Last night we finally got wind of the new greeting card. It sounded like shrimp head or lunch pail. But those are things of profound sadness and we decided to rename it, like houseboat or inscribed straggle. It now appears under your pillow like air pocket or willful sample of a lonely tooth. We suppose it is like wine wasted on the telephone. But we are similarly misled, and it is like the
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Finally You
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The Star Rover
That someday we will want to know Behind the word ardors. Projections seriously arrived at. A flourish of flowers against imagination’s Pav...
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This is the beach where the fiddler crabs first drew the outlines of their slanted homes among the eel grass. The beach where catapults were...
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Today we find ourselves in a very novelistic world. As in foot note (1) What do you have to think the poem is indicates the source anything ...
2 comments:
I got a similar greeting card. It was postmarked late August from the land of unknown borders, two bird days south of a mountain range made of skin flakes and laundry lint. I called it Edgar, but I knew it was really named Queen Ilikilian’ea by the person who sent it. It wore the traditional colors (orange, brown and sun yellow) of the ancient dancers who first thought of giving over their bodies to the night spirits. Still, the card said blue and distance and scribble. It spoke a language I used to speak, but have started forgetting.
the love
the horse
your pain
you left
I didn't leave
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