Notice if you will, how
The cicada has departed
Its skin and will now
Sing a song stark
Naked, carried on
The back of the wind.
NB: The title borrowed from Elytis's "Body of Summer," 1943, which begins thusly:
O body of summer, naked, burnt
Eaten away by oil and salt
Body of rock and shudder of the heart
Great ruffling wind in the osier hair
Breath of basil above the curly pubic mound
Full of stars and pine needles
Body, deep vessel of the day!
new old kid on the blog, with an occasional old or new poem written off the old writer's block
Friday, July 2, 2010
Thursday, July 1, 2010
A Lunar Legacy
for the down-
trodden sluggish earth-
bound masses
that said,
his lunatic majesty left
a heavenly trail
of salubrious saliva.
trodden sluggish earth-
bound masses
that said,
his lunatic majesty left
a heavenly trail
of salubrious saliva.
Wednesday, June 30, 2010
Tuesday, June 29, 2010
Stonewalled: The Poet As Culprit
--for Joe Hutchison, master sleuth
For years, I’d been trying
To trace the poem’s origins
And had come up against a blank
Wall every time: Where
Had I seen it before?
.
It must have been somewhere
In the recesses of what passes
Plausibly as my mind but the more
I looked, the less I saw
Until I saw nothing and then
I saw there was no need
Of any further investigation—
I had stolen the poem
From myself.
For years, I’d been trying
To trace the poem’s origins
And had come up against a blank
Wall every time: Where
Had I seen it before?
.
It must have been somewhere
In the recesses of what passes
Plausibly as my mind but the more
I looked, the less I saw
Until I saw nothing and then
I saw there was no need
Of any further investigation—
I had stolen the poem
From myself.
Monday, June 28, 2010
Window on a World
The linked title above will take you down a narrow, cobblestone street where you will witness an old woman looking down at the poet as he passes below her window. This is familiar territory for some of you, as the photograph of the old woman and the poem were the subjects of previous blog posts; however, you will now have the chance to follow the poet as he reconstructs how the poem was written.
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