Wednesday, June 24th, 2009...11:13 am

todd moore | leaving a little blood on the floor

Jump to Comments

Do you think it’s possible for a poem to bleed? Do you think it’s possible for a poem to breathe? Do you think it’s possible for a poem to have a life of its own? Do you think it’s possible for a poem to have a soul?

Rumor, anecdote, or outright exaggeration, this story persists about Lorca’s execution. Just before he was forced to kneel in front of the killing wall in Granada, Lorca passed a poem he had just written to one of the soldiers on the firing squad and the man read it and discovered he could not participate in Lorca’s murder. And, right after Lorca was shot, the soldier was also shot for insubordination and later thrown into a ditch with the paper containing Lorca’s poem shoved into his mouth. And, the blood was all over everything.

dillinger.jpgI’m working on The Name Is Dillinger. I’m sitting at the dining room table in the old house in Belvidere. For some reason, I’m home alone. The old Royal typewriter is sitting in front of me. It’s black all over except for the name plate where some of the black has been rubbed off showing the brass. And, the poem is really beginning to jump at me. I’ve already written some pages in longhand and now I am typing and Dillinger is talking. And, he’s talking to me at the top of his lungs and it’s hard for me to keep up because it feels like I’m taking dictation. I’m typing on the old Royal as fast as I can and I know I am misspelling words but that doesn’t matter I’ll correct them later because I don’t dare stop and Death is sitting across from me. If I look directly at him I won’t be able to see him. I can only catch quick glimpses of him if I look out of the corner of my eye.

What is so ironic is that Death thinks that by distracting me he’ll mess up all my rhythm and that I’ll fuck the poem up for sure. What he doesn’t realize is that he’s one of the major inspirations for the poem in the first place. I need him there. I need him to be sitting at that dining room table because when I write a poem like The Name Is Dillinger I am actually eating language in great big bites and when I eat language I also need to eat pieces of Death as well. I need to keep tasting the words and tasting Death’s quick stink and rot. I need to devour a whole universe of Death along with the skin and the blood of the poem.

Whenever I get interviewed nobody asks me how I can manage to keep my day life separate from the night of the poem. Or, maybe that kind of question just doesn’t occur to anyone who doesn’t write the long poem, the epic, the saga, the novel dreaming itself into the frenzy of the poem. What happens, at least to me, is that I am somehow able to speak both languages at the same time. Just as I am sure Whitman did. Just as I am sure Neruda did. Just as I am sure Homer did. But, the strange thing about living this way is that every once in awhile I find the daylight language getting all mixed up with the night alphabet of the poem. The way the poem bleeds itself into me and me back into it.

I’m standing on a street corner and I overhear someone say, a man was shot right there on that spot two days ago and I look for blood signs on the pavement and while I am searching the cement for night colored stains Death is loitering in front of a liquor store window. He knows that I have already seen him and he thinks that just the sight of his rag and bone frame will short circuit my imagination but what really happens is that when I think of him the sight triggers a line I’d been wanting to use in DILLINGER and pretty soon I am getting the first twenty lines to Dillinger’s Thompson. I get a licorice taste in my mouth that goes all through me and makes me think of the way blood comes out of a wound and Dillinger is trying to tell me something he is both a photograph and not a photograph and the man talking about the victim who got gunned down on the corner is also talking this is the real nighttalk of dying, the chatter and the buzz and the static of the world becoming part of the poem.

I’m reading The Riddle of the Wooden Gun to a dark living room. Shadows have been thrown up on the wall from somewhere beneath me and I am reading to them as though they are the audience. I start out slow and pretty soon I can feel the poem begin to gather momentum. Then I am at the part where the rebel guerilla fighter has killed the kid and when he goes over to the body he discovers that the kid is armed with a wooden gun. And, when I glance up the shadows on the wall have moved slightly and a sigh comes from somewhere and Dillinger’s face has begun to levitate above the easy chair and little planets of blood are circling it and the poem has suddenly become a movie playing itself out in the air and Death has come close and is asking if I will give him just one image, maybe the one where Dillinger is able to rub the wooden gun three times and turn it into a real one and I tell Death to go fuck himself and Death only knows the meaning of the words but doesn’t know how to actually do it and I want to find a way to have Dillinger say that to Death in the poem but I don’t want to force it in and then I realize that Dilllinger’s escape from Crown Point Jail was the ultimate fuck you and the wooden gun was Dillinger’s best finger to Death ever.

I’m reading The Corpse Is Dreaming. It’s a rehearsal for the one I am scheduled to give live on KUNM from The Outpost. I have all the radios and tv sets turned on in the house because I want all of Death’s static in my ears. I need to taste and I want to hear all of Death’s static and the air is turning black with the noise but that’s okay, that’s just the way that I dreamt it. The air is supposed to turn black. And, then little by little, Dillinger’s feet appear on the floor. Then his fully trousered legs take shape. Then his torso all covered with blood, then his arms, one is underneath him, one out to the side. Then his head which is a bloody stew of wounds.

And, I am really into the poem now, I can never read Corpse without giving in to the rush and groan and whisper and scream of the poem. Because of all the poems in DILLINGER this is the one that refuses to just be read. It must be danced so that it can be undanced. It must be acted so that it can be unacted. It must be shouted so that it can be unshouted. Of all the poems I’ve written The Corpse Is Dreaming relies on static, stutter, slaughter, and silence and every time I do Corpse I have to reinvent all of it. I have to place myself squarely in Death’s zone. This is the only way I can reach into the heart and core of the man. Because Dillinger has become a complex metaphor for american darkness and oblivion. More than that. Dillinger has somehow become a national archetype which permits us all to fall in love with a uniquely american version of murder and mayhem.

All that he asks is that we leave a little blood on the floor. He never expected me to dance in it.

Todd Moore books are available here…

some related articles are listed below:

  1. todd moore | the long way home and the blood on the floor
  2. todd moore | blood calls to blood
  3. todd moore | i write in the blood
  4. todd moore | walking around in the blood
  5. todd moore | the blood of america
  6. todd moore | the blood of the poet
  7. todd moore | tasting the blood
  8. todd moore | blood and fate under mad stars
  9. todd moore | the machine gun blood of the poem
  10. todd moore | death rides the blood
  11. todd moore | that terrible shaking in the blood
  12. todd moore | night blood, red hands
  13. todd moore | billy the kid in the theater of blood
  14. todd moore | washed in the blood of the outlaw moon
  15. todd moore | outlaw bonfires and dillinger’s blood
  16. todd moore | love & death & teeth in the blood
  17. todd moore | the rat’s blood had glued my hand shut
  18. todd moore | pure blood primal: the poetry of kell robertson
  19. todd moore | mythic blood, psychic movies, outlaw dreams
  20. todd moore | gary goude | blood on blood
  21. todd moore | the second
  22. todd moore | i was
  23. todd moore | when…
  24. todd moore | just before
  25. todd moore | i want it all and i want it now
  26. todd moore | we cut
  27. todd moore | how come
  28. todd moore | i don’t want
  29. todd moore | I don’t
  30. todd moore | this
  31. todd moore | red
  32. todd moore | what I want to know
  33. todd moore | right after…
  34. todd moore | the kid
  35. todd moore | just
  36. todd moore | when dillinger
  37. todd moore | i love
  38. todd moore | cindy was
  39. todd moore | what haunted
  40. todd moore | dynamite
  41. todd moore | the mystery
  42. todd moore | peckinpah took…
  43. todd moore | the perfect
  44. todd moore | the bank…
  45. todd moore | lucky
  46. todd moore | fucking
  47. todd moore | burning the…
  48. todd moore | dillinger was
  49. todd moore | the question
  50. todd moore | coleman is
  51. todd moore | the bottle
  52. todd moore | they’re coming
  53. todd moore | the house
  54. todd moore | reading
  55. todd moore | hemingway
  56. todd moore | tyler’s
  57. todd moore | burning
  58. todd moore | all the way to the fame
  59. todd moore | lisa was…
  60. todd moore | the name is dillinger
  61. todd moore | outlaw
  62. todd moore | frito stopped…
  63. todd moore | the sign of the outlaw
  64. todd moore | dillinger stood…
  65. todd moore | parker shot
  66. todd moore | rd armstrong | reads
  67. todd moore | taking on bukowski
  68. todd moore | the sentences are burning
  69. todd moore | going to meet the outlaw
  70. todd moore | jack wilson
  71. todd moore | the nightmare talking
  72. todd moore | devouring the shadow
  73. todd moore | the nightmare of poetry is war
  74. todd moore | working on my duende
  75. todd moore | billie licked…
  76. todd moore | shotgun blues
  77. todd moore | dillinger stepped
  78. todd moore | geeshie wiley
  79. todd moore | the old man’s waiting
  80. todd moore | nightmare frenzy
  81. todd moore | donny shot…
  82. todd moore | the treehouse reading
  83. todd moore | a conversation with raindog
  84. todd moore | i’ll play dillinger
  85. todd moore | shadow of the outlaw
  86. todd moore | black rain
  87. todd moore | everything changes when dillinger arrives
  88. todd moore | inventing the nightmare
  89. todd moore | gimme a shotgun
  90. todd moore | outlaw poetry
  91. todd moore | road testing the kid
  92. todd moore | nightmare splender
  93. todd moore | largo slapped
  94. todd moore | dillinger posed
  95. todd moore | gimme danger
  96. todd moore | the dark country
  97. todd moore | reading the dark
  98. todd moore | dillinger, the coyote, and the wolf
  99. todd moore | working the outlaw wind
  100. todd moore | I work the shattered line
  101. todd moore | and the gunfight at dodge city
  102. todd moore | stealing dillinger, becoming an outlaw
  103. todd moore | fighting death for the poem
  104. todd moore | the dark side of america
  105. mera wolf & todd moore | read
  106. todd moore | what are the stakes in american poetry?
  107. todd moore | damage, genius, courage
  108. todd moore | the coyote trickster and the wooden gun
  109. todd moore | writing dillinger in the eye of the hurricane
  110. todd moore | falling in love with danger
  111. todd moore | cold fire, molten ice
  112. todd moore | the great american poem
  113. todd moore | writing poetry, burning the house
  114. todd moore | falling asleep in outlaw country
  115. todd moore | the outlaw poet and those killer eyes
  116. todd moore | patrick mckinnon and the drunken shamanic
  117. todd moore | scratching it out street level for the poem
  118. todd moore & Lawrence welsh | poetry reading
  119. todd moore | dillinger, outlaws, writing, and murder
  120. todd moore | hustling for drinks, praying for lines
  121. todd moore | dave roskos, the editor’s editor
  122. todd moore | all the dark talking to the angel of death
  123. todd moore | coyote death mask outlaw
  124. todd moore | the fevers and sweats of the nightmare poem
  125. todd moore | reading the movies, watching the poems
  126. todd moore | love, longing, dillinger, disaster
  127. todd moore | dreaming the dream, paying the price
  128. todd moore | the murder and the ecstasy of the everlasting dream
  129. todd moore | american metaphors, visions, and nightmares
  130. todd moore | the exalted scar and the annointed cure
  131. todd moore | the last good reading from the outlaw dark
  132. Todd Moore (1937 – 2010) | A Memorial Reading | Vox Audio
  133. todd moore | machine guns, movies, culture, dreams
  134. todd moore | the dillinger convergence: three ways of dreaming the outlaw
  135. todd moore | gary goude and that crushed rotting dawg
  136. todd moore | into the open madness: the poetry of kell robertson
  137. todd moore | blind whiskey and the straight razor blues
  138. todd moore | machine guns, guernica, and the outlaw poem
  139. todd moore | the volcanic death song of baby face nelson
  140. todd moore | scorched trinity: dillinger, billie, and machine gun love
  141. todd moore | danger beyond danger, where the outlaw lives
  142. todd moore | what’s
  143. todd moore | burning
  144. todd moore | 45 auto
  145. todd moore | coming out of…
  146. todd moore | jerry’s old
  147. miriam halliday borkowski | the drunk’s wife leaving the city
  148. todd moore | the fever of writing
  149. todd moore | the nightmare of reading
  150. todd moore | doing shots with ben smith in air à boire
  151. todd moore | play it & judy christopher
  152. todd moore | dillinger and the riddle of the wooden gun
  153. todd moore | stories, ashes, and fire
  154. bone | poetry by todd moore & rd armstrong
  155. todd moore | dancing in the fire with s.a. griffin
  156. todd moore | dillinger, death, and the high mountain air
  157. todd moore | living at the movies with dillinger and depp
  158. todd moore | the last good movie I made was a poem
  159. todd moore | chasing jack micheline’s shadow
  160. todd moore & dennis gulling | shotgun weather
  161. todd moore | outlaw poetry, psychic damage, the survival of wounds
  162. bill nevin | todd moore, cinematic poet on the outlaw’s trail
  163. todd moore | stealing the fire, stealing the shadow
  164. leonard cohen | leaving green sleeves
  165. todd moore
  166. alex gildzen | looking for the blood of elizabeth short
  167. wolfgang carstens | for todd moore
  168. todd moore & john macker
  169. rd armstrong | todd moore and lummox press
  170. daryl rogers | near full moon | …for todd moore
  171. todd moore | dying with dillinger in the corpse is dreaming
  172. todd moore | las montanas de santa fe: visions of the spirit country
  173. todd moore | the sea, the poem, and the house of all possible myths: the poetry of milner place
  174. todd moore | the central avenue rundown jazz radio show
  175. john dorsey & s.a. griffin | the dead zone trilogy by todd moore
  176. todd moore | how to survive the coming night: the poetry of john yamrus
  177. todd moore | the gold cane, van gogh’s ear, and the gun in the casket: wandering down this crooked road
  178. todd moore | saturday night desperate, don winter, and the black mitten of poetry

1 Comment

  • what i love about this essay is todd moore’s taking on of death. making death a partner in the creative process. not a denial, but an acceptance of death, even more than that, making death a dynamic force that propels the poet, propels the poem.

Leave a Reply