hutt 3.1
  hutt - hill end, australia
 
 
Louis Armand lives and works in Prague. His books include The Garden (Salt, 2001), Inexorable Weather (Arc, 2001), Land Partition (Textbase, 2001), and Strange Attractors (Salt, 2003). He is the general editor of Litteraria Pragensia Books, www.litterariapragensia.com

 

 
   
louis armand - plutonium 239

(i.m. Robert Andrew Ostle)

Figures in the landscape appear to burn. A fringe
of cinders: yellow dust, funerary ash covering
the ground - Vernasi, Dasawamedh. Saddhu
in a burning ghat. And the canticle: place of
dead reckoning. Signs written in concrete, a blind
one-eyed skull and the half-god half-corpse
that fits it, fucking down into the underside of a
guilty conscience, measuring its degrees of con-
taminant … An underground reservoir, dug out
by the old whitebellied diviner pumping brine
from limestone sinkholes, resists the applied
method. Saddhu perched on a heap of rubbish
exhaling long plumes of smoke. The camera's
analogue eye like a mind passing and
observing-atoms, nomenclature, intellect -
how can it be removed? If the earth were as
flat as it seems, a photograph
dragging down at the edges - belongs to another
history: a mathematical error addressed in
manufactured desert-language, like a too-
rational and precise stupidity, uncorrectable
as a dog or man who refuses labour. Saddhu
in a contortionist's box: television vistas,
satellites, remote emanations telling of contracted
future memory in solitary confinement. A band
of night shows red above the Judas-hole - they are
counting down, digit by available digit.
Smoke settles on the eye's inner rim; attendant
fingers brush ash from ashtrays into a plastic bag.
At the other end of the demarcation line
one more salvage operation is about to begin