...and possible 28, 29, 30. Was all productive this morning. (When I plan to go the gym, is this my brain's way of thwarting me? This compulsion to actually write poems for the first time in a while...) Let's see what happens tomorrow, eh?
The Marriage of Figaro—Overture
So bounding in the slippage
& the abyss trap door, tripping
makes the rise so so
makes the fall so so
O sigh, O try
this dance yr arms
my arms
swing wide
O joy
& bang this buzz into
O light in the window
is what it means to sing
then crash from each lash
lashing onto wings onto singing each fringe forages our legs waging war against the floors
against the floors
stepping forward
toward this light wick
bounding again, rising, rising
the fringe, the war, the floors lashing the feet the light to our bodies in such urgent sprawl that we feel only the moving feel only the lightning in the darkest winter like starnight inviting unites
Clarinet Concerto—I. Allegro
O sway in and drip
this lilting lilting
so too repeating and
felt into this quick tip
of ink trills that tendrils whispers
sew happiness in the wind & field
this fielding hill so sweep
the day sweep sky sweep
away like happy having
warm
O sing! O love!
how the morning lifts sun
if luck
or storm the world the room with water
flooding out each stinking
weather clement
time in fever—
swells
down into a low note
so slow
for pause
to remember
soft
like fingers in ears
on cheeks
the smear
of passing
and the lift of arms the lift of eyes the upwards momen of each single dripping bit of life that corners into each river swell
to push, to cure & push, in such a fast
sew the spinning world to a new day
Requiem in D Minor—Introitus: Requiem Aeternam
Enter opaque march in deep
burning—heats the heather
with seeding red.
Until her heart is in the room
singing pastoral.
What leaving feels. What leaving leaves
her heart sonorous—
A fire that baritones
a kindling of larynx.
And the pulse is biblical.
And we spin the dream, weave it
a ladder heavenward, saying "please—
And they keep their eyes
like their voices
in the chords.
O god—
they say.
O lord—
2 comments:
Hey, these are pretty great! Tell me about your inspiration?
Mozart, baby. All Mozart.
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