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	<title>The Rumpus.net &#187; Dan Hunt</title>
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		<title>The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Made Flesh&#8221; by Craig Arnold</title>
		<link>http://therumpus.net/2009/10/the-last-poem-i-loved-made-flesh-by-craig-arnold/</link>
		<comments>http://therumpus.net/2009/10/the-last-poem-i-loved-made-flesh-by-craig-arnold/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 17 Oct 2009 22:00:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Dan Hunt</dc:creator>
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		<category><![CDATA[Craig Arnold]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[last poem i loved]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[I met the poet Craig Arnold only once. It was late February or early March of this year. I was at a coffee shop in Salt Lake City, I was suffering from the hypersomonlence of adderall withdrawal, and I had just taken a hit of acid. What the fuck was the point, not just of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I met the poet Craig Arnold only once. It was late February or early March of this year. I was at a coffee shop in Salt Lake City, I was suffering from the hypersomonlence of adderall withdrawal, and I had just taken a hit of acid. What the fuck was the point, not just of being alive, but of anything? I had been thinking just as much over the past year. Indeed, I did more than just think about it the year before, but that is another story and it is boring to talk about. ‘I don’t know what to do,’ I said to my friend Josh as we drove to the coffee shop. ‘I feel like I can’t relate to anyone. I feel like I’ve lost my ability to write. Basically, I feel like blowing my fucking head off.’ ‘Take this tab and think about things,’ Josh told me.  </p><p>And there we were drinking our coffees and reading when I noticed my former poetry teacher Rebecca Lindenberg standing next to a slender man with a shaved head at the register. “Rebecca,” I said. She turned and smiled. We exchanged pleasantries, then she turned her face to the man next to her and introduced me. ‘This is my partner, Craig.’ I knew who he was. We shook hands. I read he had won the Yale prize, though I had not read any of his poems.  <span id="more-36205"></span></p><p>I knew hardly anything about the man, but from class those months ago I had learned that he spoke Spanish. I asked him if this was true. He  said yes. ‘You have to read this, but you should read it in Spanish’ I said, raising the second paperback volume of <a href="http://www.powells.com/partner/33625/biblio/0374100144"><em>2666</em></a>. ‘Where did you get that?’ he asked. I told him about the two versions of the book that had been published last November. ‘It’s so good—easily my favorite book at the moment. You have to read it,’ I said. He told me he was reading <em>The Savage Detectives</em>. ‘So good!’ I responded. I remembered almost nothing about that book, though I obviously didn’t say so.  </p><p>While the three of us were talking—about the poetry classes I was currently taking, how Rebecca was one of the best teachers I had ever studied  under, etc.—I realized I had completely forgotten about myself or the dumb shit I thought was ruining my life. What I was doing was talking to a great teacher who had influenced me greatly and a man who seemingly cared about books as much as I did.  Before they left Rebecca suggested we get coffee sometime together, or a beer. It was the best compliment to my personality I could have received at the moment. After they left, Josh turned to me and asked ‘She was your teacher? How cool. That’s awesome she invited you to get a beer.’</p><p>Everything that had been bothering me was forgotten. I thought this great feeling, this erasure of the head-fogging stupidities of the last few weeks, was a product of the acid combined with being uplifted by those two poets. But I was wrong. The acid hit about twenty minutes later, and it was then that I googled Craig Arnold’s name. What I found was a poem entitled ‘Incubus.’ After reading this poem, I berated myself for not having sought out this man’s poetry before. I could have had more to say to him. But, of course, I never got that chance. I ordered the book  ‘Incubus’ was in, then and there, a book called <a href="http://www.powells.com/partner/33625/biblio/9781931337427"><em>Made Flesh.</em></a></p><p>The book arrived the next week. I was feeling much better. No matter what people have said to me, acid can be a great therapy. Though, that isn’t the whole truth&#8211;acid plus books can be a great therapy.</p><p>I opened the cardboard package and immediately read the book. The last poem of the book, ‘Made Flesh,’ was exactly the kind of poem I find myself turning  to again and again. It is a poem about love and sex and the impermanence of our bodies, our lives. The poem offers no consolation in this knowledge: ‘to know that this/ passing is all &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; and here to find/ if not joy &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; &nbsp; then a kind of peace.’ The poems that stay with me are those poems that ring true, not only in sound, but in the authenticity of its content:</p><blockquote><p>like a warm breath over snowflakes<br />To know existence is just to come<br />and go to be a single moment<br />captured in crystal &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; and released</p><p>the hold of a heart’s fist &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; a jellyfish<br />fills and deliquesces&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; a star<br />flares up fierce and yellow&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;falls<br />into itself&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;collapses&nbsp;&nbsp; oh</p><p>god&nbsp;&nbsp; the body is all a flower<br />we bud&nbsp;&nbsp; we put out petals&nbsp;&nbsp; swell<br />with the seed’s pulse&nbsp;&nbsp; loosen our pods<br />wistfully &nbsp;&nbsp;wilt on the stem&nbsp;&nbsp; and drop[…]</p></blockquote><p>Commentary on such lines feels superfluous. In my despair, however momentarily or interminable it might have been, I have read this poem, not for solace, but a kind of understanding, a clarifying vision I sometimes forget is there, easily in grasp. The only other time I’ve felt this way about a poem was when I read Whitman’s ‘Song of Myself.’ </p><p>And as anyone who cares about poetry, or who is reading this, knows, Craig Arnold disappeared on or near a volcano in Japan a few months later, in April. I didn’t know him. One of my friends asked me if he had been <a href="http://www.powells.com/partner/33625/biblio/0374100144"><em>2666</em></a>-ed, a stupid phrase we use that implies horrible death. I smiled, but not because I was amused by what my dumb friend had said. I smiled because the only conversation I had with the man was about <a href="http://www.powells.com/partner/33625/biblio/0374100144"><em>2666</em></a>. I responded: ‘No way. His death was the complete opposite of being <em>2666</em>-ed. He was in a beautiful place, maybe one of the most beautiful places in the world, and he died doing what he loved. He obviously had deep feelings for volcanoes. He may have loved them. We are all going to die. His death was tragic. He was too young. That in itself is a kind of horror. But I can’t think of  a better way to go out.’ My friend agreed.</p><p>In closing,  I can only turn to the last lines of ‘Made Flesh.’ I read these recently in the back of the latest issue of <em>Poetry</em>. I remembered this ‘write about the last poem you loved’ business. I had write something. This is the last poem I loved:</p><blockquote><p>FALL creeps like a slow flame<br />over a maple &nbsp;&nbsp;limb by limb<br />leaves that once fanned their hands<br />open&nbsp;&nbsp; wanting to put themselves<br /> all over everything&nbsp;&nbsp; begin to glow<br />brave vermillion and lively yellow<br />let at last their fingers curl<br />into the palm&nbsp;&nbsp; and let go</p><p>The same fire is touching us<br />around the edges &nbsp;&nbsp;licking wrinkles<br />into the corners of our eyes<br />making the skin inside our elbows<br />silky as old coins<br />&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; And when we lie<br />together &nbsp;&nbsp;and I feel your bones<br />blaze &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;and the rose of your face unfolds<br />and the incandescence of your skin<br />crackles &nbsp;&nbsp;like the paper at the tip<br />of a drawn-on cigarette&nbsp;&nbsp; and dies<br />in a final fluttering of ash</p><p>Then &nbsp;&nbsp;then we feel death<br />as the deepest coming&nbsp;&nbsp; then we ease unhurried<br />into the bud of body &nbsp;&nbsp;then we learn<br />little by little &nbsp;&nbsp;to relinquish<br />gracefully &nbsp;&nbsp;and less afraid<br />each time&nbsp;&nbsp; to let each other slip<br />slowly out of our clasp&nbsp;&nbsp; made<br />fire&nbsp;&nbsp; made flower&nbsp;&nbsp; made flesh.</p></blockquote><p><em>Would you like to write for The Rumpus? Send your entries for The Last Poem I Loved to poetry-at-therumpus-dot-net and we will publish the best of what we receive.</em><br /><h3 class='related_post_title'>Related Posts:</h3><ul class='related_post'><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/05/the-last-poem-i-loved-reaching-around-for-you-by-d-a-powell/' title='The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Reaching Around For You&#8221; by D.A. Powell'>The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Reaching Around For You&#8221; by D.A. Powell</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/04/the-last-poem-i-loved-modotti-by-adrienne-rich/' title='The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Modotti&#8221; by Adrienne Rich'>The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Modotti&#8221; by Adrienne Rich</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2012/01/the-last-poem-i-loved-poem-at-the-new-year-by-john-ashbery/' title='The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Poem at the New Year&#8221; by John Ashbery'>The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Poem at the New Year&#8221; by John Ashbery</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2011/11/the-last-poem-i-loved-nothing-twice-by-wislawa-szymborska/' title='The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Nothing Twice&#8221; by Wislawa Szymborska'>The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Nothing Twice&#8221; by Wislawa Szymborska</a></li><li><a href='http://therumpus.net/2011/09/the-last-poem-i-loved-minor-poem-by-bill-knott/' title='The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Minor Poem&#8221; by Bill Knott'>The Last Poem I Loved: &#8220;Minor Poem&#8221; by Bill Knott</a></li></ul>]]></content:encoded>
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