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Rogue Elephant by A. R. Ammons
The reason to be autonomous is to stand there, a cleared instrument, ready to act, to search
the moral realm and actual conditions for what needs to be done and to do it: fine, the
best, if it works out, but if, like a gun, it comes in handy to the wrong choice, why then
you see the danger in the effective: better then an autonomy that stands and looks about,
negotiating nothing, the supreme indifferences: is anything to be gained where as much is lost:
and if for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction has the loss been researched
equally with the gain: you can see how the milling actions of millions could come to a
buzzard-like glide as from a coincidental, warm bottom of water stuck between chilled
peaks: it is not so easy to say, OK, go on out and act: who, doing what, to what or
whom: just a minute: should the bunker be bombed (if it stores gas): should all the
rattlers die just because they rattle: if I hear the young gentleman vomiter roaring down
the hall in the men's room, should I go and inquire of him, reducing him to my care: no
wonder the great sayers (who say nothing) sit about in inaccessible states of mind: no
wonder still wisdom and catatonia appear to exchange places occasionally: but if anything
were easy, our easy choices soon would carry away our ignorance with the world-better
let the mixed-up mix and let the surface shine with all the possibilities, each in itself.
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