived surface mile
with
a terrible beauty
a ornamental
cell
sus stay
nd
ready
for
incarceration
and
before this
each
livable and lived mile
pathways
imagined
coated
with asphalt, concrete, cement
heavy
with intent
as
dense
as old
growth
from
haida gwaii
civic
splendor
an inter-connected
slab of dominance
will
burden the ground
at
this centre
of a
benign smile
another
s.a.
will
deliver a party justice
feed
an election
source
out new income
from
time elsewhere
house
the
house
of
e-transfers
and
keep a worthy and high value transfer list
beyond
the horizon
beyond
the nine spheres
beyond
the line of sight
beyond
the light of sound
beyond
the observable moment
in a
farther place
where
distance is silence
where
no one might look
for
these deeds
to
be done
Phinder Dulai is a BC-based author of the poetry collection dream / arteries (Talonbooks) and two previous books of poetry: Ragas from the Periphery (Arsenal Pulp Press, 1995) and Basmati Brown (Nightwood Editions, 2000). His most recent work has been published in Canada and Beyond, Canadian Literature and Cue Books Anthology. He has also recently collaborated on a sound installation called The Grove – A Spatial Narrative, with artists Carmen Papalia and Andrew Lee, and installed at the Surrey Art Gallery, British Columbia, Canada. He has presented on his work in Canada, USA, and in other parts of the world. His work has appeared in Ankur, Matrix, Memewar Magazine, Rungh, The Capilano Review, Canadian Ethnic Studies, Toronto South Asian Review, subTerrain, and West Coast LINE. Dulai is a co-founder of the Surrey-based interdisciplinary contemporary arts group The South of Fraser Inter Arts Collective (SOFIA/c).
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan