Showing posts with label all poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label all poetry. Show all posts

Thursday, June 27, 2013

For Ashley




   Sorrow departs sweetly in the worst scenes of good opera:
   Huge breasts bound tightly by slag-made cross-your-heart design
   or deceptive concrete cups, ruching, and Empire's feign of draping flag,
   chubby hands clamped to a pale quarter-inch of forehead's foundational
   stage slather;  Spandex back-supported baritone bellies twirl twirl twirl 
   and fall, arms approximating Golgotha, pointy goatee
   in pretty pointy goatee profile.

An aria ensues, eyes glint -- dab dab dab --
and postures suddenly improve.  Posture improves. 

Our theater now plays the halls of Maryland's Walter Reed
where Ashley is one of God's ones:
Top billing, Playbill's pop-eye yellow cover,
where Ashley is exceptionally exceptional.  

When blood pools and she rots,
it's angel wings that sassy girl achieves, not damp, weepy, 
slinky clots of stringy-tissued necrosis;
She's all apotheosis 
and no part pure stink.  

But her breasts are huge and healthy:  It's a family trait.
As her limbs absorb themselves, melting wax preserving
every touch like amber, every thumb print,
the incongruous grows and parts the sorrow
of this busty wasting woman child.

She was meant to die on cue, or perhaps not,
it depends,
as so much does, so much does.  
It depends
on whether Ashley's dying proves operatic
or is cast upon the more prosaic 
planks of unsung trodden drama.  

It depends
on the prompter
for each, as one will throw a lyric voice 
for her sweet ears alone,
and one will hiss and mouth
some line of gasps and sighs,
gutteral utterances.

She each will mock, anyway, with metered overplay --
spout some nasty limerick, jump up and spew
a bloody softshoe,

though in consideration
of her brother and sister actors, her pale arms
and long fingers will cast sand about the stage,
not just so we may hear with acuity
the slide and slides of her mottled soft-soled shoes,
but to soak up the dark dripping red, for when not
congealed, it's a potential hazard, and when
it does clot, the sensation is much
like stepping on a slug.

The prognosis, say the necromancers, will defy
and defile Ashley's breasts while they still swell
and enthrall, still catch a man's eyes, still cause
her male doctors to be glad of long, white coats,
and her female doctors to curse the curse of blushing.  
On cue, all admire the pearl crucifix tucked, twisted,
buried deep in teenage cleavage, between wires,
monitor pads and an embedded port,
wherein all the chemo goes 
and slows, kills and kills,
as indiscriminate as her Lord.

She's old enough, now, to be moved to the adult ward,
(every casted Annie grows up, too, the curls and voice
become insipid, the hair too brazen bronze)
but Ashley was raised, really, on pediatrics,
a child actress, a lisping prima donna,
one of the rare altos to earn deference
as a leukemic red-haired baby, though she has grown
into a pure soprano, the pure soprano
     of a whisper that flies
          whole,
               
that waivers and trembles tremolo
     vocal glory, 
          as heads bend closer, longing to hear,
     
enthralled by a death scene,
the real abstracted, a gilt poem, the spot lit
gift of many a booming brava!

-- and the self-indulgent, tendon-stretching 
screech for more and more, encore! 

-- an athletic, death-defying feat
of lung, tongue, and larynx,
of lip, heart, and soul.

Other heads rear backward, rear away, 
having heard this song before,
differently, having seen the struggle
to perform, smiling and dying, day
after day, way upon way, drip
by drip,

this woman child's performance
sometimes slipping, sometimes allowing
for fears, tears, and memory --
her worst nights closing in febrile hope
of tomorrow.  

Other heads have heard
the song of her ragged breath as she slept
in sweat, while her good parents fiercely prayed.

Other heads smiled at henna tattoos: 
olive blues and orangy seafoam, a grinning
skull, tiny flies, a cross and paisley socks,
elegant peacock elbow-long gloving.
Swift grins at real piercings, despite the risk,
gotten rapidly, suddenly, as impulsively fast
as the sexy photographs and flashes of flesh,
the cover shots for Ashley's billing as
"the beautiful, believing girl who dies too young."

The usual opera written strangely for one,
a theatrical venue in the semi-round,
where Ashley is one of God's
ones, singing her way out --
belting her way out --
in raspy heartbeats,
dreaming of singing
in New York, more Broadway
than Met. Really, if only she could live to know
it, really, Ashley wants an amphitheater,
loving, smiling, nodding heads
looking down, eyes calling soft,
encouraging, eyes calling soft,
pledging troth.

Call it an avatar or be averse
and call it just some photograph,
Ashley's image designed and plotted,
deviously planned to make me love her. 

I saw her picture first
and instantly vowed,
immediately pledged my troth.

"O, teach me how 
I should forget to think!"

Troth being an archaic term,
my vow does not bind but my bow
does bend, and deeply, as I aim brutally
sharp arrows from this ancient site, tall columned
where I perch, and shoot straight
down at Ashley's heart,
pale blue veins between 
breasts fallen apart
as she writhes on her back,
slashing her febrile skull
right left right right left.

Twang and thud.
Twang and thud.

Fun whore hair she chose for color
for life's last stage:  a flirty orange
plait in rasta raffia, that flew so
fast and far from side-to-side
they beat a staccato that fell apart,
a steady beat become dying
chaos, chaotic beeps,
fluorescent green waves
traced black on buzzing paper.

For lips. Ashley selected
a dissonant voice, a rich
and ripe bright pink,
traced somehow red
and smeared
on pillow cases.




O, teach me how I should forget to think! -- Romeo and Juliet, Act 1, Scene 1
PHOTO CREDIT: PhiladelphiaPhotos

Tuesday, May 7, 2013

"show your work"

it's been so long since i've messed around in french.
however you choose to take that...
i dared give it another go this afternoon, and was surprised at the story that wanted telling.
there was a theme to the contest, which set it all a-twirlin' -- "la roue tourne."



SHOW YOUR WORK


la première fois qu'on m'a permis
d'enseigner un peu de littérature
{dite}
française, juste avant chaque réunion
de classe, j'ai vomi, violemment.

j'étais en train d'essayer
de tomber profondémment amoureuse
d'un mec quelconque --
et oui, c'était un de mes étudiants
{pour ainsi dire}
mais pas de littérature
{dite}
française, non, pas du tout.

lui, il faisait un effort
de lier les pronoms personnels sujets aux formes
appropriées des verbes, de comprendre
le sexe féminin d'une "porte,"
et la masculinité évidente d'un "stylo."

nous sommes allés prendre un verre
et écouter un peu de jazz, comme on trouve
dans quelques trous encore à oakland,
où le verre est sale, et le vin
amer.

il avait 24 ans, faisait
des études graduées,
mais
{quand même}
j'avais tort, alors
on attendait la fin de semestre,
les notes finales,
avant de trouver ensemble un appartement,
un endroit sacré, des salles pleines
de musique
poésie
poètes maudits.

c'était bien rare, le vomissement
avant sa classe de grammaire.

mais ces êtres bizarres
qui me suivaient de près
dans la lecture
de littérature
{dite}
française?

parmi eux figurait une jeune femme
énormément sérieuse
{et belle}
et que je n'ai jamais vue
sourire même une fois,
qui raidît visiblement
devant beckett, devant ionesco,
devant sartre, et même camus.

un jour j'ai conquis la nausée
et en donnant les devoirs
à la fin de classe, a inventé
un sujet sur le coup:

"Sarte dit qu'il est impossible d'imaginer sa propre mort.
Je veux que vous essayiez,
{malgré lui}
 et comme on dit en maths -- 'show your work.''"

cet après-midi-là, mon amant, l'écrivain
toujours en train d'arriver,
a fait l'amour dans notre lit
{que j'ai acheté}
commun, notre nid
de tendresse,
avec une femme
qui a gagné l'or
dans les jeux olympiques
{patinage artistique}
et moi, enceinte, lourde,
sans médailles
d'aucune couleur.

le jour prochain, les yeux
rougeâtres, le nez coulant,
avec des centains de maux
dans ma tête?

cette jeune femme
énormément sérieuse
{et belle}
et que je n'ai jamais vue
sourire même une fois?

quand je lui ai demandé son devoir,
elle a dit, à très haute voix:

"je ne l'ai pas fait.
au lieu de le faire,
j'ai passé deux heures
en prière pour mon professeur
{on dit}
de français, qui avait l'audace
de donner un sujet
à écrire
tellement grossier,
si offensif
{envers le bon dieu}."

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

all the poetry in the world cain't halp iffen you was raised in a barn

Last night, I entertained you with my dalliances at a "poetry" site, where it is mostly all gush and gore but mostly good intentioned and lighthearted.

illustrator: abrakadabra


I forgot that just labeling a place "poetry" doesn't keep out the troglodytes. 

And that joining such a club doesn't wring the last drips of troglodyte-me out of moi.

You gotta wrack up the points to be worth your salt as a salty poet over there, and a part of that sodium content is achieved by weeping praise in comments left your brother and sister writers.

Can I escape my academic background?  Yes, of course, I can.  Do I want to, having invested blood, sweat, tears, and more money than most medical specialists in my advanced education?  No way in hell.  Besides, it is a mantle I can wear when I've no idea who the heck I really am, and it provides good words.  Lots and lots of words.

[Will the echo of Brother-Unit Grader Boob, admonishing me about "too many words," ever echo it's damned self into the canyon's oblivion?]

What many people don't know, though more know than I suspect know, is that The Academic is as raunchy and ill-mannered and whatever-other-synonym for "raised in a barn" you'd like to add... as is anyone you're likely to meet in the produce aisle.

[Unless you're talented and self-sufficient and raise your own produce!  Big wave to TW, whose bounteous box of booty arrived yesterday!  Such stews and soups and sauces I dreamt of, and what wonderful Brother-Units, too. OKAY, GRADER BOOB, YOU CAN SHUT THE FUCK UP NOW WITH THE TOO MANY WORDS CRAP... jeez.]

Hmmm.  What is actually emerging in me are some things, some ones, that I've been missing -- The Editor, The Translator.  I love those guys, I love that they hang out in me.  Usually, they're kicked back doing crossword puzzles and anagrams, and singing dirty ditties.  But lately, since this poetry site has been insisting on commentary, I've had to consult them.  "Psst, you two:  Do I do this like I'd do an undergrad's first essay in the second week of the term?  Or do it I lay it out there like the 5 pm seminar where everyone around the table looking wise was at my apartment the night before, puking tequila in my toilet?"

They usually split the difference -- they're big on Solomon as Wisdom Guide -- and advise:  "Aw, make it like it's a Junior repeating the class and it's a rewrite -- after peer-editing -- that way you know they were puking last night, but probably beer, so you can be sure it wasn't in your apartment, and then you can't be held responsible for anything you say."

The whole sordid affair... You knew this was about a Sordid Affair, didn't you?  That's why you're still here, admit it!  

The whole sordid affair began a few days ago, when I left my second comment ever on a poem that had been posted a couple of years ago.  I did not choose the poem to read, the magic computer poetry site smushed it in my face and said, "Comment or remain -- forevermore -- a wannabe poetess." So I gave it the laser intense focus of my best attention, and wrote, with sincerity, about some confusion of protagonists and my profound appreciation of a well-placed comma.  *You* know me, and you know the power of a well-placed comma.  Well, in my world.  I gave what I thought was a good representation of my level of appreciation -- two clapping hands out of three. And, really, given that I have but one shoulder and my other arm is flaky as all get out, well, two hands clapping is a barely achievable thang, anyways...

You gotta admit they're playing to the lowest common denominator of self-interest when the higher you rate (by means of iconic clapping hands) a poem, the more points YOU get.  So if I work really hard, and practice every day, and pray to the Lord above?  Maybe I can honestly come up with three hands clapping!  The orthopods would love to design such a prosthesis...

Raven on a Hill


So the poet in question took great offense.  

From the poem, I envisioned a 16 or 17 year old girl.  Not 15, not 18, my age-dar is incredibly accurate after years of teaching 18-22+ year olds, and then the Hell of a few years with the 15-18 crowd.

If the poet isn't lying, he claims to be 32.

He wrote:
I'm not certain about many of the things you have said in this comment. Why is enjoy the "wrong verb choice?" Why do you "struggle with the people peopling this poem?" What does that mean? Are you referring to the many people who "enjoyed" it? Are you saying you require me to argue my choice of words used herein?
I'm happy you enjoyed the comma.
Perhaps you could clarify. Is English your first language?

I apologized (my comments have been erased, "somehow," while his remain.  Kind of ass-backwards but, there you go...), explained that I was a rusty academic and tried, again, to convince him that the "comma" comment was from the heart, though drifting more and more toward the gut.
To which he wizzed back:

Yes... an academic.  No, not at all. Calling yourself an academic in order to excuse yourself from incoherence. That's not going to fly here.
As to your comment on confusion, you seem to be the only one confused.
"party of one"
I'm not, as you can plainly see arguing anything you ignoramus. You just come across as pompous, confused and incoherent. However, I was uncertain, I turned to a couple trusty readers, and it's safe to say, your comment is obscure at best.
Thanks wierdo.
~M

Ah.  I guess this is supposed to be... sport?  So I thought best to bow out.  I did throw myself a pity party, feeling maligned by what was a rude welcome to the site, but understanding that I can be dense (in any way you'd like to define "dense"), and closed with a request for mutual compassion.
As fast as fast can be in electronic time, he rallied:

I could certainly show compassion. However, upon my first visit to your page and reading what you've posted there, I suppose I got a really bad impression. Perhaps the community would welcome you a bit more, if the first thing you did upon joining was something other than posting an insult to to the same community you wish to be a part of on your user page.
BOING!  Arrow to the heart.  This is what I had written on my "user page," though I blushed now at the thought of a 32-year old poet reading such nonsense:  

I admit that this place scares me. Many levels of talent.  Many people married to their words.  I cannot speak to the passion, purportedly what binds the community? (Is that right?  Did I get that right?) 
If so, Isn't it a bit on the masturbatory side of things? And remember -- whether you are for masturbation or all in a lather against it -- it is you who bring any weighty value to the word, much less the act! 
"Pay up and buy your word concoctions some love?"
(As You Like It, of course -- carrying the risk of "too much of a good thing," and the potential need for potent antibiotics.) 
But there is an innate rightness in that: Poetry should be a commodity, bought and sold. And maybe here, it's reached the thin air where ditties are bartered?  And again, don't weigh down my word choice with judgment. 
Just sit with it.  Masturbatory, Community, Dripping Love Infectious Concoctions, A Commodities Exchange (What three applauding marauding hands can get you!), Bartered Ditties. 
Hey, that's probably the most profound BrainBlurb I've had on poetics, ever!
Were I blessed to be in a band, "Bartered Ditties" might be a top twenty name choice.
I had to put SOMETHING.  And, I swear, I just decided to be honest.  After all, I was not a "gold member," had put nothing on the head of the barrel, and was not out to delude anyone.  Oh, no, not pretending to be my dead cat Monaghan and an -- ach mein gott! -- academic!

So I let the matter go.  Really.

Then, two days ago, or yesterday, I receive this message from said poet:
I don't give a fuck what you do. lol
Without referential background... I think I ignored it.  Not sure.  I may have inquired as to what the fuck the asshole was pulling out of his butt now... but I don't think so.

Then, today, again without the courtesy of a point of origin:

hey, guess what...
fuck you!

One hour post that "fuck you," I got another!

hey, guess what...
fuck you!

So I guess it's on some sort of bot timer and I'll be receiving these forever. 

Oh, wait!  Here is my last comment, somehow not yet erased!  

and wayyyyy up yours.  man, you class up the joint.
Ravens Corner Pharmacy


In other news, I wrote a new poem.  Honest to God, I cannot read that -- "I wrote a new poem" -- without requiring medication for seizures!  Anyway, I *did* -- in defense of poor Poe's raven.  They have it scattered everywhere other there, and you'll note I made recent use of a poor crow, too -- but whose wings were battered, frayed.  I think I'm getting too old for all this.  After all, I'm not a 32 year old.  From California.  

{giggling at the memory of the drive-bys on our oakland avenue, at walking from berkeley to sausalito in cotton chinese mary janes, at getting drunk just before the defense of my thesis, at the china bowl express in lalaland, in awe of the people i loved and admired there...}

Sniff. Pinky in air.  Ready for the poem?

Madness makes an easy exit
by Monaghan

my heart bleeds
(a good thing)
for poe's poor raven.

raped all over the damned place,
placed wittily on the extended lyric limn of capital letters --
limbic, but not near enough obscure

that anyone could fail to make
the connection.

i mean, the raven is a one-word
bird and the narrator descending, as narrators
so often do, into

messy madness -- because madness makes
an easy exit from a poem.

Okay, well, this concludes today's soap opera digest of what's going on in the pay-your-way poetry world!  Fred and Ruby just tore off down the road toward the vet again -- no, Bodacious Buddy is fine.  He decided to take Dobby and Marmy in for their annual exams, and we had all kinds of fun getting Marmy into the pet carrier... because Fred does know that those two lose in the car might land him in Tante Louise's jail for Funky Driving.  Besides, being Mother and Son, they comfort each other.  And Marmy gets to piss all over Dobby, the highlight of her year.  The poor thing is terrified of the vet, source, she knows, of that accursed eye goop.

I'm outta here... Buddy is crying, never having been separated from his feline friends before.  Maybe this is where, and how, I am supposed to be.




Tuesday, January 29, 2013

Esquisse and Incubare

Insomnia, Part Four


Can you handle more late afternoon communiqués from this puss-filled, brain-damaged, hot-hot-hot me?

There are some relative newbies to the blog, and if my brief introduction to them at another social (but never the socialist, how long shall I be denied?) web site -- dedicated to the prospect that most anyone is a poet -- OH, CAST THIS SENTENCE INTO HELL'S PIT.

There are new Readers aboard.  They come from two main sources, pools of candidates drawn from their cool, dank waters by curiosity, and fear.  The trustworthy ones, with whom you'd leave your babe-in-arms for the weekend -- with a minimum of Pampers, four jars of strained organic peas, and an extra dark-dyed onesies to hide the spills -- are from this place called All Poetry.  That's right, optimists dressed up in smeared black eye-liner, but who will coo for the baby as soon as your back is turned and your ear obstructed by layers of doors, and a mile or two.  Ah, but the shifty-eyed devils, mostly men with severely scraped faces, clinging to the dangling scraps of their dissipating morality, mummies come unwrapped, are panicked Walmart pharmacists and mid-managers.

If you're of new readership but deny the provenance I just outlined, well, please, make yourself at home.  No childcare duties for you, no burden of instant animus.

Yesterday was a good day.  I put in almost eight hours of uninterrupted domestic labor and The Manor reflected my work in smells of polish and cleansers, in neatly made beds, and with the faint suggestion of the scales I practiced on Fred's piano every time I happened to pass by.  There was pain galore but manageable, until it wasn't and so I quit, happy with the hope of maybe sleeping well as recompense.

Hopes dashed, I got up to do more laundry, to swap one novel for another, to tend to Bianca's ever-broken heart and chipped thumbnail, to assuage Sven's jealousy of the fruit of his loins, the lascivious Cabana Boy -- who, cad that he is, is circling the weepy Castafiore -- and, as always, making time to brush the screeching Dobby.

Night turned into gloomy day, a pork loin was roasted, then neatly divided into five appropriate plastic containers, a few overdue gifts sent, along with overdue bill payments, and I bid "good luck and be careful" to Fred as he took off in Ruby, one outrageously large Maine Coon kitten tucked under his arm.

Yes, Buddy's second trip to the vet.  Fred believes Buddy's psychic frequency so attuned to his own that he won't cage him for the trip, nor for the time in the waiting room full of dogs, bunnies, ferrets, and other sick felines.  Have I not described Buddy's claws?  His natural exuberance?  Like Fred, I place loads of faith in Buddy and in the alignment of our stars -- but straight into the carrier he'd go were I the one driving and responsible for tempering any hint of waiting room mayhem.

I'd be sure he was ensconced in my familiar scent -- a towel, a t-shirt -- and had a favorite toy, at the present time one of my red mohair leg warmers tucked over and over until a tossable ball.  A kiss on the nose, and the bars of that cell would clang shut until the vet needed to handle him.

He's fine, by the way.  A bit of conjunctivitus, easily fixed.  We'd have had it cured days ago if only common sense had kicked in.  We treated the *one* eye, without doing preventative maintenance on the other.  The day after we congratulated ourselves on a vet trip averted, Buddy began rubbing and weeping from the other eye.  Duh.

I'm at 102, precisely.  Between 99 and 101, I am energetic and productive, and find it easy to delude myself.  I'm a happy girl!

Topping 101 -- and, for those of you in the know, doing so while on steroids -- changes everything.  I spent five hours choosing which gift basket of organic nuts and trail mix to send to my MDVIP Go-To-Guy and his staff in honor of their finally catching up on The Walmart Affair.  I would update you on that store's continued slow dance with idiocy, but even I am sick of it.

At about 101.5 I decided to read, then changed my mind in favor of listening to music, then opted to do both at once.  When I stopped checking it at 102, I did the unthinkable and turned off the somehow turned on television, in mid-Chris-Matthews, Hardball be damned.  There was an irrepressible air of clucking chickens loose in the bedroom.

Yeah, so back to this poetry business.  I haven't written poetry in years and still haven't, despite having posted some decided crap at this All Poetry site in the last few febrile days.  "Publish your poetry online,"it crows,  its symbol being, of course, a crow.

And they quantify to beat the band.

"428,081 poets."  Oh dear God.

I apparently joined some years ago, using the moniker of one of our dead cats, Monaghan.  It's not that we have a huge supply of dead cat monikers, but over time, well, beloved kitties pass on.  He was one cool cat -- a fighter (we didn't "get" him until he was an adult and such delayed neutering has less of an effect on habits such as knock-down-drag-outs in the street) and a jazz aficionado.

Hey, and here is a hint for the ages!  My password is "mon philosophe préféré + 1." So go ahead, my friends, and hack away.

According to the many quantifiers, I've submitted SIX poems, though I can only find five.

I cannot write poetry.  I may have already said that.  Once upon a time, yes.  And quite well.  Enough to be published in a fairly above board, non-vanity press kind of way.  With a check in hand and everything.  But no longer.  It hurts, frankly, and is terribly embarrassing.  So, I'm thinking this All Poetry site is the perfect place for me.

I wrote this just about an hour ago, entering my first contest.  Contestants are to begin this "round robin" skill test by submitting but one strophe, to begin with, based on a sketch that looks to me like two Japanese waifs clinging to one another seconds before being obliterated by an atomic bomb.

Winners of the first round are invited to add a second strophe and so on.

So this was my initial attempt, composed as you see it, online, in less than five minutes.  It would have been less than two minutes but I had to go pee mid-creation.  I titled it "Esquisse":


Pen, ink, charcoal: I try to honor what 
made it, not who, resisting the forced
twisting of my vane to the East
on this decidedly Western day,
and the visual bane of pen, ink,
and charcoal clues, hand-swiped
beastly bled-of-color visions, various 
bleak bombs, the requisite clinging siblings, 
and wonder whether to thank the artist 
for cuing up the Orient as horror's home
again (though my vane does creak,
rust breaking, trailing oxidated orange,
auroral to the curse) -- for that 
is not my home.




I suspect that I won't survive the first cut, if only for lack of enthusiasm.  Also, I don't think I've accumulated enough points, applause, comments, or money to be eligible to enter a contest to begin with.  You get points by participating, basically.  You tell other poets how wonderfully dark and at risk for testicular or breast cancer they are, you get points.  You click on one, two, or three icons of clapping hands, and are awarded points for your "applause."

But what makes you a poet, above all, is buying into a plan -- gold, platinum, paste, cubic zirconium, and so forth.  And even if I was willing to fork over 50 bucks to treat my favorite medical team to organic trail mix and an oversized "Thank You" card, I cannot seem to pay up for the privilege of purchasing space for my word assassinations.  The pop-ups and constant reminders that I'll get to use amazing fonts and words of many colors, plus buy the approbation of the equally talented have yet to sway me, have yet to give Discover, Visa, or Master Card the necessary impetus to pay up.

But it will probably happen.

Have you eaten yet?  I hope not, because here is "Incubare," written in as much haste as the esquisse above, but six days ago.  Feel free to trace the ascendant line of my accumulated poetic maturity.


i found two old lovers in one
week: one buried in an old miscellany,
the other beaming like an olive about
to burst a pit, but blunt handsome still.

(oily, though, as i always felt his favorite words 
to be -- smarmy, taken, snatched.)

the older one no longer lives in london,
or he does, but back then he loved to write
from rome, writing "cara mia, cara mia..."
until i thought i would simply weep.

(but see, he was -- in faith -- in love 
with my best friend, she who married someone
else.)

she sent me many postcards, all with
dreams of barnes casting down, with lightness, the church's doors;
dancing in a couplet, a doublet, wearing burgundy tights,
a velvet cloak, dancing down the aisle 
to embolden the unhappy pair, and to carry her away.

our loves and lovers of the time:
buried in miscellany, so cut to the quick
as to make precious acceptable --
we panted for his preciosity --
and then, older, buried in the borrowed, 
published, known, stealing the words
right out of people's mouths,
grease on his lips.



I will have to cough up something worthy soon -- a sestina, a rondeau, something that says I know form.  Content, for me, there, will always be as content is for me, here:  always a meta-something. Poetry is always and only about poetry.

Oh, sweet Reader!  A cold sweat is breaking on my brow....  How wonderful!  I must be on my way down.  In a bit, then, I'll wash up, don the jammies, and give this thing called sleep another go.  It's either that or more poetry, and I don't need to wait for the polls to know which way the wind blows.