Akin to neither
a wen,
to an octopus,
to cancer, to Hell,
nor to a
crystal, satisfying a pattern
mysteriously
preordained, the city
may instead be
conceived as a novel
but natural
phenomenon arising not
from the clash
of tectonic plates
nor the erosion
that shapes their forms,
but by economic
circumstance:
A mountainous
landscape
of skyscrapers,
tenements,
department
stores and office blocks
heaving
majestically out of the earth
in response to
irresistible forces
only to be just
as inevitably worn
down to rubble
by the incessant passage
of the wheels of
trucks and taxis,
by the feet of
messengers,
policemen,
shoppers and commuters.
We cannot vouch
for the geologic
accuracy of this
comparison,
yet admire its
cosmic quality.
Franklin Bruno is a writer and musician,
born and raised in Southern California’s Inland Empire, and now based in Jackson
Heights, Queens. He is the author of The Accordion Repertoire (poetry, Edge Books) and Armed Forces (music criticism, in Continuum/Bloomsbury’s 33 1/3
series). His poetry, criticism, and scholarly writing have appeared in Brooklyn Rail, Oxford American, The Village
Voice, Popular Music and Society, Paideuma, and Critical
Quarterly. Since the 1990s, he has released 20 albums of original music as
one-third of Nothing Painted Blue, under his own name, and (currently) as
frontman of The Human Hearts. Collaborative projects include writing,
recording, or performing with John Darnielle of the Mountain Goats, Jenny
Toomey, Laura Cantrell, and the Schramms. He holds a Ph.D in Philosophy from
UCLA, and has taught at Northwestern University, Bard College, and SUNY Purchase.
the Tuesday poem is curated by rob mclennan
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