kid charlemagne
Well-known member
there are a couple i see early february that i will prepare for..... i also see one in brooklyn next thursday i might go to and try doing this one fully memorized, or might try and write a new one by then
Did you shag then?yes sorry i think i was speaking low maybe out of nervousness.... i did go and read it.... admittedly i did read off my phone for bits, but i enunciated well and looked up and at the people seated.... i went last and everyone applauded after.... but as i was leaving this lady i had never seen before, but was sitting a few seats next to me, grabbed my arm and told me that i did great and that shes always enjoyed my work and that she hopes i come back.... i said thank you, but i was very struck because i'd never seen her in my life, maybe she was just being nice, but it was encouraging....
Chronomicro-metering of hazard. Control. Cybernetics. The poem as a mechanism regulating itself: feed-back. Faster communication (problems of functionality and structure implied) endows the poem with a positive value and guides its own making.
Assuming that the historical cycle of
verse (as formal-rhythmical unit) is closed, concrete poetry begins by being aware of graphic
space as structural agent. Qualified space: space-time structure instead of mere linear-
temporistical development. Hence the importance of ideogram concept, either in its general sense
of spatial or visual syntax, or in its special sense (Fenollosa/Pound) of method of composition
based on direct-analogical, not logical-discursive juxtaposition of elements. “ll faut que notre
intelligence s’habitue à comprendre synthético-idéographiquement au lieu de analytico –
discursivement” (Apollinaire). Eisenstein: ideogram and montage.
It is 12:20 in New York a FridayDiane,
"Diane—1600 hours—Old Lodge—two eggs with coffee and sweetbread, $7.60. Walked the town today. The locals seem to keep to themselves. Loose lips sink ships, and these people are fishers."
You could write anything this way
Yeah, I enjoyed that. Never heard of him before.![]()
A Day on the Big Branch
Still half drunk, after a night at cards, with the grey dawn taking us unaware among our guilty kings and queens, we drove far North in the morning, winners, losers, to a stream in the high hills, to climb up to a place one of us knew, with some vague view of cutting losses or consolidating gains…www.poetryfoundation.org
What you think @Benny Bunter I really like. Doesn't feel artless but feels plain and clear in a lovely way. Like Tony Hoagland but more consistent and less colloquial