‘A decade on, ‘The Poetry Silo’ is less an exhibit and more a warehouse for storing the world’s largest roll of thermal paper, making it something of a hybrid stop by Wayside standards. Those who come to view the enormity of the roll- to gawk at the constant pace and precise movements of the poetry receiver- are likely experiencing a fairly normal roadside attraction. Much of ‘The Poetry Silo’s’ facilities are dedicated to these people because they spend a lot less time and a lot more money than most of the Wayside travelers who come to read and, even worse, comprehend the words being spouted by the poet.
The poet is nothing more than a receipt printer gone awry in such a way that it mocks coherency. It babbles about the history of the world, pulling off neat metaphors and complex rhyme schemes just often enough to make up for the nonsense it tends to espouse otherwise. Members of certain factions would tell you that the nonsense is all just technique that has yet to reach fruition, the suggestion being that it might be a part of a very long metaphor or a very very complex rhyme scheme. Madness is just unfinished genius, they will say, and of course nobody can prove them wrong because several other factions carefully guard the poetry wheel, insisting it can’t be examined in full until the poem is complete.
As it stands, nearly 75% of the poem has been conclusively recorded elsewhere, initially by scribes and now via a specially programmed stream cam (and the scribes, still, but their work is redundantly spiritual). The missing 25% is all nearer the center of the wheel- output from the first few years when nobody paid the poet much attention, thinking it would give up sooner rather than later. Only the first line is still exposed- a little slip of paper readable from the hollow at the center. It says: ‘First let me tell you a thing you should know-’’
The trouble with getting into ‘The Poetry Silo’ these days is that there is an enormous waitlist, made tremendously long for people who can’t claim to be a member of one of the many quasi-religious factions that seek truths in the words of the poet and, therefore, receive priority access. My arrival is the culmination of a year’s work, insinuating myself into the most inclusive of these factions, the Nowists, whose particular urgency is due to their belief that the only important words in ‘The Poetry Silo’ are those between the poet and the wheel. The real poem is an ever-adapting prophecy, the meaning of which can only be deciphered by the individual reading it in the moment.
It’s a pretty thought and one that tends to generate a lot more hand-wringing and a lot fewer turf-wars than any of the other factions who want to expose or keep hidden the words in the center of the wheel.
So, I’ve spent some time in the Nowist forums and have even attended a few meet-ups when they’ve aligned with my travel and now I have a reasonably believable cover as an exuberant, if novice, Nowist. When I flash my credentials at ‘The Poetry Silo’ along with the various forms necessary for religious entry, I get the usual bureaucratic hemming and hawing that the process necessitates but am actually let through fairly quickly (assuming you discount the year’s work building up to it).
What the entry doesn’t quite drive home is the actual enormity of the poetry wheel. In a decade it has reached the sort of size that gives you butterflies just looking at it and it’s somehow made bigger by the sight of the burned-out little receipt printer that chugs along, spewing words onto specially grafted thermal paper wheels so that there are no gaps in its telling.
When the initial awe wears off I step up close to the visible strip of poem as any good Nowist would be expected to do and I keep Hector tight on his leash in case he gets any ideas. It takes me a moment to remember to read the thing wheel-to-printer and another to pace my reading with the speed at which words are spewed forth and it’s around that time that I recognize at least three metaphors for the Stranger and at least a little foreshadowing of the imminent danger presented by himself, resurrected, and his silky/dark demon rabbit thing.
By then, they are on me.
-traveler