I once knew a man
who could put words 
into images,
and images into words. 
He had a glass box 
full of ants that he studied. 
Music was playing, 
and he was dancing, 
but his dancing was more like twitching. 
His twitching was in time to the music.
He was losing the images in his head.
And he struggled over whether or not
the ants 
should be experimented upon. 
Then the box was smashed, 
and the ants were everywhere. 
He felt they were inside him, 
and he stuck his tongue out rhythmically, 
so they could come out.
He told me 
about Alpha Centauri and the Aquarian. 
He told me 
how far the earth is from the sun.
He said, 
“You have to move your body to the funk.“
He could talk without moving his mouth.
There is a world of sound. 
There is a world of vision. 
Sometimes the worlds come together.
His glasses had two-way mirrors
so that when he looked out, 
he looked into himself. 
He represented a collision 
between matter and anti-matter. 
There was too much energy 
to be measured in candle-power. 
He made me ask myself, 
“When a rocket 
accelerates through the atmosphere, 
what determines the boost factor?”
When he talked, 
he  created an
electrical storm. 
When he cried, 
his words were raining.
The storm windows 
were smashed, and
the power lines were down.
The cables were swinging 
into epileptic outcry. 
He gazed upward,
and looked 
at the burning holes in the sky. 
A bat was hanging on a wire.
The unconscious became conscious 
with the smell of noseblood.
He taught me 
how to see people coming out of the shadows. 
They were doing a new dance routine.
They tried new top hats on. 
Their melancholy 
could not be measured with a light meter. 
Their faces were expressionless,
and they couldn’t feel anything. 
They were practiced 
in the art of the poseur. 
They said that everything 
was a copy of something else. 
They were on a platform, 
and the floor was tilted.
The shoes of those that passed by 
were all I could see.
I could see no higher.
He asked me, 
“What world do you want to live in?
The world of lasers and starships? 
The world of clouds,
where you float in the sky?
The world of water,
where your boat is tossed 
gently by the wind?”
I said to him, 
“Are you talking about 
the present or the past?” 
But he answered, 
“When you finally get ready to act, 
it will already be too late. 
Your life will be over. 
Your time will have passed. 
The nuclear rockets 
and the guided missiles 
will already have been here. 
The thunderclouds 
will have broken. 
The next man to be killed 
by another man 
will already have died. 
Today’s newspaper 
will already be old news. 
Tea will have been served. 
What you thought about yesterday 
will not be done tomorrow."
So he climbed a rope 
to contemplate his theosophy. 
I couldn’t follow him, 
because I wasn’t skilled enough.
“What is the reverse of God?” 
he asked.
“Maybe the reverse of God is God,” 
I said.
But then I thought, 
“Isn’t there a presence in absence,
and an absence in presence?
Isn’t there a disorder in order, 
and an order in disorder?
Doesn’t the absence of meaning 
mean something?”
The meaninglessness of something 
may be defined 
by what gives meaning 
to everything."
I went places with him, 
wanting to find out who I was. 
But my rainbow break was shorted out. 
I couldn’t hang it on a gliding board. 
I knew where I was going, 
but not where I’d come from. 
Australopithecus was picking his teeth 
on the bones of my ancestors.  
I went to a graveyard 
and slept with the dead. 
The tenth book of tombs 
had been written
before I entered in. 
I looked around 
at the gravestones. 
The aurora was following 
the midnight sun.
The land had footprints on it. 
It had been lived on.
I laid down on the earth, 
and had visions. 
A man with a trumpet was playing jazz. 
A nightmare was sitting next to him. 
The nightmare was a man 
whose face couldn’t’ be seen 
because of his hat. 
He was wearing a trench coat, 
and had pockets of blue. 
He spoke through an alto saxophone 
that didn't need to be translated. 
I found myself in a bedroom, 
looking at a chest with brass handles 
that had a mirror over it. 
A magus was hiding in the back drawer.
His kidneys weren’t functioning properly. 
He had endured many tests 
on his kidney function,
and he didn’t want to be tested anymore. 
I lifted him out of the drawer, 
and we went downstairs to the backyard. 
He’d invited people over for a cricket match 
that he didn’t want to attend. 
People were standing about silently, 
waiting for him to show up. 
There were gate crashers 
whose attire clashed with the others. 
Garden parties were out of season. 
The art of mime was in rehearsal. 
The rain from yesterday 
left tears on a jonquil.
I had to learn more 
from the man who’d told me 
about the present and the past. 
He told me about life and death. 
He said, “I’ve already had my death.
This is the afterlife. 
So anything in death, 
I’ll have lived as life. 
I’m one of the living dead. 
What’s been given birth 
will have death and rebirth. 
And what is, will
always have being.
As long as I have life, I’ll know death.
And what I know of those who have life,
I can know of those who are dead. 
I can learn to know those who are dead, 
just as I can learn to know 
those who have life. 
To be one with life is to know death.
But to commit oneself to death 
is no longer to know life. 
What I can say to the living,
I can't say to the dead. 
And what I’m concerned with
is not death,
but life.”
He took me walking on a rock. 
He told me the planet was dividing. 
The rock was split 
by a force moving. 
All movement was faceted,
and anything that could fly 
had struts in its wings. 
The trees were bare, 
and blood was spattered 
across a black sky.
I saw his fingers stretching out 
in a network over the scorched earth. 
Thousands of locusts 
were coming in and out of the invisible. 
We went into a house 
where we met an old man. 
He opened a closet door,
and there were incredibly dirty rags inside. 
Spiders were regimented
into an attack force. 
We went into the closet 
and my friend asked the old man 
to let him sit in the electric chair. 
The clamps were placed on his skull, 
and the message was transmitted. 
An array of cubes over his head 
was organized spatially
to generate
controlled acoustics. 
The walls of the closet fell away. 
We were standing on a glass floor 
as vast as a convention center. 
There were prisms sliding back and forth 
across the axis in which he stood. 
He was in an arcade of spheres 
that was orbiting over his head. 
Whorls of dim stars 
signaled him 
like sidelights on a marquee. 
Pulsars and quasars 
were contracted into him. 
Searchlights were swinging 
in arcs of increasing complexity. 
We walked to the edge of the platform. 
We stepped down and walked to a door. 
The door opened to a small dumbwaiter 
and he climbed in. 
There was a smell of garbage inside. 
His vision was iridescent, 
and he saw infrareds he’d never seen before. 
The birth image he had 
was of being born in a walnut. 
It was burning, 
and some of the ashes 
were clinging together and crawling away. 
He moved over, 
and I got into the dumbwaiter. 
We crawled down a tunnel 
and came onto a stone floor. 
There were vertical steps 
projected out of a wall onto a parapet. 
It was sunset, 
and the clouds were ascending. 
Someone was coming toward us, 
and we couldn’t tell 
if it was a man or a woman.
We climbed upward 
and found ourselves 
in a city at midnight. 
Thousands of kilowatts 
had been snuffed out. 
Mortuaries were brighter places. 
The street we were on 
was a corridor 
that led toward an edifice. 
The lines that were drawn 
were demanding a definite conclusion. 
In front of us, 
a man stood next to the monolith
that stood at the end of the street. 
The inscriptions on the obelisk 
told of something that was unknowable. 
The man had a visor over his head, 
and inside his helmet nothing could be seen, 
no features were visible. 
He had a creed that was one for all places. 
It was really calendar-gone.
I asked the man 
who told me 
about the present and the past 
if there is light 
that doesn’t produce light. 
Is there light 
that doesn’t travel through space, 
and that travels only into itself? 
Can there be light 
that doesn’t have 
the physical properties of light? 
Somewhere there is someone 
who has such a beam of light.
    
He tried to tell me what the bottomless was. 
The place where there is no light. 
The bottom of the soul. 
The bottom of the world. 
The abyss without a bottom. 
The bottomless underbelly of endlessness. 
The beginning of the bottomless emptiness. 
I couldn't come up from the bottom.
      
We walked around the city. 
It was dawn. 
A new day was coming. 
A wino was standing on a street corner. 
He could see train wrecks, 
and was on a bender 
that was rocking his mind. 
He just let the scotch 
run ‘round his mouth, 
and said he could do 
the mashed potato. 
He had a friend named Shortwave 
who was into mainlining. 
She said she wanted 
to cut us some smack, 
give us a taste 
of what would rock our minds.
Let us see a backdoor man 
playin’ a funky blues piano.
Even if he could see, 
and we were all blind.
      
We came to an iron works. 
A furnace was burning.
Clouds of ash 
brought the hydrocarbons 
that were making the rain fall. 
Axes to grind 
came from the blacksmith. 
He swung his blade against a wall, 
and plaster chips fell away. 
The fathom riot 
of his drunken speeches 
founded a liberal paganism.
      
Miscreants were throwing 
rolls of toilet paper
into the
street. 
We talked with a poet
who wrote 
about what they were doing.
She took us to a printing house.
The assistant editor 
was reading a manuscript,
and was asking, 
"What are the ambiguities?"
The apogee of the grammarian
was his triumph
over sentence structure.
The psoriatic stenographer
put camphor on his wounds. 
There were amazing 
structural possibilities.
Shamans were talking to ex-bankers.
The cause that men died for
was given the once-over
by a brilliant ideologue.
Band-aids were made ready
by professional pundits.
The bunions of the Manicheans
foretold concepts of destiny.
 
      
I told the man who’d told me 
about life and death 
about a dream I had. 
It was a dream 
about faces of people 
I’d never seen. 
People with no faces 
were talking to me. 
I looked into a mirror, 
and saw that I had a face. 
In fact, it was inescapable. 
But each day 
I looked into the mirror, 
I saw I was losing 
more and more of my face. 
I became one of the faceless. 
I no longer had a face, 
and there were no more faces. 
I couldn’t remember my name. 
I couldn’t remember who I was. 
I walked along the street, 
and saw other faceless people. 
We were all faceless people.
I knew the only way 
I could regain my identity 
was by remembering 
that I’d once had a face.
I did things 
that weren’t approved of 
by the faceless people 
but they couldn’t show me 
their disapproval
in a way that
would change me,
because I
couldn’t see their faces.
I saw that the only way 
to regain my identity 
was to express myself, 
to care for others, 
to love and share 
with even those 
who’d been faceless to me. 
And the more I was able to do this, 
the more I saw 
that I was regaining my face. 
And then I was able 
to give faces to other people, 
who, in turn, were able 
to give faces to others.
And then 
there were no more faceless people.
      
We met a little boy 
who wore spectacles 
and had dirty smudges on his nose. 
He was in a sheet, 
playing a ghost story. 
He held a clock book in his hand, 
and asked me what was in it. 
There were suns inside the sun. 
He opened his mouth, 
and it was the sun talking. 
He asked me 
how long I could look at the sun.
      
I walked to school, 
and went to class,
trying to find out
which class I belonged in.
I didn’t belong
in History. 
I didn’t belong in Math. 
I didn’t belong in English Lit. 
I ended up waiting in the hall 
until all the classes were over, 
and then I went into each one,
and apologized for not being there.
      
The wind was blowing 
a stack of papers away. 
I was trying to run 
and catch hold 
of each sheet of paper, 
but I couldn’t catch them, 
and they were all blowing away.
I knew that each sheet of paper
that I couldn’t find 
would be a part of my mind 
that was lost.
      
I walked into a seminar 
on existential psychology. 
The instructor lectured 
on the history of ideas. 
Besides politics, her interests 
included psychiatry 
and the philosophy of rationalism. 
She said the course of history 
was changed by logic. 
There were no inner truths 
to be marsupialized. 
I asked myself whether it’s logical 
to say there are no inner truths. 
Isn’t it better 
to labor under the illusion
that there are basic truths? 
To say there are no basic truths 
is to try to state a basic truth.
      
She let me visit her apartment. 
In her living room,
she'd painted clouds on the walls. 
She'd been doing cartwheels 
in a photographer’s dream. 
She opened her pocketbook 
and showed me a picture 
of a blind man with dark glasses. 
“He used to be my lover,” she said. 
She took a mirror out of her pocketbook. 
“We're all mirrors for each other,” she said. 
“I’d rather be my own mirror,” I thought.
      
We went riding in a sedan. 
We arrived at an estate. 
I talked to the motorman. 
He sat with his legs crossed. 
He’d been to the petrified forest. 
His white jersey was freshly laundered. 
He described accidents 
for which he’d written a tone poem. 
Collisions of belief.
Thrusts on the brake pedal of his hostility. 
The kindly 
wicker basket carrying lady 
of the black shroud
at the estate had requested 
letters of introduction 
to his great-aunt. 
She served spaghetti 
in an uncontrollably 
steamy deep dish 
that hardly demanded
any inquiry 
as to what 
it was laden with. 
Her masseuse had showered her 
with a sense of longing for former protégés. 
Her rusted carriage 
was a silhouette of afterthought. 
Her smile was simple and uncalculated. 
She was in love with the motorman.
      
We came to the sea, 
and walked on the beach. 
Our feet were wet. 
Lights were glowing in our eyes.
My eyes were like headlights. 
The philosopher who was with us 
had taken so many tranquilizers 
that his face was numb. 
The griots were far away.
They had asked for a day’s journey 
to the place from which reasons
for unreason come. 
The rational man 
had observed that patterns 
always intersected each other, 
so that the conclusions 
that could be drawn from one plane 
could be drawn from another. 
But the philosopher said 
that to find the answer 
for anything, 
you had to enter 
the realm of the imagination. 
He said the only drugs 
he took were freebies. 
His only drug was experience. 
He said, 
“Where the known becomes unknown, 
that is where I
begin.”
      
We were in a place 
where all the colors 
were reds and yellows. 
The sky was yellow. 
The water and earth 
were red. 
I was dark red, 
and my eyes were yellow. 
There were only two colors. 
We didn’t have bodies. 
We only had forms. 
All concepts were two-dimensional. 
There were only two planes in space. 
If you walked through a door, 
you walked 
into the plane the door was in. 
You always walked in the same plane.
      
We walked into the other plane again, 
where we had bodies
and not just forms,
but were human beings. 
We were with many others. 
Everyone was naked. 
We were all naked. 
There was no thought 
of hiding or concealing 
anything from one another. 
We didn’t have to touch one another. 
We all accepted our nakedness. 
There was something impenetrable 
that proposed our honesty 
to one another. 
The fact of our nakedness. 
We talked and accepted our bodies. 
No one belonged to anyone else. 
Every individual
was accepted as a human being.
      
I asked, “What is the meaning of our nakedness? 
When you're naked, 
is anything changed in your identity? 
Do you become a different person? 
Maybe the more naked you are,
the more that others know about you. 
But if your nakedness is known, 
what control do you have
over what others know about you?
Do you lose something 
of yourself perhaps, 
when others 
know your nakedness?
When is it good
to want to make yourself
naked in front of others?
There’s no way of taking back
your nakedness,
once it’s known.
 
But if you're naked,
maybe the more naked you are,
the more you know yourself."
 
      
We walked 
into another part of the city 
that was in ruins. 
Architects were trying to reconstruct it. 
Wrecking crews were deciding 
in what way it would be a finished product. 
The remnants of a lost deity 
were collected for description. 
The people who were there 
piled stones to their creator. 
The Myrmidons 
who bent their backs to an overlord 
were summoned by an agèd paraclete. 
Everyone had found out 
how to put the fragments together. 
The thorn brake of ontology 
was broken by one mind redivivus.
      
I gave cards to all the people in the street. 
I wanted them to know 
where I was to be buried. 
The tombstone sank into the earth 
deeper in February. 
Alabaster columns 
were in front of all our tombs. 
I wanted to talk to the funeral director. 
He felt that a casket should rise 
and expand after it is closed, 
like a French crescent roll. 
I went to a funeral. 
There was a graveyard for crucifixes, 
but not for the dead. 
There was a hearse that had 
beaming headlights 
and was a radiant black 
and had curtains in the windows 
that looked like white icing. 
But I started to smell an old smell, 
and I told myself, 
“I have to get out of here 
as soon as I can.”
      
We came to a sacred place. 
It had been erected from rocks 
that had fallen out of the sky 
from another planet. 
The coloratura of divinity 
outdistanced all thoughts of being. 
The parson’s testimony 
was mostly not taken. 
His findings were inconclusive. 
The answer that he found 
measured zero on the Richter scale. 
He didn’t know whether God was dead. 
He lectured on the meaning of faith. 
The evangelist had a marble in his mouth. 
The heaven that was browsed upon by agnostics
was condensed into a tin can. 
But the parson didn’t know 
that they couldn’t be taught 
how to run quickly. 
Meridians of varying densities 
were what they exalted. 
His only remonstrance 
was the subject of a baccalaureate. 
He told us that answers were being given 
by people with no questions. 
The nature of divination 
was characteristically arcane. 
By way of metaphor, 
he turned from cerebration 
to seminars on how to cope. 
Basic mechanics 
were as necessary as grocery shopping.
      
We sang the Agnus Dei
and the Sursum Corda.
The life ever after, 
and the resurrection. 
The dogs were dead. 
The curses of caves 
were echoed with songs of faith. 
The strumpet put on the mitre 
of the archbishop. 
Her labors brought her 
to an altered epiphany. 
The beauty of her ugliness. 
The ugliness of her beauty.
      
I asked the parson about his sermon. 
“If everything living were dead, 
would there still be God? 
If God is what has created life, 
and there were no more life, 
would there still be God? 
Is God being? 
Is God meaning? 
Is God a condition? 
Is God a state of mind? 
Is God the creator? 
Is God in the past or present? 
What does being closer to God mean? 
Why do some people think 
they're closer to God than others? 
Who can tell someone else 
what God is?  
If I ask whether this is God, 
is that the same 
as asking whether there is life? 
If there is life, 
does that mean there is God?”
      
I asked whether there is a point 
at which life starts 
in the physical structure of things. 
Is there something mystical called life, 
other than what is defined 
by the physical structure of things? 
Is there a point 
at which an object in itself 
becomes a living thing?
And who can define that point?
And why that point 
and not another?
The man who had told me 
about life and death 
asked me if I had found out 
where to start to look for life. 
I said,
 “When I’ve
found what I’m looking for, 
I’m not sure I’ll know I’ve found it. 
Because I’m involved in 
a struggle with death. 
Yes, I’ve seen death. 
But I can’t hold death in my hands. 
I can’t really know 
what I’m struggling with. 
When I’ve found 
that I’ve lost the struggle for life, 
death will already have taken that life. 
I’ll have nothing to struggle for. 
I want to find out 
if whatever has lived will always have life.”
Time was traveling incredibly fast. 
The frequency of radio waves 
was all I could hear. 
My brain waves 
had become only alpha activity. 
I was lost in heat, light, density, 
time, space, numbers of events. 
There was a new day, 
and the time was coming.
I lived in a prehistoric forest 
with an old man, 
and we made a soup 
with crushed plants. 
The water we used 
was heavy water. 
The old man tested it 
with a strip of litmus paper. 
The litmus turned a color 
that wasn’t defined by acid-base. 
The old man drank, 
and he was at the dawn of life. 
He sharpened a stone 
that he used to make a fire. 
His invention was tested 
on a frictionless wheel. 
It was a time 
when humankind 
had not yet started 
its history on the earth. 
There were mud skulls on the ground 
that had real teeth. 
The eyes in the skulls were watching us. 
The old man had a book 
that was filled with recipes for truth. 
The halo that surrounded his head 
gave me a migraine. 
He rededicated his parsimony 
with an aspirin.
The outside of my brain was burning. 
It was burning 
between the pia mater and dura mater. 
There was no ectoplasm or endoplasm. 
There was no white matter or gray matter.
I felt as if I could do anything. 
I could make myself invisible, 
disintegrate matter 
and reconstitute myself. 
The flash uncoiled a spring 
of orgasmic feeling. 
I felt that if I were the dealer, 
I could throw down. 
I went to the school of mother wit. 
I did improvisational dance steps 
to boring speeches. 
I grew images in a bouquet of flowers. 
I copied mathematical equations 
and subscribed to a philosophy of poverty. 
I lived in a tree for twenty-three years,
and grew very dry. 
I was an aesthete, 
fascinated by denying myself macaroons. 
I knelt on the floor of a cave, 
and played marbles 
with the stones on the floor. 
I let vultures pick at my liver. 
I denied there was any such thing 
as the thing in itself. 
Destination zero. 
The beginning and the end. 
And death infinity couldn't do me in.
I asked myself, 
“What impulses do I want to control, 
and what do I not want to control? 
What impulses do I have? 
If I controlled every impulse, 
what would I have left? 
Where would my impulses take me, 
into a method or a lack of it?”
I was in a world 
where smells, tastes, sounds, 
images, and sensations 
were all interchanged. 
I could feel colors 
and see sounds. 
I could see 
whatever colors I wanted. 
I couldn’t shut 
any doors of perception 
without opening others.
We played with gyroscopes and radiometers. 
The concepts of quantum physics 
were totally within our understanding. 
All computers were constructed 
in the image of Man.
Dirigibles collided in the air. 
It was the earth that was moving, 
and the sky that stood still. 
The farmer opened his almanac. 
He said, “If you’re not watching television 
at the right moment, 
you’ll probably not know 
when the missiles are in the air, 
and you won’t know 
when there are a few minutes left 
before the world is blown to smithereens. 
The eclipse will be rhythmic, 
and right-sided, 
and soft caramel.
But the land masses were moving. 
The waters were opening, 
and the surface of the earth 
was totally changed. 
There were numberless continents. 
The clouds that covered the earth 
were only in one hemisphere. 
The earth was spinning and rolling. 
It had no orbit in relation to other planets. 
There was no day or night. 
Hardly any people were left. 
The earth had no force of gravity. 
Everything was vertical. 
The surface of the earth 
became impenetrable, 
and as hard as plate glass. 
Those that were left behind 
clung to the earth with picks and axes.
The others had fallen off.
I lived in a realm of space 
where there were no directions. 
To travel in any direction 
was to travel in all directions. 
There was no here and there. 
To be there, 
and to be infinitely far away 
were one and the same. 
If you reach the center of things, 
is there any other place to go? 
If the universe is infinite, 
doesn’t that make any point 
the center of the universe?
I reached critical mass. 
My circuits were connecting. 
I reached someone else in the universe. 
I was going to go off 
with the force of a hydrogen bomb.
I told the man who’d told me 
about life and death 
that I thought I ‘d found life. 
He said, “To be given birth 
is to realize there is no death.
It was birth to
come to life. 
But before birth, you already had life. 
Your being given birth 
means that 
there had to have been something
to be given birth. 
Your life is a rebirth. 
Birth, life, death. 
Is death the end of life? 
There is something in life 
that doesn’t end in death. 
When you’ve seen what death is, 
then you’ll know 
whether you are one with others. 
When you become one with others, 
then you’ll have found life.”