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Buoy the population of the soul
Toward their destination before they drown
~ Robert Pinsky
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Tuesday, 24. May 2005

NYC Chronicles



After returning from the larger world, and a journey of three thousand odd miles, he feels out of sorts, as an isotope would well beyond its half-life. Folks at home base ask him to tell them everything, yes everything he saw, did, experienced etc. And even though he had filled a small note book with pithy observations, short notes, rough haikus, jokes and conversations overheard, he feels handicapped in a way he can’t explain to himself, why he can’t undertake such a Proustian task right away.

He is also reminded of Italo Calvino’s ‘Invisible Cities’, in which Marco Polo spins narratives of cities he supposedly visited or passed through to the Great Kubla. While he senses that any narrative he might construct out of his note pile would be that of his own invisible cities, and not any real city, which as he saw it doesn’t exist anymore anyway! But he must begin somewhere, if only to unburden somewhat the sense of dullness, and to retreat from the cave, into which his mind seemed to have sunk after his return.

So he begins with the thought that was running through his head as he stood under a jet of hot water, in an attempt to cure a headache, and the thought is that of subways. He finds these rat holes and tunnels hidden under the city he had visited to be in a dreadful fashion, terribly riveting. He thinks Minotaur would be at home in that crossed maze, as would it be a great setting for more of Jack The Ripper kind of stories. And then writes a poem set in the subways.




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