Andrew Seguin


THE LESSER SYSTEMS

              On this day when
the clocks fol­low the concentric
              tem­po of a top

and the verb to be
              has worn off its costume
so the tongue can pick a place

              among pic­tures, touch
the unsung repose of shut
              it’s like the spring is one

pow­der keg of pretty
              and all the math that felt
unnat­ur­al adds up to up

              So stay with me
and stir paint for definitions
              give red to melancholy

for all I care
              for all I am is care lost
in a corn­field where it seeks

              accord, as love
is as much about a person
              as the atmos­phere they create

around your coordinates
              the admis­sions parlor
the fam­i­ly tree where din­ner is religion

              No one ever asks
about fig­ments of reality
              but they’re there

con­fet­ti and metaphysics
              make a fine pair, as do
lemon and ocean, progress, nocturne

              plus oth­er approximate
pro­nouns such as you and I
              and the only chronological

con­stants worth a dance
              the two-step we ones
call on and on

 

 

 

 

PRIVATE NILE

Riv­er flu­ent, sired
by ice in the up-high
waters, mineral

physic of the mind
which notices a poplar
cul­ture here, where

the granite’s gouged
by endurance and tin trash
roosts in the rocks and clicks

in the wind like a let-go
radio. Land­scape no
ban­dage, I pick the parts

I want to see. Oth­ers badger
me: fox-flash, lapis, a guess
down its hole, Peregrine

six­ty miles an hour
into a kill from the clouds.
No choice in vision’s

twitch to catch the last
of the lark? rook? pigeon?
for the mind keeps a ghost

named grain or peril
in its pro­tein chain,
whom the labs hack

and wish to fix with Latin,
while we less-contents
wel­come anoth­er shepherd.

Next→


Andrew Seguin is the author of Black Anec­dote, a chap­book that was a win­ner of the Poet­ry Soci­ety of America’s New York Chap­book Fel­low­ship. He is also a pho­tog­ra­ph­er with an abid­ing inter­est in 19th-cen­tu­ry pho­to­graph­ic process­es. To see more of his work, vis­it www.andrewseguin.com