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      July 27, 2024Stairs Appear in a Hole Outside of TownJohn Philip Johnson

      Stairs that never stop going down,
      concrete steps, concrete walls:
      down twelve, turn right, down twelve more,
      fluorescent bulbs humming on every landing—
      you can look between metal railings
      and see down into the vanishing point. It’s creepy
      because it’s so bland, because it is so otherwise
      plausible. There are little clusters of tourists
      and townsfolk, walking up and down,
      murmuring their speculations. The municipality
      has stationed a few policemen in the upper stories,
      after that it’s the wilderness of young men
      who aren’t huffing, or letting their better judgments
      hold them back. Some pack a lunch,
      see how far they can go. A few loners
      have gone for days, or longer, obsessed, and come back
      with critical perspectives on prior stories brought up,
      arguing against them, bringing rumors of their own,
      rumors of the lights shifting imperceptibly,
      of ambiguous odors, of vast ballrooms
      and wide open spaces, of small villages
      with picnic areas, of hot steamy dioramas of hell,
      strange animals, grotesque and sublime,
      of a rapture that some theorize is the bends
      but they swear is as real as the bright pounding light
      that fills everything down that deep, where
      the stairs are made of light, the walls a glow
      you can’t quite touch—this is weeks down,
      beyond some rapture or rupture point,
      beyond some point from which they never
      really come all the way back.

      from #38 - Winter 2012

      John Philip Johnson

      “I hear a lot of poets say they’d rather be jazz musicians, but if I could be something else it would be an astronaut. I’d rather land on Mars than win a Nobel Prize. I got into poetry because I had a great high school teacher named Kirsten Van Dervoort. In college I came to believe I could write the stuff when I read Byron rhyme ‘gunnery’ with ‘nunnery.’ I thought, golly, anybody can do this.”