The Book of the Dead Man (#3)

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1. About the Beginnings of the Dead Man

When the dead man throws up, he thinks he sees his inner life. 
Seeing his vomit, he thinks he sees his inner life.
Now he can pick himself apart, weigh the ingredients, research 

  his makeup.
He wants to study things outside himself if he can find them. 
Moving, the dead man makes the sound of bone on bone.
He bends a knee that doesn’t wish to bend, he raises an arm that
  argues with a shoulder, he turns his head by throwing it
  wildly to the side.
He envies the lobster the protective sleeves of its limbs.
He believes the jellyfish has it easy, floating, letting everything pass 
  through it.
He would like to be a starfish, admired for its shape long after. 
Everything the dead man said, he now takes back.
Not as a lively young man demonstrates sincerity or regret.
A young dead man and an old dead man are two different things. 
A young dead man is oil, an old dead man is water.
A young dead man is bread and butter, an old dead man is bread and
  water—it’s a difference in construction, also architecture. 
The dead man was there in the beginning: to the dead man, the sky
  is a crucible.
In the dead man’s lifetime, the planet has changed from lava to ash 
  to cement.
But the dead man flops his feathers, he brings his wings up over
  his head and has them touch, he bends over with his beak 
  to the floor, he folds and unfolds at the line where his 
  armor creases.
The dead man is open to change and has deep pockets.
The dead man is the only one who will live forever.

2. More About the Beginnings of the Dead Man

One day the dead man looked up into the crucible and saw the sun. 
The dead man in those days held the sky like a small globe, like a 
  patchwork ball, like an ultramarine bowl.
The dead man softened it, kneaded it, turned it and gave it volume. 
He thrust a hand deep into it and shaped it from the inside out. 
He blew into it and pulled it and stretched it until it became full-
  sized, a work of art created by a dead man.
The excellence of it, the quality, its character, its fundamental 
  nature, its raison d‘être, its “it” were all indebted to the 
  dead man.

The dead man is the flywheel of the spinning planet.
The dead man thinks he can keep things the same by not moving. 
By not moving, the dead man maintains the status quo at the center
  of change.
The dead man, by not moving, is an explorer: he follows his nose. 
When it’s not personal, not profound, he can make a new 
  world anytime.
The dead man is the future, was always the future, can never be 
  the past.
Like God, the dead man existed before the beginning, a time marked 
  by galactic static.
Now nothing remains of the first static that isn’t music, fashioned 
  into melody by the accidents of interval.
Now nothing more remains of silence that isn’t sound.
The dead man has both feet in the past and his head in the clouds.

© Marvin Bell