Death, The Last Visit
by Marie HoweHearing a low growl in your throat, you’ll know that it’s started.
It has nothing to ask you. It has only something to say, and
it will speak in your own tongue.Locking its arms around you, it will hold you as long
as you ever wanted.
Only this time it will be long enough. It will not let go.
Burying your face in its dark shoulder, you’ll smell mud and hair
and water.You’ll taste your mother’s sour nipple, your favorite salty cock
and swallow a word you thought you’d spit out once and be done with.
Through half-closed eyes you’ll see that its shadow looks like yours,a perfect fit. You could weep with gratefulness. It will take you
as you like it best, hard and fast as a slap across your face,
or so sweet and slow you’ll scream give it to me give it to me
until it does.Nothing will ever reach this deep. Nothing will ever clench this hard.
At last (the little girls are clapping, shouting) someone has pulled
the drawstring of your gym bag closed enough and tight. At lastsomeone has knotted the lace of your shoe so it won’t ever
come undone.
Even as you turn into it, even as you begin to feel yourself stop,
you’ll whistle with amazement between your residual teeth oh jesusoh sweetheart, oh holy mother, nothing nothing nothing ever felt
this good.
Tag: death
Tracey Emin, Death Mask, 2002, bronze Vitrine: 12.99 x 11.1 x 11.5 in. (33 x 28.2 x 29.2cm) Mask: 7.68 x 6.89 x 9.25 in. (19.5 x 17.5 x 23.5cm)
Paul Thek, Pyramid Self-Portrait, 1966-67, Wax, metal, wood, Plexiglas, 58 x 32 x 39.4
We live in history, says one.
We’re flies on the hide of Leviathan, says another.
Either way, says one,
fears and losses.
And among losses, says another,
the special places our own roads were to lead to.
Our deaths, says one.
That’s right, says another,
Now it’s to be a mass death.
Mass graves, says one, are nothing new.
No, says another, but this time there’ll be no graves,
all the dead will lie where they fall.
Except, says one, those that burn to ash.
And are blown in the fiery wind, says another.
How can we live in this fear? Says one.
From day to day, says another.
I still want to see, says one,
where my own road’s going.
I want to live, says another, but where can I live
if the world is gone?
–Denise Levertov
Daniel Johnston: “Funeral Home”

Robert Bly
Mount Eerie: “Distortion”

Jacques Derrida from “Roland Barthes” in Works of Mourning edited by Pascale-Anne Brault and Michael Naas

Maurizio Cattelan, Untitled 2009, view of the “Pop Life” exhibition at London’s Tate Modern, naturalized horse, glass and wood, 185.5 x 200 x 190 cm © Galerie Perrotin – Maurizio Cattelan

Anne Carson, from Nox

Cole Swensen

Nancy Spero
