SurVision Magazine |
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An
international online magazine that
publishes Surrealist poetry
in English.
Issue Five
STUART ROSS Sufficient Evidence, Opus 19 after Barbara Guest's "The Knight of Sun" My feathered enemies lurk by the foaming flames, their foreheads damp in the winging breeze. My thoughts are concave like your ragged tooth that trembles in the archway of your pitiful gob. The instruction manual explains that I am a loser, puffing in a monsoon of ginger ale and shivering sand. Night arrives. It has curves in all the right places. The night's language melts with the snow, revealing creatures of armour and sundry wacky farm critters. I occupy my shiny hands, rock like a leaf on a rock. I gather sufficient evidence. I give myself a tetanus shot. Next thing you know thin streams of light separate my toes. I give each a name. Itinerary I was riding backwards on a train when I started to roar, and I roared till my brow turned roric, and everyone else on the train roared with me. (I mean, I didn't actually walk up and down the commodious aisle to take inventory of who was roaring and who was not, but by the general din I could judge it was pretty unanimous.) When I woke (or maybe it was when I slept), I was splayed in a rust-covered tub filled with swampy water, reeds poking out around my spindly corpus. I tried to let out another roar to see if the rust would roar with me, but my efforts were feckless, devoid of feck, feck-free. What did, however, transpire was that a flock of delicate poodlejays descended from the skylight above me, their feathery coifs (I'd thought at first they were yarmulkes) rustling as the birds circled the tub. The poodle- jay who was clearly in charge landed upon my bony, blistered knee and proceeded to declaim on a topic I found obscure, the pith of which appeared to be that I was dead. This thing of being in a rusty tub in a dank and magnificent house I only now realized I had never seen before: this was death. A frisson of ecstasy, though it might have been grief, navigated its way through my shattered spine, and the poodlejays roared, and I roared with them, and my train pulled into its final destination. My Life as a Cartoon I became a cartoon depicting a tin of tuna whose lid rolled back like a tongue. My parents chose not to prolong my suffering and woke me, crowing, See, we put you to bed in a crinoline netting, and told you not to crinkle your thoughts, to focus on a single freckle. Behind Yosemite Park in Fresno! I reached into the snow and formed a snowball, Beaned them, and out into the world did waddle. Stuart Ross is a Canadian writer, editor, and writing teacher born in Toronto and currently living in Cobourg, Ontario. He is the author of 20 books of poetry, fiction, and essays, most recently the poetry collections entitled Motel of the Opposable Thumbs (Anvil Press, 2019), A Sparrow Came Down Resplendent (Wolsak and Wynn, 2016), and A Hamburger in a Gallery (DC Books, 2015), as well as the novel-in-prose-poems Pockets (ECW Press, 2017). He has taught workshops across the country, and was the 2010 Writer-in-Residence at Queen's University. His micro press, Proper Tales, is now in its 40th year. |
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