ROBERT KELLY INTERVIEWS ANNE GORRICK
RK: You have written a number of long poems that seem
to have grown from a profound
engagement with scents, perfumes, the chemistry of attraction and
repulsion. I've read two of the pieces
so far, and found them exciting, tempestuous, verbally exalted.
How did they come to be? How did that all start?
AG: When I think about it now, a lot of things perfectly
aligned for me to make these poems. I’ll
begin by answering concretely…
I run a reading
series called “Cadmium Text,” and we had a reading with Louis Asekoff and
Caroline Crumpacker in February 2012. I
remember talking to Charlotte Mandell in the hallway of the art gallery at
R&F Paints. I think I was wearing
one of the last precious drops I have of an ambergris oil that’s about 25 years
old. Charlotte was wearing Saffron,
Cardamom, Agarwood by Korres. Perfume
has always been a completely private and solitary interest for me. But we met in that hallway and exchanged words
like secret agents (she said, “ambergris,” then “agarwood”), and suddenly scent
catapulted to my foremind. I never
heard of agarwood, the most rare and revered olfactive substance in the
world. So I began to research everything
I could find about it. The weirdness,
the isolation of this common interest propelled Charlotte and I to meet up every
few months and compare the scents we were sampling. She takes this stuff very, very seriously. The first time we met to compare notes, I
showed her an unusual oil. I have no
idea where I got it, where it came from.
She whipped up a related potion based on what she could smell (rose,
patchouli, sandalwood in perfumer’s alcohol), and those three things
transformed into something new.
Around the same
time that Charlotte and I started “talking perfume” like it was a dead language
with few speakers left, I began a collaboration with the poet John
Bloomberg-Rissman, the king of “putting in.”
This collaboration has been very important to me. Subtraction holds little interest for him in
his project “Zeitgeist Spam,” a vast sculpted aggregation of all the things
that dissolve in his consciousness. ZS
is like an act of witnessing that is painted painstakingly and broad like the
Sistine Chapel. The processual
underpinnings of our first colab showed me (glaringly) how compartmentalized my
own processes are, and I began to knock down the walls between the different
types of work that I do. At his
suggestion, our first colab took a poem written by my friend Lynn Behrendt; JBR and I decided on a repetitive phrase that
would ring through the piece; and the only part of Lynn’s poem that would stay
in would be the nouns.
Before this colab
with JBR, I would keep various processual work together – like only with like –
never mixing the processes into a single piece.
For example, in my
book I-Formation (Book 2), I kept
all the anagram poems in the first section together, instead of treating the
anagram process as something I could inject into other work. In many of the poems in my first three books,
I used Babelfish (a notoriously poor translation device that has now been
discontinued) as a primary disordering mechanism, and I kept that work
together.
For these new
perfume poems, I decided to go at some exterior descriptive text in two ways,
using Babelfish and another technique I use where I slowly type text into a
Google or Bing searchbox, and make poetry out of the disparate
suggestions. The latter started as an
investigation into Cage-ian, aleatory possibilities, but I also realized that
there is a strong opposite here too, meaning that every time I was using the
searchbox technique, I was hooking into a current zeitgeist, the algorithms of
popular desire. It wasn’t chance
exactly. Or a slanted chance. I used straightforward Google methods as well
to develop sections of these poems.
So the mixing,
watching Charlotte combine ingredients, watching JBR grab the disparate and
blend seemed very important.
In March I wrote
these notes to myself in a notebook where I keep track of possibly interesting
things to Google :
3/9/12
Poem idea –
Babelfish Lucky
Scent
description – Le
Labo Patchouli 24
Make poem out of
fragrance
reviews @
basenotes.net
Possible Google
treatment
What followed
comprises (so far) almost 100 pages based on six different perfumes, not always
ones I necessarily personally “like,” but ones with hypnotic conceptual
underpinnings to them. To me anyway.
RK: Blake clamored for us to enjoy "enlarg'd and
numerous senses." Curious that when
back in the Psychedelic Era people quoted that, it was mostly to foster drug
experiences--trans-sensual as they are.
What of enlarging the senses we already have (or are)?
AG: Perfume is invisible.
Many people roll their eyes at it, as if you’re asking them to believe
in ghosts. There is a flaky, new age,
intellectually negligent perception that surrounds scent. But it’s an entire realm that is completely
Proustian, sometimes plangent, dimensional, symphonic. The first oudh (or agarwood) that I ever
smelled gave me the impression that I had walked into a new room. It created a space that I could now inhabit. I think it’s funny that we can all agree on
what we see, what we hear, what we taste and feel. But not necessarily on what we smell. It’s as if we don’t have the language yet for
the sense of smell, but we’re working on it.
Robert, why do you
think the sense of smell reverberates for us, as shimmering as memory? Our other senses are more
straightforward. It’s as if every scent
has the potential to sepia at the edges.
It’s as if time imprints scent more readily and hauntingly than our
other senses.
RK: I’ve been
thinking about that, why this veiled sense is to many people the most potent of
all. I thought about a sentence in a
book I was glancing at, Pierre Bonnet’s Words & Sounds, where he
says that a sound generates in the listener “an agitation at once physical and
moral, intriguing and disquieting.” That seems exactly, subtly and deeply, what
happens when we smell anything. My own take on the question you ask has to do
with the very automatic quality of our response to odors. We have no control over our reaction—we can’t
turn away, we can’t (as we can do with music) quickly arrogate the sensation to
some domain (o that’s hiphop or that’s Stravinsky)—we’re stuck with the smell,
an almost unnamable ‘moral’ response that for a brief moment engages our whole
sensorium. And I think most of us hate
that—hate being dragged into lust or disgust without any mental or verbal
context, content, for our feelings. The
percept is so small, the effect so broad.
AG: Yes, we are hostage to our sense of smell. We can shut our eyes, we can turn off the
music, we can spit out the food, throw out the lover, but once those molecules
enter our noses, it’s really too late.
There’s a commitment to the response that is beyond choice, involuntary. Physical pain (and pleasure) and smell are
really the only things we really have to sit with – we can avoid everything
else with a little effort. I read
somewhere that the perfumer doesn’t have favorite smells, because every single
scent is a tool. Having a favorite scent
would be like saying, “I’m only going to use a hammer to build this house
because I strongly dislike screwdrivers.”
Could I be a writer with a preference for nouns? Our “moral” response is our “committed”
response. Once in a while, I’ll smell
the smell of fresh skunk at night. And
to go from sleep to disgust to trying to wait it out – it’s completely out of my
control.
RK : Do you think people are embarrassed by smells
and that uncontrollable response — maybe the way people are embarrassed by poetry —
the other ‘shimmering’ thing that disquiets our nice stable words?
AG: “That uncontrollable response.” I
read somewhere that when relationships end, often one person finds the other to
not smell wonderfully the same anymore.
A changed smell is othering.
Poetry can be othering to the uninterested, but “shimmering” to the fluent. Othering vs. shimmering. Are we embarrassed by responses we can’t
control? I’m not sure. But it does take us into our deepest, most
animalic realms. Maybe the feeling of
“embarrassment” is really the feeling that something is beyond us, that we can’t
capture the experience in a soundbite, that we can’t quite nail it down and we
feel outside. I actually look for the
feeling of not knowing where a film, a book, a perfume, and piece of music is
going. I like the feeling of not
knowing, but a lot of people don’t.
My husband Peter had his faced wrecked in a car accident many years ago,
and it really screwed up his sinuses.
Most of the time, he can’t smell much.
But once in a while, his sense of smell becomes superacute, and he can
smell the most minute things.
Scent and text are both potentially disquieting, disordering and suturing
in the same way. Lately, I think a lot
about our moral responsibility to find new language in order to make a new
world. Maybe things are so fucked right
now because we don’t have the language to create solutions. And it seems like the worse things get, the
more language undergoes a public reduction.
The trick will be to find ways to make language work with a Deleuze-ian
“yes/and” instead “either/or.” To set up
strategies of inclusion – to make things “mean” multi-valently, to allow the
vast complexities into our language, because they are already in our world.
While public language seems to undergo a simplification, perfume
undergoes a complicating. There are
companies devoted to finding new molecules that would never be found in nature,
to make scents we could never find in the natural world. A perfume now might contain hundreds of
compounds to unify them into “lilac,” a scent that can’t be created from
natural ingredients. I read that a 2009
New York Times article estimates the perfume industry makes an annual $25 to
$30 billion, that 83 percent of women wear perfume occasionally and 36 percent
wear fragrance every day. Maybe once I
thought of perfume as a “minor” art, but it’s pretty major. An invisible art. And there is enough mainstream interest to
support small and successful niche perfumeries that are like small poetry
presses.
RK: As you compose
the poem, would you admit to some sort of intention of making the poem
"feel like" the perfume? Can a
poem work in some similar way, summoning neural responses? So that a perfume based on oudh, or with oudh
in mind (that's a lovely thought in itself), somehow smell different from one
based on neroli?
AG: To fortify myself to answer your question, Robert, I’ve slathered myself
with Chergui (Serge Lutens by
Christopher Sheldrake). It smells like
hay and honey and unburnt tobacco. To italicize
its name as if it were a poem…
I was thinking about this question all night, and my first starts at it
were riddled with fallacies, but seem important somehow. Language, by its nature, is a collection of
signifiers, road signs that point at things.
In poetry, sometimes we are able to make language a thing itself,
instead of only what it points to, when language offers itself as a form of materiality. I often think of writing as a type of
architecture, like I’m constructing a building on the page. Language has that level of “thingness” to me.
Then I was thinking about how language points to things, and perfume IS
the thing. Or is it really? Behind the scenes feats of extreme chemistry
produce an olfactory mirage. Certain
scents cannot be taken, distilled, reduced from nature. That intense smell of an oriental lily can’t
be taken from the plant itself. All
sorts of chemical fireworks happen (new molecules, combinations of molecules) unknown
to us, to give us the impression of a lily.
It’s a true alchemy.
All the poems I’ve written about so far are about perfumes that carry
behind them, a hypnotic (to me anyway) “story” that I want to follow, or
rewrite, or extend. For example, Au Lac (Eau d’Italie by Alberto
Morillas) is meant to summon the garden on a small island in the middle of an
Italian lake where a 20th century Futurist painter seduces a 15th
century princess (who was also a poet and devotee of Michelangelo). That tiny story alone makes me crazy with
happiness for the ridiculous and passionate leaps it makes. I don’t want these poems to point to
neroli. I want them to become something
else likewise in their wild combining.
The perfume becomes the “jumping off point” into the poem. The cliff.
Charlotte made me this perfume last year.
I had brought her a tiny vial of something I’ve got called Morphia.
I can’t remember where I got it or why I have it. There is no information on the bottle of this
black, viscous liquid. She sniffed it
and could discern rose, patchouli and sandalwood. So she mixed up a batch in conversation with
the tiny vial and gave it to me. For the
first two months, all I could smell was rose, and it seemed to fail. Then I opened it later and all the pieces
sang together something strange. And
wonderful. I wear it now before I got to
sleep sometimes and it’s very peaceful to sleep in a smell so perfectly
unified. A unified field. Duncan’s “opening.”
Speaking of sleep, I’ve had two nights in a row of sleeping in different
perfumes, and them producing (do they?) dreams.
First, I wore a white ambergris to bed and dreamed these dreams of
organizing my life, cleaning up, putting old clothes into bags and getting
stuff and finding stuff I need. I was an
organizational goddess! Then I wore
Chergui to bed last night, I dreamed of horses as pets exactly like dogs
roaming around R&F Paints. I
recently bought a strange and floral oudh from Thailand that came with promises
of astral projection. No sleeptravel so
far…
I don’t have the type of synthesthesia that would make a poem about
neroli become or be like neroli. I wish
I did! But the lessons in perfume, the
combining of wildly disparate scents to produce something new (“Make it new!”),
push me to find new ways to fit language together, instigate me to link the
unlinkable until language has that new thing to tell me. Why would I want it to tell me what I already
know? I’m not looking for equivalences
in poetry and perfumery. Only that one
informs the other, or pushes the other into a new dimensionality.
Funny that you bring up oudh. In
all my life, I’ve never met another person, another animal, another substance,
another place with the colossal range of this odd stuff. Oudh is produced by a viral infection to the agarwood
tree (an odd parallel to the botrytis on grapes that produces the nectar
Sauternes). That wood is steeped in
water until the oil collects on the surface and is collected. Some oudh is alarmingly fecal to western noses,
some is floral, some is woody like a forest floor, some is medicinal. It differs according to how it’s produced and
where. Borneo supposedly has the best
oudhs in the world. That I could make a
poem, write poetry with the range of this substance? Perfume asks us to go deeper, longer into
what’s possible. To rethink of the limits
of what we know, our own edges, to document the world and its vertigos.
Robert, are there perfumes you remember as being important or startling
or transporting to you over the years?
RK— Never mind about me, I’ll get to that in a
moment. But you’ve just thrilled me with
one of the grandest and most precise articulations I’ve seen of what poetry is,
must be, now and hereafter. “new ways to fit language together…until language
has that new thing to tell me.” There it
is. I call it revelation (because I
stink of frankincense and temple), you call it “that new thing” And as you spoke about the compounding and
alchemic fussing of perfumery, I thought about how richly blended, compounded,
your work is. And I remember the old
pharmaceutical word ‘exhibit’—-to add a substance to a substance to be
administered, and how it is our word to show.
And that is the extraordinary business in your recent work, your hundred
pages of perfume shastras. They have the
startling freshness of flarf, in the embrace
of the rich affectual tenderness of propositional poetry, When I read
your new work I feel I am reading something utterly new, a kind of (at last)
3-D poetry, where words lead plausibly to other words in tuneful sequences, and
all that, but behind them there’s a strange spacious hinterland, a wind from
elsewhere making us doubt the foregrounded text—-a dance, so to call it,
between statement and erasure. But all
done without pretentiousness or gimmickry of any kind—-just words on the page,
ma’am. It gives me a pleasure I haven’t
found elsewhere, the rich crazy sensuous presences of your work, the stern,
technological vocabulary, the thingliness of words. When I can get people to listen, I tell them
Write what you don’t know, write what you’ll never learn until you write it,
write in Thinglish. And those are just
the things you’re doing, but pistoning off this keen sensory hallucination of
perfume. So, to answer your question,
some perfumes were important to me, but they were invariably the result of
associating the blend with the person.
But essential scents themselves, those are different. Answering your
question makes me aware that there’s probably a moiety in the world: perfume people and scent people. I am immensely moved by some scents: sandalwood, patchouli, bergamot and
(negatively) birch. So the mixing
mingling alchemy of perfume eludes me—perhaps because the raw smells of the
essential oils are so compelling. I must
be a fauve… but not when it comes to the poem.
Anne, have I talked myself towards an aporia? Have I gotten too far from your work?
AG: I like the idea of you as a fauve and a Fauve. The wild beast painting in inappropriately
odd or bright colors. Again, the weird
juxtaposition adding again to our animal paints.
I’ve put on Vetiver Extraordinaire (by Dominique
Ropion for Frederic Malle) to respond to you (and thrill myself). VE starts with a peculiar cumin note that
extends the vocabulary of all that medicinal and dusty grassiness and camphor. How can we extend our own language? What unknown cumins can we add to make it
strange enough to tell us new things?
These poems seem “Technicolor” to me, to your “3D.” They are big enough that I don’t know them that well. Thankfully big enough, and as is all my work,
written in a sort of willed aphasia.
We’ve had
conversations about how to restore poetry as a great art. As a culture, are we moving away from the
abstract into the purely sensual, the visual?
Has the sensual become the virtual?
Is language becoming vestigial in terms how we tap our canes like the
blind through the world? Can we
resurrect language by connecting it more deeply to the sensual? And have our physical landscapes become more
emphatically virtual? Where is the scent
and taste and touch of our language? Can
we touch the invisible sculpture of language?
Hmmm, perfume
people vs. scent people. People who
write poetry and those that write poems.
I’m definitely the former. You
told me once that while out on a walk, you turned around and followed a woman
wearing patchouli, as a completely unconscious act. Can scent form “songlines” in a way, singing
us, our landscapes, into being, forming invisible strands linking us to each
other? Does it form its own unseen
sculpture? Is perfume really just
another form of photography, painting’s younger sister, always compared and
found lacking, and like photography was until the 1980s, relatively inexpensive? With recent bans on perfume ingredients, is
perfume about to become an even more collectible art?
I had a brief
conversation with Michael Ives recently, how he completely fell in love with
the language around perfume, not with perfume itself. We talked about being riveted by the text the
book Perfume: The Guide Luca Turin
and Tania Sanchez, that he has used it in writing exercises in his classes. Riveted.
Mechanically. Hinged. “The language around,” what we’re trying to
construct until it’s no longer “around,” but its own scented architecture, an armature,
complete with defined spaces. Build it, and remove the scaffold.
RK: When the scaffolding is knocked away, the poem
stands. Charlotte (from whom almost anything I know about so many things
derives) reminds me of the three notes in a perfume: top note, middle tone,
bottom tone. Naturally my operatic
disposition makes them soprano, tenor and bass. But she notices that each page
of the work of yours we've been talking about, each page is like a perfume in
that it seems to flourish the three notes--three styles of typographic
imposition. Is this a deliberate
incantation on your part? Or is it one
more of the grand pervasive Indo-European trinities that Dumezil alerted us
to? Surely poems have their sillage too,
the afterness, but then they always have that.
And yours leave in my sensorium a sense of richness, intellectual play
on a very serious playground, and always a deeper shimmer hovering nigh. So, tell us about three...
I have a suspicion
of trinities, having been brought up Catholic.
Threes, fours, there IS numbers’ magic going on in the demolition
surrounding each of these poem. And in
the last few years, I’ve seen a number of performances of the Kairos Consort
singing various Bach cantatas, always in the background of making these
poems. I go to hear Kairos sing at the
monastery across the street every chance I get.
The multi-vocal seriality always at play. Three fingers chordally down on piano keys,
the notes unfolding in a perfume, its scroll unwinding.
In the end, some
fundamental quantum poetics, the attempt to let language mulit-valently mean
many things at once, be in many places at once, inhabit many forms at once. Dumezil’s priests, warriors, commoners. At once.
I’ve been thinking of these poems as Hadron Colliders with their
smashing of disparate things. I dump
language into these poems, accelerate it, and maybe in the end, particles I
never knew existed. What language has
comes to tell us. Its polytheism, its
plasticity, the baroque hidden chemistries.
+++++
A POEM BY ANNE GORRICK:
Night Repeated Daily by a Teacher of Italian Intervals
after the perfume Les Nuits d’Hadrien
(made for Annick Goutal by Camille Goutal and Isabelle
Doyen)
A reinterpreted
night
bathed in a
spangled darkness
Hours fall
downwards and alleviate the darkness
When orange bring
heat to your skin
a chordal
succession lays down a sun
Lemon flutter:
green, acidic, Sicilian
Heat averages
cypress
Basil falls in
leafpetalsheets
We look out over a
juniper-filled bay
Cringing, I found the citrus too acidic and strange
shadowed by herbaceous qualities
I own Eau d'Hadrien which I find too lemony
The lemon, although present, doesn't play a huge part in this
composition
The mandarin orange stands out the most
especially with the aromatic herbs surrounding it
Miserable
echo mills
Novelles, nomads,
numeriques
Les secretes
blanches d’une demoiselle
Hadron collider,
toilet partitions
The history of your
walls
A circle around him
thrice, a paper basket
A blood type to
remember
A new tab will
appear on the ribbon if
A table of constant
weights
[I am subject to a pathetic fallacy / its cloud of
hesperidic ambered cypress / I discovered it early last autumn / I've been
wearing it steadily ever since / Subscribe & Save: Sign up to have this
item delivered at a regular interval of your choice]
Tamil songs, talent
trees wow, a tile roof
Vesperia symphonia
genji
A torrent of facial
workout
What if you were
reincarnated as
reindeer food
or airport luggage?
Reintegrative
shaming, the reintroduction of wolves
Reinterpreting
property
Chicken décor,
dinnerware, nightlights
Lightart, night
sweats, googles
Nightshade, white
satin, pufflings
Le Nuits d'Hadrien has a dark aura
of citrusy warmth and exotic cooking spices
I made a pork roast once
which I seasoned with bay leaves, orange pulp and rosemary
This fragrance reminds me of that beautiful winter dish
Let’s Let’s tell a new
story about how
the Emperor Hadrian reinterpreted the
Tuscan night
how he was a magical teacher of Italian
intervals
We are soaked in darkness
tell It knits around
us
Undersky inland inlaid with our walking
When character is spiced with oranges
and it burns deepred and also falls
a When the heat
is functional and single on your skin
When it smells like calmness and time
Lemon comes in chords and reflects its own
facts
Put this in place: solar Toscana
story happening in exchange
for color
Bergamot, inland cedar, basil
Egyptian cumin comes in contact with our
approximate bays
Amber comes in the from the east and acts
surprised
about Let’s make a note of
ourselves in tangerine, musk, green
Can be worn without any problem
in a hot/humid country
If the original was too tart, give this a try
Airy and light enough for hot weather
it opens in the classical Eau De Cologne style
Templar symbols,
plush sequins
Determine the
number of deer
and destroy the
island of shopkeepers
Silk depicted, use
“Our Lady of Guadalupe” in a sentence
An ecosystem
balanced in woodland
An artistically
abstract goal
A cell at the
beginning of mitosis
She was a snow
florist
Gel bra cataclysm,
an oblivion of items
A wedding soup in
translation
[As the first dawn turns to the last sundown, Les Nuits
d'Hadrien is born / Men's 3.4 oz EDT Spray at an everyday discount price on
Overstock.com! / Become your very own wonder woman / Have this / Want this / You have 0 wants left]
The brightside of a
perfection in dresses
A clapalong
infused with
bloodlight
infused with wow
Dreft depravity,
Dawn soap, bird mites
Touch ministries in
plain swim sight
in dash navigation,
let me dwell in a movie-ed confusion
When the noon has
darkness around its eyes
around its neck
A night riddled
with animations
Should the puja
room door close:
an opera
in wishterrorsweat
An interesting twist with the appearance
of an astringent artemisia note
joined by herbs and something coniferous
An oriental which I can appreciate for its restraint and light style
It has two distinct phases
The first is an herbal-green scent very much in the style of Eau
d’Hadrien
This is a new
history of night
night repeated
daily by a teacher of Italian intervals
To walk under the
knit of night
The sky
inside inlaid with
red-darkness
burns with the rare
scent of heat
that chooses your
skin
Recently calm was
uncovered
Time lightens
itself of facts
Lemon expertly
cables a solar code of Tuscan permissions
Mandarin green
acids average with fame
Egypt at the center
of this cumin-ed bay
makes a strange
eastern base
Green mandarin
mandarin / bergamot / mosswhite
There is an aromatic citrus/green aspect
which suggests a fine, classic EdC
GROUP. Citrus-Aromatic
GENDER. Safe choice for both male & female.
CREATIVITY. Another citrus
scent but very wisely blended
You certainly won’t impress wearing this one
but that is not always the point
Can you capture a
prayer with photography?
Satellite images of
her seizures, coughs
Study forms and
their templates
Nightmare, cherry
tree, velvet cloak, killing paper
Starlet skies, mood
lipgloss
Speed reflects on
the windshield, reflective learning paper
Transparent teal
The sunroof is the
fundamental flaw of this country
I first believed in
the power of obituaries
then in glass
anointing, whitening
[Gift wrap available / Fragrance fit for a princess
inspired by a night time stroll under a starry Mediterranean sky / Les Nuits
d'Hadrien is a citrusy, spicy and warm green mandarin / Zesty tangerine combine
with hints of basil]
When nature calls
pest control
Her hair was made
of gas
A valley filled
with photography and quotes
Set apart girl, set
aside prayer
Dustland fairytale
disease
Dusky dolphin
enemies
I come iridescent
without being fetched
From the belly of
god
Dusk shark, marine
Dusk fang oblivion
Dusk fatigue
The finely balanced hesperidic opening
(lemon zest, mandarin, bergamot
and a touch of star anise)
I wish it could last longer
Delicious bright yellow lemony opening
turns soon into a quite ordinary week
Contact This is a new historical and
redundant night
the type that requires a Tuscan explanation
of this pregnant place
is where Italy’s
intervals are an inconceivable teacher
We soak up night and knit our walks under a
corner-mounted sky
Salty orange characters smell like autumn’s
burnt darkred
The heat chooses your skin
intrinsic and exposes it to
tranquility and time
Illuminated components are a lowland
reflection
A new lemon smells like an expert
sends cable codes to the sun, an investment
and Color revises smell
in
lemon permissions spoken in Chinese
with a green and acid bergamot
probably Average in crowndaisy
chrysanthemum to this Egyptian center
Contact is intrinsic and probably a
transformation
is fragrant and warmer with promiscuous
functions
a Amber is a
strange basic eastern part
Nights famous for afforestation
standard spoken Chinese standard spoken
transformation and lemon and sandalwood, mossamber
Perhaps unisex, no problem
but what I think is how exquisitely it would probably work
on skin to skin action
with some beautiful woman. – PigeonMurderer – Finland
Mouthwatering, sour, realistic lemon
I don't believe it will attract many adoring fans
My desk falls apart
Church Motors
Catholic Credit Union
Rocker arm noise by
surprise, wrist pin knock, system bounce
She glistened
with cold
with a neck so long
and a negative
spirit prevailing
The new food
pyramid might include:
metals
discography
glory
coves in Bermuda
Found calm
money sleeps in
caskets in the calmness thesaurus
To give off light
as a smell
synonyms sparkle
Caffeine as
perspiration
as definition
[A sharp and complex fragrance that manages to be
subtle enough not to intoxicate with its opulence / As the first dawn turns to
the last sundown / a cypress tree in Tuscany scents an evening in the
Mediterranean with its mandarin green]
The sensation of
vinyl pressing into information
A rare skin disease
with a greenish color
Seaweed, extract
from the earth its magnets
Seashells,
snapbacks, Tantric soap – black currant, vanilla
Allergies in the
workplace
One easy delicious
sentence
in old roses
cross-stitched with oak
Our kidneys, our
spiritual strivings
or having to do
with the lungs
Picture a lemon creamsicle dipped in gold
that came in an opulent sandalwood box
It reminds me of Christmas Eve as a child
It could easily be used in the summer
It has an outdoor feel to it
A confused, unfinished fragrance
with a lot of projection
Recite Italy’s
intervals with an inconceivable teacher
who regards a
redundant night as a woven patrol
A description
mounts from an explanation
There is a new
history of Hadrian under this sky
Chinese characters
tranquilly, recently smell like salted oranges
their spices
exposed and therefore possible
The rare smell of
an autumned burntred darkness
Heat chooses your
skin and illuminates your reflected facts
This is the new
lemon – a telegraphed code
An expert invests
in the sun
Color revised smell
to order this permission
Lemon, Chinese
standard speech, green and sour bergamot
Coronarium (white
ginger lily)
and the
chrysanthemum’s famous average
The Bay of Egypt
affects us promiscuously
Amber makes a night
famous with afforestation
Standard speech
Chinese standard speech Chinese
lays in the moss
The patchouli overwhelms the citrus
and there's a nagging cumin
in the background silently screaming for attention
yet getting none
More of a combination of hairspray and patchouli –
something of the "society ladies" in the little farm town
where I grew up
Pink wedding black,
silver illusion necklace
Spiders get along
together, spiritually speaking
War dogs bring
water to dry places
The glow of other
suns is for sale
A tolerant Dracula
dances in a battlefield
Your skeletal
system is pale white and ice cold
Your skin makes me
cry younger lyrics
You take the cast
off smoking
[…comes in two different concentrations with
designations more or less female/male / This scent is a student of the French
Art Decoration School / A hand-painted cypress tree illustrates our new limited
edition Les Nuits d'Hadrien with orange stars]
Sunny days are
single musical tones
Successories, fresh
frozen plasma, easy corporate fun
Salt water so
clean, spaetzle sportswear, Choctaw casino
The grenade was
also a halleluiah
Everlong acoustic
What is the
character of gasoline?
Let’s go to the
Chinese typewriter store
Let’s change
fractions to decimals
I thought that this is what
an egoiste in summer might smell like
If you like your citrus foul and pungent
(a la Eau d'Hermes or Malle Bigarade)
This one may not be a good fit for you
Hold Ask an
incomprehensible teacher about Italy’s intervals
How they spin inside an redundant night
How description acts like a patrol
There are lots of explanations for the
edges of night
the one of which is a
new history of Hadrian under this sky
Letters smell like recently salted oranges,
their spice put out
Autumn smells rarely of its own burnt
density
Heat selects your skin and exposes its
facts
edge The new lemon is a
telex code, expert as it invests in the sun
Hold the edge of the land and clean it
Color editions our sense of smell
of Lemon in
standardsour
Bergamot: the language of China and green
the The
chrysanthemum’s famous average
between coronation and culmination
Egypt is multicolored with disorder
land When amber is
strange and fundamental, eastern as a subject of night
In the quest for
the fully rounded citrus wardrobe
this one is essential
A definite considered purchase
for those of us not made of money
This is one that I can admire but not love
I'm willing to cut the powder notes some slack here
Hydrangea knitted
with grout
Auras, amniotic
fluid, antifreeze
A mineral lion
Skullbone prefixes
gin joint
A thousand days of
thinking bubbles
A tuna Christmas, a
pie Jesus in Mimicville
Sunflower festival tanning
Travertine, this
present darkness is condemned to a photograph
This person doesn’t
allow invitations
There is a perfume
taste in my mouth
[Les nuits d' Hadrien racontent une nouvelle histoire /
Une parenthèse italienne enchantée, bénie par l'obscurité, inspirée par une
promenade dans un jardin / A a refreshing trail of fresh and ambery citruses
that tell an enrapturing story as the luminous day turns to the sorcerous night]
The percussion of
white dresses
The shape of an I
on her forehead + baton twirling
The stars are made
of sangria, sake
Her sugared show
clothes
How do the missing
smell?
Cut grass, placid
cows, Christmas aromatique simmers
Cinderheart
She is a citation
machine
Beurre blanc,
bergamia
The side effects of
the Sicilian Defense
or a resort in the
middle of a volcano of proverbs
Not so much bugspray
or washing detergent
as the original
Heavenly hot summer evenings on the patio
trailing vines swaying in the desert wind
Adobe walls giving back the solar heat they've soaked in
during the blazing hours
When night is
depicted as flood
by an excessive
teacher
who has
incomprehensibly spun Italian intervals inside night
The lower parts of
the sky attach themselves to explanation
We demand a new
history of Hadrien from the edges of night
Handletter it
recently, peacefully with a salty orange smell
The smell of autumn
is rarely possible any other time
having, rising in
compliance in deepred degrees
Spices strung along
your skin ignite
Reflected emissions
distinguish our factual last
A new lemon smell
in its case, a facsimile
A new publication
of its smell
Open the sun and
clean it
The sun is in leaf
Lemon languages
China, it’s national flower
Our domestic
sciences are noble and wise and average
the effects
received only from disorder
Amber dances on the
eastern side of night
a subject which is
so basic and also so strange
a telerecording of
a standard language
Lemon basted with
sandalwood, musk
Very subtle, and there is a warmer feeling
than is usually the case with citruses
In the heart notes, the herbs and conifers
continue in elegance toward a rich, full accord
I think the cumin plays a very important role
On my skin, the entire progression takes a little over an hour
The dry down is a bit annoying
Juice, ice,
chicken, white cake, liqueur
Lemonmouth, lemon
grenade
Gold wedding
Coffee brown pink
wedding
Apple barnriver
wedding
Purpleblack wedding
White anaconda
yellowsong gold wedding
Accessor and
mutator methods
Tanorexia, quartz
music
Tissue paper boxes
with fire
[Have you tried any of the above? / Can you recommend
anyone with the same notes? / The colors of sunset: mysterious warm sensual top
notes / Need a perfect scent to go with your spring yellow outfit? / Les Nuits
d'Hadrien fits the bill with the spicy lemon scent / A pretty bottle with old
world charm]
Velvet banks under
sun given to
a middle name
generator
A piercing
gardenia, mimosa
make up some notes
that float around
and sound good
together
What is the
smallest unit of music
that still thinks
of you?
It contains one of
the most classic French combinations:
orange and amber!
This is a common combination found
in many distinctly French fragrances and toiletries
that I use on myself and my children almost daily
I know this combination very intimately
from childhood until present
A An approximate
night is flooded with description
and turns incomprehensible
Italian intervals spread out, their
expenditure of night
An interior lower part of the sky
transfer attaches to night’s edge
Mark with letters the recently peacefully
salted orange
When autumn meets your skin with its
carefully chosen spices
When a bottom-of-the-range facsimile of
lemon
of arrives like a
new publication
its edges rectified
and invested with permission
science The sun opens and
cleans him
Sheet, lemon, China, flowers crowning
A transfer of science might domesticate an
Egyptian cumin
might Effects received only
from disorder
Hadrian’s night is so basic and so strange
like a telerecording of a standard language
domesticate how it indicates business through
its lemons
Until I return to the workforce
I will enjoy its more affordable, fleeting, and common blood relative
It comes the closest to poetically capturing
the desert sky at night
I don't know how, but trust me on this
A book shattered
like the birth of prison
A carnivorous fat
medicine
A kiss cam under
the sign of gorgeous
The state of Ohio
when exposed to cold
Her glowblood for
sale
Winter ovens over
her lyrics
when it snows less
snow
[Spices brings warmth to your skin, and is pleasing to
share / Parfum hespéridé, oriental et amber / Une composition de mandarine
verte, tangerine acidulée, bergamote / The Annick Goutal Boutique online ships
to the following European countries:
Austria]
These are tough
times for typing
The edge of your
heart under a clavicle, a clavier
Three digit orange
beauty
We’re in Bling
Country, Missouri
Medicinekarapitiya
Cypress turning
yellow, turning brown turning black
in Hindi, in
Spanish yellowing
There is something ancient in this
something that seems to go back to cultures from long ago
and that makes it fascinating to me
The kinds of things people
in ancient Rome or India
may have scented themselves with or burned
in urns as incense
When does it become
excessive to be a student of intervals?
When is it
impossible to understand these floods of description?
Turn off the
approximate night
and attach it to
the lower part of the sky
How do we fix our
nights inside?
Explanations
recently in orange add to the salt of peace
There are signs
where a letter has been attached
to a darkred
density of its reflections on your skin
Fire chords adjust
to measure time
Colors publish
themselves in facsimile
The sun continues
to open up each of us methodically
The green in which
you follow the Chinese language
and the new
coursing movements of science
Under the Hadrian
night
we are basic and
strange and famous
we follow the sound
recording of distant lemon
the whites that act
like amber
the shake of ylang
ylang against the distant Oh Lemon
Of course
too much of a good thing is
too much
I soon found out
that the smell did not last very long
so a lady in the perfume shop gave me this advice:
because of the conditions found in male skin
men should always use a moisturizing cream
before using a perfume
just to make it last longer
Equivalent extract
eaten
Should I leave out
the rest?
The discography of
your eyes
under cotton sheets
[An enchanting Italian interlude bathed in electronics,
cars, clothing, apparel, collectibles, sporting goods, digital cameras, and
everything else / 70% off retail prices on Les Nuits,
Hadrian's sexy older sister]
Juno in Pisces,
junkyards, juniper credit cards
Toxicity in the
Juniper Book
Trifles that makes
everything taste sweet
The singer, the
body, the peace of dead things
in a jar from the
heartland
Rumba playing with
the right set of eyes
How does Christ
smell, or Tacoma, or coffee, or the Alps?
Or servanthood?
Your shoulders have
been abducted
and replaced with
sunflowers
or you’re drinking
a bottle of sauvignon blanc out of spite
Salt and its
sacraments over
an absinthe-minded
dreamscape
I am a little bored
of the all in all
quite overrepresented
citrus notes of this smell
But you never forget a first love
Their Are we excessive in
our Italian intervals?
You cannot occupy a central flood of
description
and touch the actual rough parts of night
Had Hadrian hoped to determine the extent
of night?
rope Recently, orange
added its own salt to the story
letters marked by their own infrequent
lines
their darkred slowness, an exemption of
skin
codes Fires select their
seasons, their rope codes
Quite unknown
and unfortunately
terribly underrated
This night time version of the original Hadrien
has some brilliantly executed
semi-dirty musk notes
accompanying the regular lemon blasts
Rose collapse,
mosquitos, vinyl-ly
Vanilla twilight,
vanilla offense
A wildlife
experience
a theoretical lens
a flight from Syria
to Madris
a competitive
landscape
a reason for
handwriting
Offer a cobra
Write a weather
report adventure poem
Come up with a fact
about cells that is also about your mother
Baskets filled with
black and gold ejected images
The curvature of
your mask
Mango gaming
dragonet fish
[I've tried on it on paper only and liked it, but have
never worn it / But with more pronounced notes of orange zest, precious woods
and touch of musk / Nuit Étoilée seems like a cousin of Goutal's Eau d'Hadrien
and Les Nuits d'Hadrien / A delicious burst
Tangerine
clementine kool-aid
Bridesmaid dresses
summarized in vines
lemon-ylang
Dreams made out of
quartz and music and books
Her eyes are
shadowed with coupons for Chanel
slippery shrimp
eyeshadow
wiki wrist malas
What white
hide-paint can do for you spiritually
There are mushroom
in the lawn
Sheer woods filled
with pear trees, mallow, galbanum, salt
It all ends in a pleasantly spicy drydown
and my only complaint would be
it's somewhat short duration
My girlfriend also made the remark
that I smelled like her 60-year old father
Not exactly what I was looking for
Open and measure
time
Clean copies,
smells are informed publications
and consequently
the sun
because there is a
new lemon
A course of locomotion
over acid green, cumin
when musk,
tangerine, dill, moss, Chinese characters
become the standard
science of our intervals
*****
Anne Gorrick is the author of: I-Formation
(Book 2) (Shearsman Books, Bristol, UK, 2012), I-Formation
(Book 1) (Shearsman, 2010), and Kyotologic (Shearsman, 2008).
She is currently co-editing (with poet Sam Truitt) an anthology of innovative
Hudson Valley poetry titled In|Filtration:
A Hudson Valley Salt Line (Station Hill Press, Barrytown, NY, 2014).
She collaborated with artist Cynthia Winika to produce a limited edition
artists’ book called “Swans, the ice,”
she said with grants through the Women’s Studio Workshop in Rosendale, NY,
and the New York Foundation for the Arts.
She has also collaborated on large textual and/or visual projects with
John Bloomberg-Rissman and Scott Helmes.
She curates the reading series, Cadmium
Text, which focuses on innovative writing in and around the New York’s
Hudson Valley ( www.cadmiumtextseries.blogspot.com
) She also co-curates, with Lynn Behrendt, the electronic journal Peep/Show at www.peepshowpoetry.blogspot.com Her visual art can be seen at: www.theropedanceraccompaniesherself.blogspot.com
Anne Gorrick lives in West Park, New York.
+
Robert Kelly was born in Brooklyn (Marine Park, Sheepshead
Bay, Old Mill, City Line, Crown Heights), studied at CCNY and Columbia
(1951-1958); worked with and learned from the wonderful poets of the Lower East
Side scene — Paul Blackburn, Jerome Rothenberg, David Antin, George Economou,
Diane Wakoski, Jackson MacLow, Armand Schwerner — helping develop the Blue Yak
bookshop on 10th Street, Trobar magazine, and Trobar Books. 1960-61:
taught at Wagner College on Staten Island. Soon after the inauguration of John Kennedy,
migrated to the Hudson Valley and has lived there ever since, in Annandale,
teaching at Bard College. He was the
first Poet-in Residence at CalTech, and has taught or done residencies at Yale,
Tufts, USC, Kansas, Dickinson, Buffalo and elsewhere.
Among his many books
of poetry (starting with Armed Descent,
1961), are Finding the Measure, Flesh Dream Book, A Common Shore, The Loom,
The Convections, A Strange Market, Lapis, May Day, Sainte Terre, Fire Exit, Uncertainties. His fiction includes the novels The Scorpions, Cities, and The Book from the
Sky, and five collections of short fiction: A Transparent Tree, Doctor of Silence, Cat Scratch Fever, Queen of
Terrors, and Logic of the World. Forthcoming are a collection of poems, The Secret Name of Now; five recent
plays, Oedipus after Colonus and Other
Plays; a cycle of poems on archeo-linguistics, Opening the Seals; and the long poem The Hexagon. Pierre Joris
and Peter Cockelberghe are editing a two-volume collection of essays by and
about RK. Currently teaches in the
Written Arts Program of Bard College, where from 1980 to 1992, he was a
founding member of the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts
(1980-1992). He lives in Annandale with
his wife, the translator Charlotte Mandell.
This is a great, great, great, great, great, great, great exchange.
ReplyDeleteLet me be clear: I really liked it.