Queenly Swans Are Nudging Eternity Figs


“Gray Isn’t a Black-and-White Proposition: Ivory Black Mixed With Phthalo Green Light (Vert Anglais Clair, Englisches Grün Hell, Verde Cromo Claro) Cut to Varying Values With Titanium White,” oil on watercolor paper, 24×30 in., (JMN 2025).

What the hell is going on in “The Gazing Ball”?  I had to lock horns with Mitchell Glazier’s poem (Poetry, May 2025) and break it down robustly in order to reach a fragile accommodation. I’ve come to expect having to do this with much verse filtered through Poetry’s reading committee. My approach is to fall back on the godliness of syntax. If the writer respects language half as much as I do, chaos is dodged. If the writer doesn’t, we never met.

Fortunately, what scans as jabberwocky in “The Gazing Ball” does have structure once you look below the bizarro surfaces and cracked lines.

Consider the first 18 words of the poem:

Queenly swans nudge eternity figs
Yellow rose fire

Lit by a ghost breath
I’ve eaten you someplace before
[…]

Wrap your mind around the base assertion that “swans nudge figs.” An obvious-enough adjective describes the swans: “queenly.” A curious adjective describes the nudged figs: “eternity” A flagrant metaphor placed in apposition to those nudged figs further characterizes them: “yellow rose fire lit by a ghost breath.” (The reader must intuit a full stop here.) Figs whose hue is like the fire of a yellow rose — radiance blasted by a fastuous flower — is rather pretty. Go figure what kind of illumination “a ghost breath” casts upon that fire, but the expression’s metaphysicality gives it a certain staying power. In the next assertion, a speaker apostrophizes (talks to) the swan-nudged eternity figs: “I’ve eaten you someplace before.”

Let me go straight to paraphrase in order to save you and me time. Next, several unlikely subjects conjointly “nip” something and “curtsy” to something else. The subjects (actors, agents) are “venom,” “chops” (lamb? pork?), “novels” and “peacocks.” The venom is that of a “terrapin” (a freshwater turtle); the chops are “heart-shaped”; the novels are “beautiful [and] rare”; and the peacocks are “bedlam,” denoting uproar and confusion. The terrapin venom is making a mess on someone’s clothing, “sopping cream suits.” What these several creatures and objects functioning as subjects of the sentence engage in nipping are “limbs”; indeed, “nip limbs a-rosy” is what they do. Leaving them pink? The thing venom, chops, novels and peacocks curtsy to is “the apricot cross.”

Terrapin venom
Sopping cream suits

Heart-shaped chops
Beautiful, rare novels

Bedlam peacocks
Nip limbs a-rosy

Curtsy
The apricot cross

[…]

There’s more than half the poem yet to parse and construe. You take it from here (the link’s up top). Dozens of other new poems await my grappling and I’m out of time for this one. I’ll only remark that the “The Gazing Ball”’s last line is stated so baldly, in contradistinction to what precedes, that it fluoresces:

The poets who offed themselves
Have formed a small country

(c) 2025 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved

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About JMN

I live in Texas and devote much of my time to easel painting on an amateur basis. I stream a lot of music, mostly jazz, throughout the day. I like to read and memorize poetry.
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11 Responses to Queenly Swans Are Nudging Eternity Figs

  1. Striking portrait, I can tell it was approached differently.

    Liked by 3 people

  2. JosieHolford's avatar JosieHolford says:

    The Posing Orb

    Elegant pigeons cough up moons
    Plum-toast lacquer

    Licked spinach
    Of abandoned buffet

    Chinchilla syrup
    Chafing linen jodhpurs

    Star-shaped bacon
    Critically-acclaimed pamphlets

    Hysteria flamingos
    Peck at my MFA

    Curtsy
    The kumquat veil

    Regret is a velvet
    Hamster in a cul-de-sac

    Of interns
    Counting sparrows for credit

    Nearby, the dog-walker limps
    A sterling power drill

    Glazing the gluten-free
    Swine flan

    Groom-shaped crudités
    Quiver near the razor

    Tiny artisanal
    Thumb, vase

    The tureen of fonts
    Now the sorrel

    I’m a bishop
    Wrapped in faux-purple

    Inflated glassware
    Spangles the ethical gravel

    Twin yarrow sonnets clang
    In the trauma drawer

    O gatekeeper may I submit?
    O mate, pack it in right now.

    Liked by 2 people

    • JMN's avatar JMN says:

      Whoa! Richly ripped, I must say! 🙂

      Like

      • JosieHolford's avatar JosieHolford says:

        Da-Daist Tristan Tzara once “created” a “poem” public performance by pulling words out of a hat. If you put in some great random words that have no obvious relationship to each other we can all write this stuff. What I did was to go through a whole bunch of published poems and pick out a word from the fifth line of each. Add a few basic linking pronouns etc. give it a twirl et voila! Genuine gobbledegook.

        Liked by 1 person

      • JMN's avatar JMN says:

        Ha-ha! Sounds like an AI intervention. Your methodology is sound. Dunno how art survived Duchamp’s urinal or poetry Dada. Wonder if it will survive Sam Altman? (Speaking of good names!)

        Like

  3. azurea20's avatar azurea20 says:

    Interesante análisis.

    Yo también puedo hacer verdaderos desastres con un “poema” con una metáfora, con un adjetivo.

    No soy poeta, juego con el lenguaje como una neófita que intenta descubrir algo de belleza en ese juego. Nada más.

    No obstante insisto en la importancia de tu análisis.

    Un saludo y feliz finde, amigo.

    Liked by 1 person

    • JMN's avatar JMN says:

      Your remark touches me deeply, confirming what I already suspected, that the tone of my “analysis” (you’re generous to call it that) was misleading, even harsh. I didn’t do justice to my subject, and I want to enlarge on the matter (briefly always!) in another post. Your own poetry excites me into translating it, which is my favorite form of engagement. Thank you for this nuanced and helpful comment. Feliz finde a ti, amiga.

      Like

  4. Pingback: ‘O Brute May I Come In, O Brute You May’ | EthicalDative

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