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	<title>the Buenos Aires Review &#187; John Oliver Simon</title>
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	<description>Arts &#38; Culture</description>
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		<title>Ariel Schettini</title>
		<link>http://www.buenosairesreview.org/2013/04/ariel-schettini/</link>
		<comments>http://www.buenosairesreview.org/2013/04/ariel-schettini/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 23 Apr 2013 06:10:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[John Oliver Simon]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Poetry]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Buenos Aires]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.buenosairesreview.org/?p=1474</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p></p>
<p style="text-align: right;">translated by John Oliver Simon</p>
<p>SHADE SAILS</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">Not poppy, nor mandragora,
 nor all the drowsy syrups of the world,
Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep
Which thou owed’st yesterday
Othello III.iii
</p>
<p>When night falls I’m another woman.
 Because day is something else and falls into night.
Day and night. Given and withheld.</p>
<p>But I might have said: when day falls,
Worn out from being day all day long,
Night comes and transforms day
Into a bitch, a beast, a ferocious rising
And day’s no longer day, it’s night.</p>
<p>We call that process half-shadow.
Plants no longer release oxygen and begin to emit CO2
the half-shadow attacks
like a beast in a cape, under shade sails.
I’m a chicken spider, a tarantula making webs from darkness.
Weaving all day night’s inevitability.
I stop breathing — at twilight nobody breathes — like a spider.
Give her what she wants, and there, seduced, she stops breathing.</p>
<p>Nervous system ... <a href="http://www.buenosairesreview.org/2013/04/ariel-schettini/">Read More &#187;</a>]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="http://www.buenosairesreview.org/wp-content/uploads/sofia-flores-blasco-jlc-tumblr_meyfuvPXfO1ralyy7o2_1280.jpg"><img class="alignnone size-large wp-image-1852" alt="Blasco_Schettini" src="http://www.buenosairesreview.org/wp-content/uploads/sofia-flores-blasco-jlc-tumblr_meyfuvPXfO1ralyy7o2_1280-1024x682.jpg" width="1024" height="682" /></a></p>
<p style="text-align: right;"><em></em><em>translated by John Oliver Simon</em></p>
<p>SHADE SAILS</p>
<p style="text-align: right;">Not poppy, nor mandragora,<b><br />
</b> nor all the drowsy syrups of the world,<br />
Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep<br />
Which thou owed’st yesterday<br />
<i>Othello III.iii</i><br />
<b></b></p>
<p>When night falls I’m another woman.<b><br />
</b> Because day is something else and falls into night.<br />
Day and night. Given and withheld.</p>
<p>But I might have said: when day falls,<br />
Worn out from being day all day long,<br />
Night comes and transforms day<br />
Into a bitch, a beast, a ferocious rising<br />
And day’s no longer day, it’s night.</p>
<p>We call that process half-shadow.<br />
Plants no longer release oxygen and begin to emit CO<sub>2<br />
</sub>the half-shadow attacks<br />
like a beast in a cape, under shade sails.<br />
I’m a chicken spider, a tarantula making webs from darkness.<br />
Weaving all day night’s inevitability.<br />
I stop breathing — at twilight nobody breathes — like a spider.<br />
Give her what she wants, and there, seduced, she stops breathing.</p>
<p>Nervous system paralysis, they say, conscious of everything.<br />
Don’t crack a smile but you know what’s happening.<br />
Like a spider whose breathing nobody sees, you approach your ecstatic prey,<br />
mute, stunned prey, fascinated by half-shadow.<br />
And you fall on your prey like a manta ray,<br />
<span style="color: #ffffff;">______</span>your mouth’s stinger,<br />
fluids penetrate respiratory tract and paralyze central nervous system.<br />
Shall I sing something? Sing La Somnámbula while I penetrate you?<br />
I’ll sing to you like a torch-singing spider. Listen.<br />
That’s how we’ll begin. I sing to you in darkness,<br />
in penumbra, in auditorium<br />
I see you and imagine myself as the spider and you the prey in my web<br />
in the voice of my web weaving weapons of saliva backstage.</p>
<p>Sometimes I construct the moment like a play in an old-time theatre<br />
where you’re the only audience and the lights go down. My voice alone<br />
sustains and mesmerizes you, while I sing and see you with my voice,<br />
you stop breathing.</p>
<p>How did Jesus become conscious of his divine nature?<br />
Did it hit him one day? Or was it a process, say, of learning?<br />
He slowly put the evidence together in his body. One day a miracle<br />
the next a revelation and<br />
finally he stood up and said, “I’m the Savior.”<br />
Like a plant, I don’t know how it does it.<br />
How does it reverse from puffing oxygen and sucking CO<sub>2</sub> to doing<br />
exactly the opposite?<br />
Is it a molecule by molecule process? Or an everyday catastrophe<br />
how the plant’s nervous system (nervy veins) stops producing<br />
measurable oxygen and starts to poison?<br />
I know I’m one girl now and under the shade sails I’m a different one,<br />
and when you understand what my stuff is about<br />
you’ll crawl unbreathing, mute and stunned to my paws.</p>
<p>As the manta ray looms over, enveloping its prey,<br />
miraculously, it stops breathing,<br />
as the spider goes to her mute paralyzed prey<br />
fascinated: neither alive nor dead.<br />
If the prey dies, it‘s no longer a tasty spider-snack.<br />
She’ll toss the rotten carcass from her web.<br />
It’s only that at a certain hour of twilight<br />
in night’s half shadow,<br />
listen,<br />
I’m an animal.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">* *</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>THE KISSERS</p>
<p>In order to prove the world does not exist, my friends<br />
Chose a luminous noon in a restaurant in Olivos<br />
To demonstrate with a public kiss<br />
That lovers are the only reality in the universe.</p>
<p>I knew that already. I didn’t need an op-ed<br />
Much less an empirical demonstration.</p>
<p>In order to prove that two lovers<br />
Who have found something realer than reality<br />
Are immune to customary behavior<br />
(Manners are a pious lie<br />
And they were playing around with history’s end)<br />
They kissed at noon in that restaurant<br />
Between placing our order and the arrival of food.</p>
<p>Anxious to get things on a different footing<br />
I talked nervously<br />
to curb their insistence chatting with words<br />
about travel and the recent future and past<br />
(I was wishing I didn’t know them)<br />
And from their distant orb of infatuation<br />
The kissers looked down on my mundane<br />
shallowness and gave me up for lost<br />
along with everything in ordinary reality<br />
and in Olivos.</p>
<p>I was witness to all those kisses<br />
From which they parted whole and unsatisfied<br />
But as far as our fellow diners, mouths agape,<br />
were concerned, I was an accomplice.<br />
I knew my friends wanted to go farther and they would do it<br />
And to the mute stupefaction of the restaurant in Olivos<br />
they continued kissing, while I searched in the menu<br />
for some poisoned dish<br />
So that they<br />
Or I or the whole restaurant<br />
would instantly fall down dead.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">* *</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>FOXES OF LONDON</p>
<p><i>Foxes first sought refuge here after World War II. Since then they have swapped wild rabbits and farm chickens for a diet of discarded takeout containers and other garbage food. Experts estimate there are now 16 foxes for every square mile [2.6 square kilometers] of London. </i>(National Geographic)</p>
<p>Tonight I’ll wait up for the foxes.<br />
I’ll watch from my window, with my happy meal and the camera on.<br />
They won’t surprise me.<br />
That’s why I came to London: well-fed cradle of socialism.<br />
Foxes of the world, unite!<br />
I’ll bait them with sweet cream so I can snap a photo<br />
so that people will believe me.<br />
Not like yesterday:<br />
After my friends left last night the foxes came to my door.<br />
They were fighting over garbage until I came out yelling<br />
and they scattered like rats, escaping left and right.<br />
Hungry, pregnant females.<br />
And the voice of my conscience said:<br />
My body has seen better days too.</p>
<p>Tomorrow I’ll give them milk.</p>
<p>Shy nervous starving foxes pawing through garbage.<br />
They have no idea that tonight I’ll go out and feed them<br />
so that they’ll know I’m a prince.<br />
That I’m desperate also at night<br />
Shy and nervous.</p>
<p>Tonight I’ll wait up for my London fox family.<br />
With my cheap camera and my milk.<br />
So that people will believe me.<br />
To crown myself Prince of a nation of 80 backyards.<br />
I’ll go off with them.<br />
Escaping like rats.<br />
But be sure to take out your garbage every week<br />
because if I ever return, it’s strictly from hunger.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">* *</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>RETURN TO ORIGIN</p>
<p>Today I saw a pair of chimps<br />
returned to the jungle<br />
as if they had a money-back guarantee.<br />
He had acted in the circus.<br />
She was the subject of medical experiments.<br />
Students of linguistics, both<br />
Knew and could combine 32 signs.<br />
Their marriage had been celebrated<br />
With only veterinarians to witness.<br />
This repatriation was for services done.</p>
<p>Operation Return began<br />
in the Rehabilitation Center<br />
where, to keep safe amidst their hostile surroundings,<br />
they were briefed about nature.<br />
Nature: tree, fruit and predator.<br />
Its opposite: rope, trainer, reward.</p>
<p>She accepted the new environment out of docility<br />
(or its opposite)<br />
He on the other hand didn’t want to get his feet muddy<br />
Walking barefoot.<br />
When they came to the sidewalk’s end they seemed to confront<br />
a wall,<br />
instead of a National Park.<br />
And they learned that food no longer came in boxes.<br />
Maybe the hardest thing was<br />
the distinction between “return to the wild” and “exile”<br />
which the couple had a tough time grasping<br />
and the program didn’t go any deeper<br />
because Animal Planet is aimed at children<br />
And apes, no matter how old, are like children.</p>
<p>Finally the day came<br />
when they said goodbye to their keepers.</p>
<p>She with kisses and he with an applause.<br />
They said goodbye to the end of culture.<br />
And reluctantly, they walked to the jungle<br />
Returning to where they were born<br />
Like old folks on their way to Florida.</p>
<p>When she saw the trees she ran to meet them<br />
As if she remembered at last<br />
And finally the circle was closing.<br />
They had gotten to what we all want:<br />
Freedom.<br />
They performed this last dream<br />
Just as they had been trained and untrained, did it perfectly.</p>
<p>Halfway there, he turned his head<br />
to estimate the distance from jungle to Center.<br />
His wife went on but he lagged a few steps behind,<br />
And then<br />
He gazed a long while at the African sunset<br />
as if he could look at clouds from both sides now<br />
and was lost in their depths.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">* *</p>
<p><em>Image: <a href="http://sofiafloresblasco.tumblr.com/" target="_blank">Sofia Flores Blasco</a></em></p>
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