20 - Poetry Week
[LISTEN]
This week's episode features writing contributions from: Trilety Wade, Russel Swenson, Vanessa Irena, Katherine Ciel, Erika Paschold, and Danielle DuBois
INTRO: “You’ll be safe here,” says a whisper behind you. Welcome to Night Vale.
Listeners, today begins Night Vale Poetry Week - one of our most sacred town traditions. As you know, every citizen is required to write hundreds of poems. Nonstop poems. During this time, the City Council lifts their bans on writing utensils, thesauruses, and public descriptions of the moon. And they mandate that everybody use their municipally-granted free will to join in on the fun.
Last year, over 800 thousand poems were written by Night Vale residents and then eaten during the Poetry Week's closing ceremonies by real, live librarians who were chained to thick titanium posts inside double-locked steel cages. (Honestly, listeners, I don't think it's a good idea to ever have librarians out in public no matter how secure the posts or cages are. I know there were no serious injuries last year, but some of you older listeners may remember what happened in 1993, when an unchecked librarian population resulted in the loss of many innocent and screaming booklovers.)
But that was 20 years ago. Let's not dwell on our corpse-strewn past. Let's celebrate our corpse-strewn future. On the show today we'll be featuring some poems sent in by listeners from all over Night Vale. We'll start with this one. Last night, Night Vale's Poet Laureate, Trilety (pronounced like Trinity but with an L in there) Wade, with clenched teeth and frightened eyes, delivered the opening stanzas for the Poetry Week Festivities. Here is what she read:
I fell in love with a hooded figure
who tied my tongue with an ink ligature,
and silently urged I write this po-em.
Please believe me, I wasn’t forced,
through bone telepathy or the code of Morse,
to pen this uncoded, unsubversive gem.
On the desert farms, the ghost eyed maidens make the cheese
while a maelstrom of thick milk falls with ease.
Our punishment? Hotblooded clotted cream.
The days here pass like cancerous sunspots.
And black metal trees can’t compare to car lots.
You are in Night Vale – Welcome.
Wade capped off her reading by screaming "It is lies. It is lies!" before separating into minute white particles and fluttering away on a swirling breeze. Like soft snow, she covered our hair and light coats and, like snow, it smelled of fennel and meat. Then a voice announced over the PA "Everything is perfect in our little town." Poetry Week has begun, Night Vale! It's going to be great one!
******
This weekend the Night Vale Zoo finally reopens after last month's renovations. Among the new features are fences and plexiglass to separate the animals from each other and from zoo patrons. Zoo officials promised that they focused especially on the tiger, bear, spider and snake areas in this regard. Another new feature is the Sensory Extraction Room where a randomly selected zoo-goer will be dropped into a pitch-black, sound-proof booth for two straight days while zookeepers harvest their scent and teach it to genetically-improved predators. They've also unveiled a new logo featuring a swan being eaten by a giraffe and a new slogan: "You go to the zoo so the animals can watch you."
So come join in on the fun this weekend. Slow-moving children with more than 15% body fat get in free!
****
Oh, I can't wait anymore, listeners. Poetry Week has to be the most wonderful time of the year. Let's get back to the fantastic poems that have been sent in. Some of them are even from our city officials, like Mayor Pamela Winchell, who put her quill to parchment and sent us this lovely stanza:
No one will
Have to be
Anyone
Ever again, in fact
It will not
Be
Allowed.
That poem also doubles as recently enacted legislation, enforced by the Sheriff’s Secret Police. Thank you, mayor! And now - and this is very special - a poem written by the Sheriff himself! Here goes:
The town criers have cross-stitched their mouths shut and stapled their eyes open.
The benches are all broken.
No one sits down anyway. No one can fit their broken wings beneath their cloaks.
A skin condition that makes its victims appear timelessly sad afflicts most.
Prominent citizens drown in the carpool lane.
Their makeup floats to the surface. Wine glasses clink together. They hate each other.
They clink.
Until one breaks and then the other.
There is no such thing as vagrants.
There is no such thing as home.
The sun has a tic.
No one can afford flowers but the children stand very still in the garden.
Until the cold snap cracks.
Very pretty. Thank you, Sheriff.
And now a poem sent in by Irena Panchyk, a 3rd grade teacher from Night Vale Elementary. It is called “Street Cleaning Day”:
Run Run
Remain Calm
Run
Where are my children
Do I have children
Run Run
Remain Calm
Run
I know
I know where
they will not go
But what way
Again the announcement:
Run Run
Remain Calm
Run
They are coming
I must choose
I have chosen
Save myself
Thank you, Mrs. P. You did the right thing.
Madeline LaFleur, Executive Director of the Night Vale Tourism Board, sent in a piece of paper that just reads, in all caps:
TOURISM IS IMPORTANT
Below that is a reddish-brown smudge shaped like an underfed hawk alighting on a mesquite tree. She also scotch-taped what appear to be 3 human molars to the page. You know at first I thought, this is NOT poetry. This is visual art, but that's mere semantics. We are all poetry, Night Vale. Every breath or branch or sigh before another hopeless night of uneasy slumber is itself a verse in a great poem.
****
Here’s a question, listeners: have you seen those new billboards all over town recently? They have no pictures, just hyperbright and colorful text that reads “20% off everything! We're going to take 20% off everything! Every thing. We're craaaazy!” There's no store or brand associated with the advertisements, and the Highway Department said that there's no record that anyone owns the billboards or that they were ever put up. “They just appeared one day, and we all sort of accepted that they were there,” a representative from the City told us.
The Sheriff's Secret Police warned that the advertisement appears to be completely literal, and that soon 20% of everything might, indeed, be gone. They are still investigating as to whether or not we have a choice of which 20% gets taken off and where that 20% goes.
Scientists say that the 20% must go somewhere because of something to do with something called “thermodynamic laws”, but Police Officials reminded us that scientists are comedians and that they should stick to comedy.
***
Let's have a look at traffic. Old Town Night Vale resident Katherine Ciel (pronounced See-Ell) just sent in the following report of what's happening out there on the roads. Katherine writes:
On Sunday, a lambent crevice opened up in the street outside my house.
By Tuesday birds were flying into it.
"I probably won't miss you", my mother said. "I'm only interested in the end of the world", I replied.
Many find it difficult to breathe
without the atmosphere
but we knew how. We just stopped breathing.
We're at the Moonlite All-Nite Diner and they're serving up fruit from the plants growing out of the waitress.
The closed sign whispers "please, don't touch me."
We watch bodies fall to the ground outside like deep-sea creatures surfacing.
You turn to me and ask "do you ever think about suicide?"
I look away from you and close my eyes,
eat the raspberries to confuse the blood in my mouth
Now you're in the only car in the parking lot at midnight and you're watching me throw stones at the moon,
which hangs low in the sky so that he can look into your house.
Your sister tried to touch him from her bedroom window once, and he flinched; now he and the oceans watch her with a quiet concern.
The lilac sky is trying to rest her head on his shoulder, all trees gradually growing through her.
A hummingbird whispers to you "be careful, under her dress is her skin", and then builds his nest in the middle of the highway.
I look back to you, and you close your eyes.
So, Night Vale, it sounds like you should use some alternate routes today. Thank you, Katherine, for that report. This has been traffic.
****
An update now on Poetry Week. A strange thing has happened listeners. A note was posted at the entrance to the Dog Park. I'm told the note is on paper that is black like the ocean of space, and the text is – well, it's not white, really, more resplendent – radiating its strange free verse message from the dark page. The message reads:
Today they scratched me from sleep.
Nails unhinged, carving
my name in cement. Ash stains
my pillow and bruises the shape
of spiders climb my neck.
Sunlight catches dust
and broken glances between strangers
dodging desert puddles of something metallic.
I'm highly contagious, quarantined
to another body I've since infected.
I will seep into you
if you hold me too tightly.
I assemble your letters, left
torn in the pocket of a hospital
gown. I stain the paper
with sweat. I'm beginning
to steal your voice.
The voice that lies
dying
in the Dog Park.
The poem is signed with just the letter “E.” Listeners, while I certainly love luxuriating in the lush language of a good poem, I do not condone entering the Dog Park. It is forbidden. Dogs and dog owners are not allowed in the Dog Park. Please disregard this renegade poet's radical lies and stay away. Oh, I fear the damage is done, listeners. Whoever this “E” is must know we are all now in grave danger.
****
And now a word from our sponsor. With low interest rates, now is the perfect time to buy a home. Just name your amenity. Every house in Night Vale has a luxurious view of the void. We also have great schools and plenty of spiders. Who wouldn't want to settle down in Night Vale? Seek a licensed realtor to help you find the house of your dreams. Realtors live inside deer. When you find an undersized stag or ailing doe you can catch, simply wrestle it down and knife open the chest cavity. Then let the realtor inside help you achieve your American Dream.
The head of the Greater Night Vale Realty Association, Russel Swensen, says “No one has lived here for years.You're one of them. One of the No ones. A woman is a fire and no one is invited. Anyone can watch. No one can help.” (beat; off mic) Dana, is this a poem Russel wrote for us, or (beat; shuffling papers; back on mic)
So start looking today for your new Night Vale home. As the old saying goes “Streets swallow their own tails and choke.”
****
Listeners, oh this is bad news, the gates to the Dog Park have been opened for the first time anyone can recall. In fact no one even knew there were gates. We've only ever seen tall black walls with no visible entrance or exit. But there are gates, and apparently they're just standing wide open. Witnesses said that inside you can see a couple of old tennis balls, some frisbees and a black stone monolith that is humming a hum that makes anyone who hears it feel calm and ever so slightly more sensual.
The City Council issued a statement moments ago which was just a series of ancient glyphs. Nobody could read the language, but we all understood what it said. It was a dire warning. A warning to the mysterious “E.” A warning to those by the Dog Park. A warning to all of Night Vale. A great pain. A great piercing. A great scream that will soon break apart our sky and our lives if this insolence does not stop.
If you are near the Dog Park, listeners, do not enter it. The monolith (or whatever you think you see) is not for you to know. Public property is not for citizens. Stay home, Night Vale. Write your poems. This should be a fun and festive time to write government-mandated rhymes. Not storming the shores of hell and bringing us all to war with you.
I’ve just sent intern Dana (or intern Dana's doppelgänger, I am still unsure) to the Park to warn those who are standing so near to their demise. I only hope Dana is in time to save them.
Let us go now, possibly for the last time, to the weather.
*****
[WEATHER: "Get Me Home" by Robin Aigner. robinaigner.bandcamp.com]
****
Old Woman Josie called during the break and said that the mysterious “E” is one of the angels and that the E stands for Erika. “Erica?” I asked. “No no, Erika. With a K,” she said. “Oh, Erika, with a K,” I said. And then there was a weird pause, and then she said “all angels go by the name Erika,” and then I was like “right right,” and I felt dumb, because that's like the first thing you learn in 7th grade Transmigration Studies.
Anyway, the City Council in a press conference said “Oh, an angel wrote that? Well, okay then! Nevermind. Sure, we'll show you the monolith. Come in.”
And so those on the streets outside the Dog Park entered. And the City Council showed them the monolith, welcoming all with friendly upturned palms. But some witnesses resisted, and their conservatism served them well, for the tall black gates soon closed, vanishing into the smooth onyx walls, taking the Dog Park visitors with them. No entrance. No exit. There may never be either again.
Sadly, intern Dana (or her double) was inside the Dog Park when it was sealed. And listeners, I hesitate to tell you, but as a journalist, I think I must. Intern Dana (or her double) texted me a photo of the monolith just before the gates closed. Did you know there is an inscription at its base? And get this, right here, on this the first day of Poetry Week... the inscription is a poem.
According to the plaque, the poem was written in 1954 by former Night Vale Mayor Danielle DuBois, quote, “in honor of nothing that should never not be unknown.” The poem reads:
the gentle man, in glowlight
is a candle in his maybes.
his face is a loamy bog.
do you ever stop to look at
all the blood you gather?
metal halos spring
from your attention. she said:
watch with all your eyes
lest chance again escape you
said: chalk’s wasted
on blind children,
wrote TODAY’S SPECIALS
on the board.
what’s blessed entry
in this weather? i heard it
tapping, but it doesn’t leave
a trail. when you catch a beating
heart in the wild, you hold it
squirming, & say:
that is that.
but the damn thing
keeps on moving
til you squeeze
it in your hands.
I know not what the monolith's poem hides, Night Vale, nor if there will be consequences for my actions today. But I do know it is Poetry Week. It is only the beginning of our fun and festive favorite time of year. Let's not think about what we're not allowed to know. Let's think about what is safe to know. And let's start with the beauty of our words. So get out those pens and dust off your iambs and couplets.
Also, intern Dana (or your double), you will be missed. I tried texting you back, but now there's just blood seeping up through some newly formed crack on my touchscreen, so I think that's a no-go. Good bye, Dana.
And for the rest of you, good bye, too, but with the hint of a future hello. Stay tuned next for the sound of some helpless thing being eaten.
Good night, Night Vale. Good Night.
PROVERB: Pain is just weakness leaving the body and then being replaced by pain. Lots of pain.