Friday, 29 December 2017

Forgotten Quote

A journey of a thousand miles begins with the unloading of a lot

A journey of a thousand miles begins with the unloading of a lot

 

‑We must leave.

‑We must leave today.

‑We have taken care of the pets.

-Of the dog, the cats, the turtle, the mice.

-We will be as ones born anew.

‑The food we bought this week, the PVR I bought last month.

‑The others will find out about our departure soon enough.

‑The Christmas presents, the birthday presents.

‑I have this map in my head that outlines the first steps we will be taking.

‑Books, newspapers, LPs, CDs, framed Mondrian prints from MOMA, greeting cards.

‑We'll be improvising after we've exhausted the map in my head.

‑Sociocide.

‑We'll be improvising in just a couple minutes. I know we agreed.

‑We've taken care of our heirlooms, our memorabilia, and our souvenirs.

‑I'm feeling cleaner already.

‑The time to leave is drawing near.

‑Language will be useless where we are going.

‑Everything human shall burn down to ash.

‑Animal too.

‑The dog, the cats, the turtle, the mice.

‑With this journey we are re-beginning what we've exhausted.

‑With this journey we hope to be allowed to experience a portion of a second which is not thoroughly ambiguous, don't we?

 

*

 

Don't say emphatically we should think of the end every single day. Some weeks can pass without the idea. We're not all Baptists.

Marie said to him: "Please to meet you. I'm Suzie."

He came in and sat down on the bed and put his grey hat on the bedside table. We wiped his clean forehead. He said: "Sorry, I've never done this before."

Marie said: "That's okay, hon. Do you want me to say it's my first time too?"

"No, no." He looked around the room. "Nice place. Are you always here?"

"No. I move around every day I'm working. Make yourself comfortable. Should I take off my clothes?"

He quietly said: "Yes."

Marie took off her clothes neither quickly nor slowly. She stood there. "Do you want to get undressed?"

He took off everything except for his underwear. It was a start.

Marie sat down beside him and started to touch him. "Relax."

"I'm relaxing."

But he wasn't relaxed enough. Something else was needed.

"You thirsty?" she asked.

"I hear a baby crying."

"It must be in the next room. Ignore it."

He suddenly relaxed. The rest of the moves were his.

The fetishes men have, thought Marie.

 

*

 

Today I saw a boulder in dirt.

If I'd straddled the boulder, my hands and feet would not be able to touch dirt simultaneously.

I didn't straddle the boulder to find out, but I knew.

A long time ago the dirt created a flat field for me to see today, and the dirt had moved to somnolently surround the boulder.

Where the boulder touched the dirt: who knows how vast it was under the flat?: where the boulder touched the dirt, dirt became stone and stone became dirt. Or so I suppose: I wasn't there personally.

If boulders could talk, I would have asked some Wordsworth-like questions in the hopes of getting a response: since boulders cannot talk, instead we stayed silently together.

The dirt, on the other hand, was wise. It envied the boulder. How permanent, thought the dirt, is the boulder! I am ever-changing, I am protean, but the boulder is ever obviously here!

Together we envied the boulder that our minds were pre-destined to protect.

Today a boulder in dirt did not even not see me looking at it. The dirt did not even not receive any attention either.

The dirt and I envied the boulder's literacy.

 

*

 

They call it.... They call it the Coriolis effect.

Do they now.

Yes, they do. It has to do with how things spin when they're on a spinning thing.

Yeah, so what. Barkeep!

This Earth has two hemispheres, right?

At least two.

Northern and southern.

Eastern and western.

I'm talking about northern and southern here.

Why is it you can go west forever but not south forever?

Are you going to listen to me?

Okay, what?

Things go the other way in the southern hemisphere.

Things like what?

Water in toilets.

So what?

Let me finish. Cars on roads.

They go backwards?

Australia, they're on the mirror sides of the roads. They drive on the left.

Well that's crazy.

They do, they do; only they don't know it.

They think....

They got left and right backwards down there.

Wow. Different meanings?

Yeah, only they don't know it.

Do they think we're wrong too?

Absolutely. Maybe. Who knows?

Shouldn't they go backwards sometimes?

They do. Their plays run backwards too. I saw Coriolanus down there.

I was just reading about that play.

A Coriolis Coriolanus. They did it all backwards.

Good and evil reversed.

How's that?

Descended from convicts, you know.

 

*

 

Screen with stock prices sliding up on left, man describing merger, swap, Archduke, Manchuria, rare earth metals, interrupted: plane crash on parent channel, now now

Screen of overhead of close-up of fondue stirring for nine-courses and nine people (guffawing nearby) and she opens the oven: Midlands cooking hot meat pie

Screen with panthers and jaguars and how they kill compared, tender ironic comparisons asserted with talk that never seems to end: pop-up coming up later

Screen with wah-wah guitar and a cock plunging piston into a cunt CUT TO meanwhile on other couch tongue flicking clit and sucking: come now

Screen with bright cartoon rabbit planning a picnic with weather reports and a newspaper and cooking and basket-stuffing with celery: frantic violas pulling their bows

Screen and now the weather starting with Владивосток, Артем, Уссурийск, and Веселый Яр, with high pressure abutting on low pressure, moisture: down from the mountains

Screen with sincere sneers wrinkled on ravaged visages montaged shotguns rebels rock and roll blustering hammers in brightest colours surrender: we are the fucking future

Screen with black like perfect black, silent and inert, here: : : : : : : : : : : get me out of here

 

*

 

He was serious



She was goading Nik, to turn the evening into a fight. He told her:
"Look, I'm not going to get in a fight with you. I'm serious."

They went back to their hotel room.

She lay on the bed and he sat in a chair. He turned on the television.
The television was showing Batman
fighting against some Thing. The
Thing was getting the upper hand. The action would inevitably reverse.

He looked over to her, laying on the bed. She was using her tablet
computer to play a game or read or maybe she was messaging.

He changed the channel. Superman was battling against the same Thing.
Superman had the upper hand. The action would reverse.

He looked over to her. Some strangers had arrived; two men and a
woman. He arose from his chair to get a closer look. One man was
sitting on the bed at her feet. He was naked, with a shirt draped over
an erection, whilst she, likewise naked, was covering her naked
pudenda likewise with a shirt.

"I see what you're trying to pull," Nik said to her. With that, he
retired to the bathroom to sleep. He was serious.

 

*

 

At dinner with my mother, two of my adult siblings with children and husband or wife, I started to talk about something I had noticed about family disputes, but I didn't get further than: "Have you‑Anyone noticed‑You know" because my brother was talking about what he saw in Aspen and who was there.

I tried again to say that maybe adult sibling disputes are so violent and insoluble because we are all carrying around these false images, primordial images, infantile images, but I didn't get further than: "Isn't it‑Don't you‑Can we" because my sister was shoving around snapshots and smartphones of their new kitten.

So I put up my hand thinking I should tell them that children have characters that are not related to their sibling relations even though in childhood they seem that way, not getting further than: "Let me‑Isn't it‑When we" because my mother was talking sarcastically about her childhood.

My mind moved on, with something to say, about how one's character emerges from the family chrysalis and naturally comes into conflict with relatives with whom one feels a sentimental kinship, saying: "When we‑There's something‑How about" but all three were talking about a baseball game.

It went on.

 

*

 

Learning to Cry in fictional dictionaries

 

One cry, dish detergent, water, freezer, acrylic floor wax, white paint, silver amalgam, glue, local newspaper, gypsum plaster, plywood, black paint, linoleum, steel plates, screws, screwdriver, force, desert, shovel, housing materials, chromosomes, parsley

 

Mix detergent and water in 1:20 proportion.

Capture a cry in a soap bubble.

Freeze the soap bubble.

Spray the bubble with acrylic floor wax and let dry.

Spray the bubble with flat white paint.

Spray the bubble with silver amalgam.

Mix glue and water in 1:6 proportion to thickly papier-mâché the bubble with local newspaper.

Mix plaster of Paris (i.e. gypsum plaster) and coat and form the mass into a cube to a thickness of one inch deep at least.

Encase the whole inside a well-bevelled perfectly square plywood cube.

Spray the cube with flat black paint.

Glue squares of linoleum to the painted plywood.

Screw plates of steel to the cube.

Take one desert.

Bury the cube one mile down using a shovel.

Build a house near the hole you dug.

Find a person to mate with and live in the house.

Raise children, raise grandchildren, build cities and nations.

Wait for a million years.

Sprinkle with parsley.

Enjoy!

 

*

 

I saw the captains gathered at the shore near their four ships. They were looking at some big sheet of vellum at their feet. Ah, I figured. There's going to be another raiding party somewhere across the sea.

My mother said: "Hrfivr, come."

"I think there's going to be another raid."

"Be that as it may, your tutor is looking for you."

I went into the hut. Shackles rattled. It was my tutor M'Gregor rattling his shackles.

"Have you been studying your Latin?"

"I have."

Later, the sun reached four. My lesson was over. M'Gregor rattled away and I went outside.

The boats were loading nicely. My father was among the raiders. He waved at me and I waved back. He came over and called for his wife.

"Try not to scorch your face this time," she said.

He laughed. "It's worth it to scare the animals from their shacks."

They kissed. "In three weeks, you'll have another servant girl. I promise."

"Be careful. Watch the crows. Stay away from the crows."

"Tales. I'll bring you some feathers."

He boarded the ship and they were off.

None of them ever came back, and a year later we starved to death.

 

*

 

OCCUPATIONS DAY ADDRESS

 

As my old grandpap used to say: "If you can't put it in a chart, it ain't worth a damn." He was a farmer.

As his grandson, I have taken his words to heart. I have risen to my personal career pinnacle, inasmuch as I am now the Executive Editor of the Most Wanted List as published under the imprimatur of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It hasn't gone to my head.

Here's some photocopies. Pass them around.

As you can see, there's only ten people on the page. But realize this is only the tip of the iceberg as they say. My complete chart, as it happens, contains information concerning millions and millions and millions of people. Perhaps one of you is on it. Just kidding! Juveniles are handled by a separate department.

Winnowing them down to just ten is a constantly consuming task, you understand, which requires both heuristic analyses of demographic stratification and a healthy spooge of good ol' Yankee intuition. Much like farming.

On a lighter note during this Occupations Day, reflect on the fact that how you choose to spend your life is unbelievably important, and if you choose wrongly you're damned.

 

*

 

The ANGEL appeared again to say OH ASTREOTH in your current form how are you occluded so? O how can you sit there, my ANGEL, and idle be when your PERCEPTION fundamental drives it on, this creation, without end, while idly you sit and futz about instead of jumping up and down like a Deacon in a southern black church? And he said: I am too tired to jump, I am weak from the week, I 'd sleep if sleep I could. And the ANGEL said: Ay there 's a why you cannot sleep and the why you know for I am beating my wings and blustering you to keep you wake, for there 's a job for you to do. And he said: Why do I deserve this agony, this focus on my soul, there 's billions others here I know, so why to me do you my ANGEL pick on me? The ANGEL said: I pick on all all the time and all know that I do! I call them all all the time but none know so as you do how to speak. And he said: How should I speak? and the ANGEL said: Speak of this.

 

*

 

In the House of the Blues

 

Dozens or hundreds pass by this house every day. Although it's easily reasoned that only a fraction look at it, not a single soul is unaffected by it, for they all to the man do find themselves infected with thoughts of death, illness, and back door men real or imagined.

I watch them from the upstairs front bay window; I see them shiver and stop; I imagine I can hear their thoughts as they think: Damn. My heart's been kicked around like a broke dick dog.

In silence I leave the window to go stare at the unmade bed in the room with the blood red curtains, I can see the vibrations of the blues coming from the middle of the mattress where the stains are, and I can hear a voice not unlike mine own saying: Why baby why?

And still they walk on by, and shudder, and halt.

I can burn it all down. I can water the ashes with my free-flowing tears. I can purify my land with the fire that forgets. I can make the street safe again for natural-born fools, and the body in the basement won't mind none.

 

*

 

Pastural Reflexions

 

There wasn't much use to the mare any more. She's had more than her fair share of foals, five in fact. She wasn't much to ride on neither, seeing as she'd gotten so slow since summertime had passed into fall. So spring had come again, and the pasture was getting hairy, so they figured it was time for her final retirement.

Buck took her reins and the old gal followed him forth into the field. She took a look back at the barn, thinking. In the farthest of the field he took off her leathers for the last time and hooked them hand at hip. She looked at him‑her name was Betty‑and whinnied once. Buck started back to the barn and she stood there quietly looking. She shook her head, feeling freed from the straps and such.

She smelled the ground and felt the pains in her shoulders. She knew she could still run, maybe not so fast any more, but she didn't feel like running. Her ideas were all fuzzed up in her big head. Something was definitely missing. She turned around to look at the trees she used to sleep under. She walked over to them.

 

*

 

His scabs were complaining. Four days after his bicycle accident, they demanded his attention. The one at his elbow was the most demanding one. It was the Lady Gaga of scabs.

"Pick me, pick me!" it cried. He had no choice but to look at it. It had a thin angelic halo of dried pus. The centre was meaty and maroon. He put his fingernail two millimetres under one edge.

"Hey!" cried his knee's boss-as-Springsteen scab. "What about me? Pick me, pick me!"

He gently took his nail away from his elbow and pondered his knee which was a giant continent of a scab surrounded by peninsulas and archipelagos. "Sorry, knee scab. I don't think you're ripe enough yet."

"Awwww!" cried the continent.

He returned his nail to his elbow, where the scab was crying, "Give it to me! Pick me!" He pulled up an edge, and the scab squealed in exquisite pain. Blood seeped into the crevice as his clingy basal layer exposed itself for what it was. "Ahhhh!" cried the scab as it finally broke free climactically.

The scab, satisfied, was quiescent in death. The wound it had left behind was hardening into a newborn scar. Lux Aeterna.

 

*

 

Jan swept into the restaurant and took up her regular table after easily evicting some little man. She called for service. "I want music," she said. "Live music."

The maître made some calls and the band was there in five. They tuned up then rocked out.

Jan cried: "No, no, no! I meant ... a Carpenters cover band!"

A couple phone calls later and the rockers were replaced by electric piano, acoustic guitar, and thin girl.

The maître asked, "And what shall I serve you this evening, madame?"

"I'd like to start with mussels, then chicken breast picante, maybe some pork ribs in a West Texas sauce, carrots and bacon, and a baked potato. Then I'll order."

Dishes arrived and arrayed. "Hey!" she shouted. "Get Mark here for me! Get Mark and his tongue!"

Mark got hurried into the restaurant and sat across from her.

"Hello, Mark," she said. "I've decided I want your tongue in me."

Mark got off his chair and down on his knees.

"Not here, silly! Later!"

He returned to his chair.

Jan started coughing, then choking. There was a soup-bone stuck in her throat. She keeled over, dead.

Someone somewhere must have been keeping score.

 

*

 

On First Looking into Lindgren's Pippi

 

My interest, piqued by a newspaper article, did not wane before I decided this Pippi Longstocking was a character into which I need peer. And so, at 52 years of age, I have begun the reading of the chapbooks. She has of course been someone of whom I've known for my entire life; I think my sister read some of the books way back when. But for me it must have been sissy stuff. I must have figured there were far too few skeletons and monsters involved. And so it had taken me 45 or so years to get around to these thin volumes in their original translations as published by Penguin Puffin (though originally published by Viking, co-incidentally the publishers of the last book I read, which was James Joyce's critical writings).

But how I look and read and find that my life has been shaped by this character without my knowledge, a likeness that starts with very red hair and very many freckles and proceeding on to a rebellious spirit that treats nonsense as sense! To respond to people who thought: "Look, a boy Pippi!" with: "Why so surprised? Who are you?"

 

*

 

SHOELESS JACK

 

Jack was created with big feet that constantly bled.

Wherever Jack would go, he would leave bloody footprints everywhere. His custodians couldn't do a thing about this. "He's who he is," they reasoned. "We shouldn't interfere with nature's ways."

Everyone could tell where Jack had passed by because he felt bloody footprints everywhere. The footprints nearest his home were stacked eight or nine high.

Have I mentioned that no amount of scrubbing could remove Jack's bloody footprints? If I haven't, I apologize.

His purview expanded as he grew up, matured, and became an adult. His big bloody footprints became known on sight far and wide. Everyone said: "Jack's been here again. There's another footprint. O nature!"

Years passed, then it became estimated that the majority of the earth's surface was covered with Jack's bloody footprints. The event horizon had been passed, and all because of nature!

Finally Jack's bloody footprints were everywhere, and you know what? Nothing could grow anymore, and the people found themselves starved of all forms of sustenance.

Thus it is as easy to laugh as it is to recognize that all could have been avoided if only someone had given the devil his shoes.

 

*

 

The queue stretched around the block. Some wag said that each person was at the start of the queue and at the end of the queue simultaneously, and no-one had the will to step out of the queue to prove or disprove the wag's hypothesis.

How long had they been waiting? No-one in line could recall life before the queue although there must have been such a time seeing as they all had learned language; though it was possible they had never learned language at all.

One said: We have the most wonderful queue in history.

Another said: No-one could possibly beat us re our skills in queuing.

Many years passed, during which the queue scarcely moved. This is not a parable.

A food truck drove up and parked. The driver leaned out of the window and shouted: Sorry for the delay. The queue disassembled, leaving some to wonder why, mysteriously, they had formed a queue.

Sausage on a bun was the order of the day, and three dollars apiece was the price.

After having eaten, all the people went elsewhere. They had things to do, though they knew nothing would ever top the experience they'd had in the queue.

 

*

 

She told me: "Remember that, even if you forget everything else. Remember that one little bit. Let the mountains fall into the sea, let the clouds tip the sky aside, and let meteors destroy whole continents, but remember that one little bit. Even if nothing else continues to exist, including most of you, remember that. I said it clearly, so I think you must have understood. Put on the second tier all your books, all your operas, all your plays; put on the third tier your ephemeral newspapers and contingent journals; put on the fourth tier your television and your radio: put all these below that which I have told you. If you are so forced, depart from your family and depart from your friends, burn your home, kill your animals, before you forget what I have told you, for what I have told you is of such an importance that all else is derivative of it. Prior truths can be inferred but not derived, so my precise formulation, which I am giving to you and you alone, is worth more than the universe itself. Do not forget it. Never forget it. Keep it first and foremost in your mind."

 

*

 

When I accidentally notice the truth, and get depressed about it, I fool myself into thinking a clear line is best.

Music starts. It's 'The Great Pretender' by the Platters. I turn it off. I put on underwear, a t-shirt, and slippers. I go down to a basement. I pick up a front section of a newspaper. I sit on a toilet, smoke a cigarette, and read. I go into a shower. I make a sandwich in a kitchen. I wrap it in newspaper and take it upstairs where I put it in a backpack. I turn on a computer. I go further upstairs and dress in clothes. I go to the computer I turned on and read a blog or two. I put on shoes and open a door and go through and close it. I walk down a long street and I smoke a cigarette. I get to another street that runs perpendicular and I wait for a streetcar. I get on. I read a book. I get off the streetcar. I go into a coffee shop. I order a coffee and a bagel. I walk to another building and I go into it and I go up.

 

When I accidentally notice the truth, and get depressed about it, I fool myself into thinking a clear line is best.

I work and I get paid for the work. I get paid. I work for a while. Somewhere there's money coming to me. I work for more money. I do some more work. I work some more. I go outside for a cigarette, and I'm still getting paid. I go back to work and earn more money. The money will buy food and shelter. I work more. I make more money. I do some more work. Money comes to me just like that.

I stop working. I find a place on a ninth floor to eat the sandwich I unfold from newspaper. I read a magazine. I go outside and smoke a cigarette.

I go inside and work some more. I make more money. It'll go towards shelter and food. I do more work and I earn more money. I make money. I make some more money. I go outside for a cigarette and earn money doing that. I go back inside to make more money. I work some more to make more money. I do some more work.

 

When I accidentally notice the truth, and get depressed about it, I fool myself into thinking a clear line is best.

I watch a clock to know when to stop working. I stop working and I put on a coat (if I brought one) and go down an elevator. I go onto a street and find a streetcar. Some time later, I get off the streetcar. I walk down a street and I come to my house. I make a meal with a woman and we eat the meal. We sit on a couch and watch a box that's showing us something amusing. I go to another room occasionally to smoke a cigarette. When a clock tells us it's between ten and eleven, the woman prepares for sleep while I go to a computer to play a computer game and listen to a recording of music. After an hour or so I go upstairs to a bed and I lie down. I try to not let certain ideas enter my head, but certain ideas enter my head anyway. Finally, just before I fall asleep, I find myself hoping I will wake up the next morning transformed into a tiny insect.

 

*

 

There was a terrible sense to it, this dream he'd had about Jacob Boehme. What could it possibly mean to have dreamed of Jacob Boehme? It's not every day that someone dreams about Jacob Boehme. There was a terrible sense to it too. What could it have meant?

So he called up Wikipedia, at 94-547-3342.

"You've got to help me, Wikipedia," he said. "I dreamed about Jacob Boehme, and I don't know why."

"Hmmm," said Wikipedia. "He was a German philosopher, a Christian mystic, and a Lutheran Protestant theologian, considered an original thinker by many of his contemporaries."

"That's all wonderful to hear, Wikipedia, but I'm talking about what he means in dreams."

"Well, dream interpretation is about assigning meaning to dreams."

"I know that. It's ob-vi-ous."

"Okay, Mr. Demander. Dreaming about philosophy means you're concerned about fundamental meanings."

"Duh-duh-duh-duh. What do you think this phone call is about?"

"Don't be like that. I'm only trying to help."

"Fine. Help. What does it mean?"

"Oh, look at the time. I have to be going."

"Where?"

"Elsewhere."

"You're giving up?"

"You know everything already."

"How do you know that?"

"That information is classified."

"How can it be classified?"

Wikipedia hung up.

 

*

 

Magnolia trees are blooming.

Matt and Patt are walking across the prison grounds. They do not notice the magnolia trees, and I should not have mentioned them.

Matt says: Maybe things are better in France.

Patt says: Let's go check out France.

They get on a prison plane and fly to the prison of France, Paris specifically. Pretty gamines flirt with Matt and Patt. Plenty of sex ensues.

Matt says: What should we go now?

Patt says: Maybe there's a quality cathedral we can find.

They find a prison cathedral and go in. A Mass is happening. There's always a Mass happening. The Mass is super-fun and a pleasant distraction. For a moment Matt forgets he's in a prison. Patt never forgets. After all, Patt built the prison.

Matt says: Where to next?

Patt says: How about the moon?

They get onto a prison rocket and land on the moon. It's barren. Matt thinks about the prison. Why is it so big? Where are the walls? Is there anyone outside the prison?

Matt says: Why did you build this prison like this?

Patt says: Do you naïvely think I had a choice in any of this? Have you understood nothing?

 

*

 

Down in the cellar we were playing with knives when the signal from the Queen came over the government radio. She used a German word, but she pronounced it incorrectly by failing to pronounce the terminal e, and that was the signal.

We fired up our computers and connected to our Internet service providers. The bandwidth was strong: our enemies were being caught unawares.

Through Facebook, through Reddit, through Twitter, through blogs, we spread our message far and wide that the time had come to take back governance.

We jammed Parliament's channels with document requests built from the bit-heaviness of the heaviest of David Bowie videos. Soon they were paralysed and at our mercy.

The government radio began transmitting that which we had waited centuries for: the familiar dot dot dot dash dash dash dot dot dot of an unconditional surrender.

We climbed out onto the street and headed for the Palace of Westminster where Prime Minister Theresa May surrendered to us the Big Symbols of Power then brought us tea.

Queen Elizabeth II came over. We gave her the Symbols and she thanked us and we bowed.

Our coup had been successful. England had been taken. Time to party.

 

*

 

She said: "Put your hand here." She put his hand palm-up on the table and leaned over to let her breast touch it.

He said: "That's soft. Pillowy."

"And so?"

He moved his hand away. "Five years ago I found myself outside an old girlfriend's house. I decided to go knock on the door. Some stranger answered. She told me there'd been a fire and that my old girlfriend's parents had been killed. She showed me the basement which was still all burned out and a photo of my old girlfriend she'd found.

"So I tracked down this old girlfriend. We had coffee. I talked about touching her breast once and how I thought it that a lot. She talked about her parents and about how long ago everything was. We decided to go on a date, and we set up a time.

"That time came and I went to her apartment. She greeted me in her housecoat looking disheveled. She had gotten her calendar mixed up.

"I said: 'Well, I'm here. What do you say we go for a drink?'

"She said: 'Sorry. Busy. I'm having sex with five men right now, and I don't have room for another.'"

 

*

 

We tried exchanging time for space during our argument, and we almost got it to work.

She put the rolling pin into the past and said, "You're not listening to me now."

"Listening to what?"

"To what I said four paragraphs ago."

"I wasn't there at the place."

"Are you seeing my words now?"

I put the eggbeater in the past, on the table as it once was, and I said, "I see those words plainly. I still don't know what you said because you must've said it on the previous page."

"How can you not understand?"

"I wasn't there nine paragraphs ago. Can we stay in the here though we can't in the now?"

We were pretty good here.

"I'm almost ready to leave you."

"Where are you going to go? Are you going to go to the next page maybe?"

"That's none of your business. I may go to another book altogether."

"What says they'll have you?"

"I have my ... my time machine."

"You have a time machine?"

"Can't you see I said that?"

"What time gave you a time machine?"

"I don't think this argument is working."

"Quite right."

We picked up utensils and continued cooking.

 

*

 

With a lift in my stride and a lock in my pocket, I found my locker for the new year. I opened the lovingly dented metal door and what do you think I saw? A bundle of foolscap sheets, three pens, and a coffee cup emblazoned World's Best Mom. Before I could mutter: "Left over from last semester?" a large hand clapped upon my shoulder.

I turned to see a big woman looking down upon me. "Oh, is this your locker?" I politely inquired.

She pulled out the foolscap sheets, handed them to me, and said: "Cut these into thirds for me."

I counted them and there were fourteen. "Cutting them into quarters would be easier."

She glowered at me, and I replied to her glower: "Of course, into thirds, right away."

As I was sitting in the stairwell creasing the sheets, Margaret came down the stairs. She said: "Did Bronto give you that to do?"

"Is Bronto a large woman?"

"Yes."

"Then perhaps she did."

My thirds were exemplary. I found 'Bronto' at 'our' locker. "My exemplary thirds," I said, handing them over.

"Don't need 'em anymore," she said. "The auditorium will be dark."

"Happy to be of service."

 

*

 

NEW YEAR'S EVE MESSAGE - PRETAPE - [EMBARGO TO 11;59;59;27 PM 31 DEC 2017]

 

Good evening, and a happy new year to you all.

As we look back on the year, thinking about the friends who have died in the last twelve months, let us consider our own chances of surviving through the new year. Some of you are undoubtedly hoping to die, and I hope your wishes are fulfilled, as I hope all wishes are fulfilled. It's a terrible thing, this life, "signifying nothing," yet suffer through it we must. We shall all hope to end forthwith our consciousnesses

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