& considered.
Where to start.
Where to end. What
to be. Call
me Queequeg? Start
at the fore-
head? Fill it in or
put a title there,
the chapter heading?
The chin?
Remembered Ta
moko, had seen
the death of it when
young,
old ladies sitting
on the kerb
waiting for the bus
to Waitara's
Manukorihi Pā,
green markings
moving with their
mouths. Had left
the country before
its resurrection,
part of the
twin-tongue reformation.
Using the chin would
give that aspect
strength, but
continuity lost in the
hidden contours of
the throat. The
neck? Too many
prison tats, tearing
along the dotted
line. The chest? But
only if a play, the
curtains opening.
But only if the
final scene, or curtain
call, everyone on
stage. & how to lay
it out? As
newspaper, columnar, or
else a book,
straight-down, verso,
recto, the arms
appendices or table of
contents & an
index. Dead Egyptian,
ungrateful, right
round & keep on
keeping down, or
variant helix, single.
Or doubled,
entwined, defining who
you are. Or who
might like to be. Ideal
is Möbius Strip.
Reading the message
within the eyes each
other time you
pass. Alternate.
Reading without them.
*****
Mark Young lives in a small town in North Queensland in Australia, & has been publishing poetry for almost sixty years. His most recent books are Ley Lines, from gradient books of Finland, The Chorus of the Sphinxes, from Moria Books in Chicago, & some more strange meteorites, from Meritage & i.e. Press, California / New York.
He also has two chapbooks in the Moria Books Locofo Chaps political poetry series — "100 chaps in the first 100 days of the Trump presidency."