By Marcus D. Niski

A collection of writings about place space writing and art …
By Marcus D. Niski
By Marcus D. Niski
By Marcus D. Niski
By Marcus D. Niski
By Marcus D. Niski
By Marcus D. Niski
By Marcus D. Niski
Magic steps unfinished
nights gulped down under
new waves
within us each one view
skys no longer burning
over spent seas
the clouds lie down in vain
my nest made in your arms
it’s loose body drooping and falling away
under failed remorse
into the void of unseen dimensions
[MN] 10 January 1999
By Marcus D. Niski
The flies buzzed over
the rotting belly
from which an eye came
watching for a moment.
While little resistance was shown
towards these excesses,
the shapes suddenly vanished
and were no more than a dream
published in the press.
Now our countries united
filled with a desire to gobble
down one another without kid gloves.
Majestic mushroom, Keep on!
The victories of the Red Army
have had results and consequently
the fall of the navy into the sugary milk
will end the depravities of this majestic
Hitlerite coalition.
Yes! this will be you,
O queen of graces, after the final
centrally determined stimulus seeking apparatus
preys upon itself.
Eloquent evidence of this
is also imbedded in the historic wellsprings
caught in an enormous glass bowl
that runs skillfully across a plain of mirrors.
But what arguments can be advanced against this fact?
To which we may say with an added mixture of sadness,
the dream unwinds with an angelic indolence,
and ceaselessly, the hair undulates obedient to our
caress…
Behind so many flowers,
the azure Adonis discreetly hides itself.
The last tree impotently blazes.
Drinking, cigarettes and wild living on the horizon
harnessed by desired eclipses,
weeping over accelerated throbbing,
that solemn hiding place of nothingness
which was my body.
Probed, the patient ibis
presses its beak into a rim of fire
paying no heed to the passers by in life.
Through the great hawthorn of rain
I hear the human linen tearing
like a great dolphin heads under ice
Under the claw of sense, all looms
are withering. Sitting, the spinner drowns
morning thirst muscles and fruits
crack asunder
But the sleeping lady spins
lovely threads
the furniture giving way
to animals of the same stature
who gaze fraternally at the Lions.
Meanwhile, in this hour of love and blue eyelids
I see myself burning.
[MN] 24 August 1996
In memoriam, Tristan Tzara (1896-1963) leading surrealist poet.
By Marcus D. Niski
How is it possible
to make it into the Pantheon?
Must the Gods
be pleased?
Infinitely so
I jest
But how are we to judge?
You must be the best and the worst I say
Lest you fail
the ultimate test:
For once you have
made it into the pantheon
there is surely no return.
[MN] 20 February 2003
By Marcus D. Niski
The inner clothes
we put on each morning
unbuttoned by night
adorned with useless circular landscapes
purified
in cities prepared
near vast expanses
[MN] 22 July 1998
You must be logged in to post a comment.