Flow Chart: A Poem

Flow Chart: A Poem by John Ashbery Page A

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Authors: John Ashbery
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awareness that hungers always for new victims
    like a minotaur, and whose mad thirst for the blood of innocent bystanders can never
    be slaked, least of all by tepid gestures toward understanding
    seen in a mirror and wrongly interpreted, or lives entirely given over to sacrifice
    and austerity, for it is there, cautions the tome, that the greatest losses, the worst
    atrocities will be instigated and immediately tallied. For such is the life of a young man
    these days; there is still time to leave the boat, which at last report
    was committed to its moorings, but of course to quit now
    would be to miss the whole spectacle, and that, after all, is what
    we came for, and shall insist on staying for, once the dirt has settled
    and the bats flown back into the trees. And the cicadas stopped stuttering.
    As dead wood floats, the expanding afternoon exhales
    its mousy fragrance, battening on the memory of countless similar
    ones it thinks are in the heads of those going about in this one,
    and so the structure stands, without any apparent support. Doors are left open
    as in spring, and beyond them float tunnel-vision landscapes
    brought from somewhere else, and none recognizes the clever substitution.
    Here a man carries bags
    out to his truck, and makes the same trip over and over. There, windows shine.
    And on a far-off hilltop someplace a living sacrifice gleams, red
    in the puddled haze, and all eyes are cast downward, defrocked,
    speechless. And though one can hear the traffic’s swish
    as it cuts from one side of the island to the other, one is transfixed,
    facing an army of necessary revisions. “How would it be if I said it this way,
    or would so-and-so’s way be better, easy on the adjectives?” And if I told you
    this was your life, not some short story for a contest, how would you react?
    Chances are you’d tell me to buzz off and continue writing, except
    it’s so difficult; we barely begin and paralysis takes over, forcing us out
    for a breath of fresh air. Meanwhile the vengeful deity whose acts
    are being recorded has all the time in the world. “OK, that’s it for today,” as if
    one weren’t busy on other fronts too, such as writing letters
    to friends in Panama and Hawaii. Not to mention keeping track of expenses
    in a ledger acquired for just this purpose. But though reams of work do get done,
    not much listens. I have the feeling my voice is just for me,
    that no one else has ever heard it, yet I keep mumbling the litany
    of all that has ever happened to me, childish pranks included, and when the voluminous
    sun sets, its bag full, one can question these and other endeavors silently:
    how far wrong did I go? Indeed, one can almost see the answers spelled out
    in quires of the sky: Why? it enthuses, and immediately some of the metal trim
    falls off, the finish has gotten gooey, but we persevere, and just as the forms
    begin to float away like mesmerized smoke, the resolution, or some resolution, occurs.
    We are no longer on that island. Here, the inmates
    treat us harshly, but like adults, and though as usual no rest is authorized,
    one can without too much difficulty keep pace with the majority of them
    and see one’s old clothes reflected in that mirror. And shoots keep popping up;
    birds are pecking excitedly in the dirt for something, and your shoes
    have grown too small; it will be time to change them soon. Of course, one is too old
    to be a waif, yet that issue never surfaces; one is judged fairly
    though without this set of complex circumstances being taken into account,
    and that’s something, more than you think, for by evening
    the pronounced moan will have been deadened, and we are free to take our ease,
    reveling in the glow, the surface of things, like water nourished on fading light.
    You see, we have escaped. But one always goes back voluntarily
    before the next roll-call, and that bittersweet dream of complete and utter
    laziness is postponed once again, confirmed and postponed. And I

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