Skip to content
Menu
home
issues
about
submissions
search
home
issues

issue one

issue two

issue three

issue four

about
submissions
search
Menu
home
issues
about
submissions
search
home
issues

issue one

issue two

issue three

issue four

about
submissions
search
Timothy Donnelly

All Vanishes

            after Comte de Lautréamont

Old ocean, salty bachelor, when you roam
     the solitude of your realm, you are right to
grow boastful over the magnificence of what you are
     and give birth to, plus all that love you get from poets!

 Voluptuously balanced by the soft perfume
     of your imperturbable slowness,
the most grandiose among the attributes
     circumstance has bestowed on you, you unroll—

 emboldened by your own ambiguity, and over the whole
    of your surface—waves in cursive, demonstrating a steady
propensity for endlessness. Each hastens after the other
     in parallel, individuated by an interval, a glimmer—no sooner

 does one dissolve than the next rises up to meet it
    where it dies, accompanied by the melancholy tone
of the foam as it melts into air, warning us that all is foam,
     all vanishes, even the migratory bird

that rests on you with confidence, entrusting its body
     to the movements of your body, proud
echo of your finesse, until the bones of its wings
     recover, and are strong enough now to resume their flight.

author bio
issue three

Posts navigation

previous
next
[email protected]
Twitter Instagram
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors