The Local Bat
- Quote
- Posted: Thu, 28 Jan 2010 17:24:36 +0000
I've never actually started a collective or anything, but this is the manuscript I wrote last semester for something of a senior project. I plan on adding more material as it surfaces, but I feel this is pretty much finished structurally, as something of an "edition zero."
Apologies if anyone's read some of these before--many of them have been posted on these forums in the past, though most of those have been revised at least a little bit (though a few are probably, word for word, the same).
If anyone actually reads this, and has any criticisms or comments on any particular poems, or the work as a whole, that would, of course, be really fly. smile Peace/Love.
Anyway,
Walking Black Hole
by Andy Jones
PROLOGUE: TWO APOLOGIES
Metapoetics
Your poem says mine is a fool,
but my poem don’t give a damn—
too busy shootin’ pool. Jazz and funk
and hip and hop and beats and bop
go and drop up top the loading dock,
into my poem’s block.
Your poem says mine takes too long,
Your poem says mine takes too long,superfluity.
(and learn to ******** lineate!) but my poem enjoys
taking its time—a slow , scenic , drivex,xx,xx,
observin’ as every line becomes a landmark—
O, sea of words! , O, tree of text! , artificial architecture—
my poem likes to absorb it all, then be cut open and spill.
Your poem says my poem is fat, excessive, overwrought,
Your poem says my poem is fat, excessive, ovsuperfluity.
but my poem watches your skinny, scrawny,
anorexic poem’s bones shake and fracture
under the weight of expectation. My poem weeps
for yours, but also sometimes chuckles at its undeveloped
form—it's cut the strings that hold it up—and the way it denies
itself,
itself,xxx“O I have no form,
itself,xxxO I have no rhyme, no
itself,xxxI am not formal
itself,xxxI am not a poem.”
(My poem thinks your poem has identity issues,
and needs to accept the fact that it is, indeed, a poem.)
My poem’s not so bound as yours to what the world will say—
it’s seen many a lonely critic’s eye wander from it—
instead looking for that lean, easily comprehensible,
easily digestible diet of thoroughly compacted
verbal worms in party dress and mascara—
before being forgotten, and, the next day,
ground into mulch. My poem would prefer to be
a simple pulse in the present than being a shock
wave then and a grave in the past. My poem will
be a ghost in life, then linger on past death.
My poem will last.
Your poem’s arranged in a neat row—
your pobut-mine don't [/******** with no rows,
Your poem's arra don’t
and I mean that in the figurative and the literal
sense, or as literal as you can be about
the series of abstractions that words are, for they are
abstractions—every last one of them—but your
poem is too busy with its face smacked down
in the concrete—blood coming out of the title line,
each stanza soaked in that s**t like red ******** wine
on clean white carpeting, so it can’t really deal with that,
and likes instead to think that it knows, and by the way,
remember—don’t tell, but show.
(don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell butremember—don’t tell, but s(.x)x (.x)xMY POEM: Hmm….
showxxxdon’t tell but showmember—don’t tell, but show.andifitbecomesnow, when will that become
don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell butabitchtoformatwellohwelllearntodealwit“overused to the point
showxxxdon’t tell but showmember—don’t tell, but show.andifitbecomesof losing [its] meaning?”
don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell but
showxxxdon’t tell but show
don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell but
show)
Now don’t get me wrong—my poem
ain’t tyrin’ t’ dis or none of that s**t.
It all just has to do with atmosphere,
and rhythm, and establishing something
cerebral, and yes, formal (maybe my poem
just like to dress fancy—is all I’m sayin’),
but not formal in the way you think that
my poem is absorbed in institutions, but
it likes to recognize said institutions, said
establishments, and un-drill its nuts and bolts,
then build a playground. But your poem
comes ‘round, and like some douche bag
singer with a diva complex who goes to karaoke
every week, but, of course, is too good to sing it,
your poems stands right outside the playground
and is all, like, dissin’ and s**t and all of that, pointing at
mine and sayin’ its fat, so if my poem
retaliates a bit, that’s just what it is, man,
I mean I’m just sayin’, man, I’m just
sayin’
just sayin’ that my poem is a bit sick and tired of taking
itself in, to the gym to get a little bit fit, then being
told it shouldn’t exist, but maybe if we cut off a few limbs—
its feet and its arms and its fists—and remove certain elements
of its cerebral cavity which cause it to lead itself to confusion,
then maybe we can market its mutilated body—maybe
then that condensed version will make it into a magazine,
or an anthology with a cheesy intro claiming that poetic meter is “boring,”
and poetry is poignancy, and seek to mean, and oh, speaking of that,
no, we can’t just see your poem with a pair of kicks on
and just like its pair of kicks—we need to see the intention,
and the purpose, and the literal meaning of these kicks,
and don’t go quoting modernists in defense of this, because
they may have played with language, but everything they wrote
has at least some kind of meaning that can be traced, and your cerebral,
indulgent, wordy s**t just goes in circles for the sake of rhythm,
goes in circles for the sake of sound, and not much else.
(circles for rhythmxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not mu(.x)x(.x)xMY POEM: (dot dot dot)
soundxxxcircles for rhythmor the sake of sound, and not much else.ccwell, s**t, maybe
circles for soundxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not much else.cxthey are right about the
rhythmxxxcircles for soundor the sake of sound, and not much else.ccmodernists. In that case
circles for rhythmxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not much else.cI’m stuck on a word in
soundxxxcircles for rhythmor the sake of sound, and not much else.cca Cummings poem—
circles for soundxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not much else.cc“omiepsicron1onO—“
rhythmxxxcircles for soundor the sake of sound, and not much else.ccyeah, can anyone tell me
circles for rhythmxxxcirclesthe sake of sound, and not much else.cxxxwhat that word means?
for soundxxxcircles for rhythm
circles forxxxsound)
To Write Upon a Vampire
What thoughts arise in me to write upon a vampire?
To dabble in a bold, old archetype—
to set the ink, like gasoline, to fire?
When I can’t find a single bit to inspire,
and I stray upon the verge of form and type,
what thinking makes me write about a vampire?
Well, ‘tis simple—a ghoulish beast by implication creates dire
circumstance. He conjures up a kind of tripe,
reverses wills, then sets the ink, like gasoline, to fire
and then he sits and stares, bares his teeth, his lips as thin and sharp as wire—
he muddies thought and cloaks the situation, molar’s marrow makes its bite,
and thoughts stir up to write upon a vampire.
A vampire, with foolish fangs and pompous slang—his whole, entire image is to tire;
he constantly repeats the same old ******** thing, through lack of sight
and then sets out to set the page’s ink to flame and make the paper burn and fade with fire.
My pen and him are but one line away—synonyms, like sweat to perspire,
but I know they’ll never save this night’s last dying type.
Still thoughts arise in me to write upon a vampire
who’d sell his soul to set this poem on fire.
Apologies if anyone's read some of these before--many of them have been posted on these forums in the past, though most of those have been revised at least a little bit (though a few are probably, word for word, the same).
If anyone actually reads this, and has any criticisms or comments on any particular poems, or the work as a whole, that would, of course, be really fly. smile Peace/Love.
Anyway,
Walking Black Hole
by Andy Jones
PROLOGUE: TWO APOLOGIES
Metapoetics
Your poem says mine is a fool,
but my poem don’t give a damn—
too busy shootin’ pool. Jazz and funk
and hip and hop and beats and bop
go and drop up top the loading dock,
into my poem’s block.
Your poem says mine takes too long,
Your poem says mine takes too long,superfluity.
(and learn to ******** lineate!) but my poem enjoys
taking its time—a slow , scenic , drivex,xx,xx,
observin’ as every line becomes a landmark—
O, sea of words! , O, tree of text! , artificial architecture—
my poem likes to absorb it all, then be cut open and spill.
Your poem says my poem is fat, excessive, overwrought,
Your poem says my poem is fat, excessive, ovsuperfluity.
but my poem watches your skinny, scrawny,
anorexic poem’s bones shake and fracture
under the weight of expectation. My poem weeps
for yours, but also sometimes chuckles at its undeveloped
form—it's cut the strings that hold it up—and the way it denies
itself,
itself,xxx“O I have no form,
itself,xxxO I have no rhyme, no
itself,xxxI am not formal
itself,xxxI am not a poem.”
(My poem thinks your poem has identity issues,
and needs to accept the fact that it is, indeed, a poem.)
My poem’s not so bound as yours to what the world will say—
it’s seen many a lonely critic’s eye wander from it—
instead looking for that lean, easily comprehensible,
easily digestible diet of thoroughly compacted
verbal worms in party dress and mascara—
before being forgotten, and, the next day,
ground into mulch. My poem would prefer to be
a simple pulse in the present than being a shock
wave then and a grave in the past. My poem will
be a ghost in life, then linger on past death.
My poem will last.
Your poem’s arranged in a neat row—
your pobut-mine don't [/******** with no rows,
Your poem's arra don’t
and I mean that in the figurative and the literal
sense, or as literal as you can be about
the series of abstractions that words are, for they are
abstractions—every last one of them—but your
poem is too busy with its face smacked down
in the concrete—blood coming out of the title line,
each stanza soaked in that s**t like red ******** wine
on clean white carpeting, so it can’t really deal with that,
and likes instead to think that it knows, and by the way,
remember—don’t tell, but show.
(don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell butremember—don’t tell, but s(.x)x (.x)xMY POEM: Hmm….
showxxxdon’t tell but showmember—don’t tell, but show.andifitbecomesnow, when will that become
don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell butabitchtoformatwellohwelllearntodealwit“overused to the point
showxxxdon’t tell but showmember—don’t tell, but show.andifitbecomesof losing [its] meaning?”
don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell but
showxxxdon’t tell but show
don’t tell but showxxxdon’t tell but
show)
Now don’t get me wrong—my poem
ain’t tyrin’ t’ dis or none of that s**t.
It all just has to do with atmosphere,
and rhythm, and establishing something
cerebral, and yes, formal (maybe my poem
just like to dress fancy—is all I’m sayin’),
but not formal in the way you think that
my poem is absorbed in institutions, but
it likes to recognize said institutions, said
establishments, and un-drill its nuts and bolts,
then build a playground. But your poem
comes ‘round, and like some douche bag
singer with a diva complex who goes to karaoke
every week, but, of course, is too good to sing it,
your poems stands right outside the playground
and is all, like, dissin’ and s**t and all of that, pointing at
mine and sayin’ its fat, so if my poem
retaliates a bit, that’s just what it is, man,
I mean I’m just sayin’, man, I’m just
sayin’
just sayin’ that my poem is a bit sick and tired of taking
itself in, to the gym to get a little bit fit, then being
told it shouldn’t exist, but maybe if we cut off a few limbs—
its feet and its arms and its fists—and remove certain elements
of its cerebral cavity which cause it to lead itself to confusion,
then maybe we can market its mutilated body—maybe
then that condensed version will make it into a magazine,
or an anthology with a cheesy intro claiming that poetic meter is “boring,”
and poetry is poignancy, and seek to mean, and oh, speaking of that,
no, we can’t just see your poem with a pair of kicks on
and just like its pair of kicks—we need to see the intention,
and the purpose, and the literal meaning of these kicks,
and don’t go quoting modernists in defense of this, because
they may have played with language, but everything they wrote
has at least some kind of meaning that can be traced, and your cerebral,
indulgent, wordy s**t just goes in circles for the sake of rhythm,
goes in circles for the sake of sound, and not much else.
(circles for rhythmxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not mu(.x)x(.x)xMY POEM: (dot dot dot)
soundxxxcircles for rhythmor the sake of sound, and not much else.ccwell, s**t, maybe
circles for soundxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not much else.cxthey are right about the
rhythmxxxcircles for soundor the sake of sound, and not much else.ccmodernists. In that case
circles for rhythmxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not much else.cI’m stuck on a word in
soundxxxcircles for rhythmor the sake of sound, and not much else.cca Cummings poem—
circles for soundxxxcircles forthe sake of sound, and not much else.cc“omiepsicron1onO—“
rhythmxxxcircles for soundor the sake of sound, and not much else.ccyeah, can anyone tell me
circles for rhythmxxxcirclesthe sake of sound, and not much else.cxxxwhat that word means?
for soundxxxcircles for rhythm
circles forxxxsound)
To Write Upon a Vampire
What thoughts arise in me to write upon a vampire?
To dabble in a bold, old archetype—
to set the ink, like gasoline, to fire?
When I can’t find a single bit to inspire,
and I stray upon the verge of form and type,
what thinking makes me write about a vampire?
Well, ‘tis simple—a ghoulish beast by implication creates dire
circumstance. He conjures up a kind of tripe,
reverses wills, then sets the ink, like gasoline, to fire
and then he sits and stares, bares his teeth, his lips as thin and sharp as wire—
he muddies thought and cloaks the situation, molar’s marrow makes its bite,
and thoughts stir up to write upon a vampire.
A vampire, with foolish fangs and pompous slang—his whole, entire image is to tire;
he constantly repeats the same old ******** thing, through lack of sight
and then sets out to set the page’s ink to flame and make the paper burn and fade with fire.
My pen and him are but one line away—synonyms, like sweat to perspire,
but I know they’ll never save this night’s last dying type.
Still thoughts arise in me to write upon a vampire
who’d sell his soul to set this poem on fire.