4/29/2013

Conserving the Magnitude Of Uselessness
A. R. Ammons

Spits of glitter in low grade ore,

precious stones too poorly surrounded for harvest,
to all things not worth the work
of having,

brush oak on a sharp slope, for example,

the balk tonnage of woods-lodged boulders,
the irreparable desert,
drowned river mouths, lost shores where

the winged and light-footed go,

take creosote bush that possesses
ground nothing else will have,
to all things and for all things

crusty or billowy with indifference

for example, incalculable, irremovable water
or fluvio-glacial deposits
larch or dwarf aspen in the least breeze sometimes shiver in-

Suddenly the salvation of waste betides,

the peerlessly unsettled seas that shape the continents,
take the gales wasting and in waste over
Antarctica and the sundry high shoals of ice,

For the inexcusable (the worthless abundant) the

merely tiresome, the obviously unimprovable,
to these and for these and for their undiminishment
the poets will yelp and hoot forever

probably,

rank as weeds themselves and just as abandoned:
nothing useful is of lasting value:
dry wind only is still talking among the oldest stones.

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