On the Impossible Occasion of an Old Leonard Cohen meeting Young Federico García Lorca for Tea in a Buddhist Monastery in the Catskills, 1929
On the Impossible Occasion of an Old Leonard Cohen meeting Young Federico García Lorca for Tea in a Buddhist Monastery in the Catskills, 1929
I wash with scrub
in a silence so luxurious,
so still, it is rhapsodic,
almost lewd to my liking.
You think I’m kidding,
do you not young man?
Everything for you is
ensconced on a throne
of deep, and great danger.
Federico, your name’s sake
is the scream, planted green,
green, so heaven-climbing,
green, where walls to earth
and eaves do meet,
where blood spills by moon
and civil hands, cry of gypsies
at their shining leather feet.
My boy. I am peace between
pebbles thrown into water,
I have women or men
for you if you want them.
My kitchen serves breads
aromatic, soft, and whole
to ease you after your
journey to our America,
and today I wonder, child,
at spirits—what devil or which
talent as forest fire burns
the soul of your pen—rent poor
of metaphor, drained of similes
in verdant Granada today.
What of New York—has
my Andalusian puppy come
to chide? Dear, we sing!
Secret chords into each other,
we please the Muse
and cease our Civil War,
stamp heels together—
splintering the cedars
from the naves to the tops—
to the slow, red stops!
of the Soleá,
and make the weave
of your pouting, black locks wet
with fixative to slide
words smearing unintelligible
on the page—a wildness asking,
a pregnancy begged.
Leonard, perhaps men can stop
making sense of women,
perhaps life becomes less interesting,
perhaps even boring.
Leonard, I want to burn the ark of heaven
dressed in pesetas and prayers.
Give me agency and excess,
give me your disease and prowess,
I want to touch this sexless mystery.
Leonard, today I am the Germans
who bleed Guernica,
Krakow’s ovens blessing Poland.
I will sit one day in the West
inside the bomb in New Mexico,
I will light the sky with el duende,
the grace and violence of all the poets
riding black horses on a plutonium core
without a door, the sweet life dancing
inside an eye with no walls slightly smiling,
with no walls broken widely open.
14 thoughts on "On the Impossible Occasion of an Old Leonard Cohen meeting Young Federico García Lorca for Tea in a Buddhist Monastery in the Catskills, 1929"
Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.
Wow.
…love the language! It works.
Works well.
Aloud it rolls!
I like it too! I like the long strip of narrative works. You effectively switch to Leonard Cohen as I’d almost forgotten about him. Very good,7 Manny!
Good Lord, my typos. I meant to say words not works and who knows what a 7 is doing in there.
el duende:
the impossible
becomes possible
and in some universe
this has happened
because you’ve made it.
Manny you are
“a sort of corkscrew that
can get sensibility
into an audience”
Love the whimsy of this, and the short lines, which give it structure. Well done.
Appreciate the title — very helpful and important in orienting the reader for this poem. Love “your namesake is the scream planted green, green…”
I love how you put these two in conversation with each other. That dichotomy between experience and understanding grounded with lush language: “the grace and violence of all the poets/riding black horses on a plutonium core”
I love this!!!
And this part really jumped at me this time around.
“Leonard, perhaps men can stop
making sense of women,
perhaps life becomes less interesting,
perhaps even boring.”
Such a beautiful part of the poem, reminding me that in some cases we can never really truly understand what other people think or feel. And sometimes, maybe we shouldn’t try too hard to figure it out. Well done Manny, like always!
I’ve been telling people, Eirill, when they ask what my life is – that it is boring and lifeless. They leave me alone. Then I find myself surrounded by people like YOU, and Michael, and it is rather pleasing, even exciting–don’t you think?
I mean– who really wants to spend time with a person such as that who ask such a literal question as “what do you do to spend your time?” or “what is your favorite color?”
Personally, slap me in the face and reject me–make me cry and let me know the fool you really are so I can continue on with my dumb birds, my boring books, my dreadful room, jank car and record collection. And my siblings that came to me in a dream.
I feel you on this my sibling from another dibling. I find life to be a much more enjoyable place when we laugh ourselves stupid, falling of chairs over stuff we never felt safe enough to say or do in the company of people who asks “what is your favorite color?”.
Anything’s game if your brave enough 😜
HAHA!
“You want it darker” may be my fave album of LC’s. No, it is my fave. Because I tend toward the dark, too. I’m a sucker for this poem. Such a joy to read aloud.
Take this Little Viennese Waltz.