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Andrew Furst Apr 2015
A little thin in the wallet and the waist
She was a ripe red instrument moving sound.

Putting to minds questions,
Apers set to calculating, which event was it that uncovered her work’s charm

She only shined as a jewel would
Twixt the particles transporting those sonics
12:1 technique.  

1. use a random word generator to produce 12 words
2. use the same generator to produce 1 word

The title\subject is from step 2
I construct a poem from the 12 words from step 1.
Andrew Furst Apr 2015
A pull or a falling feeling
At the heart
Head fuzzy, blood drawn below
The touch of another, so new, so full in its sensation,
Dispelling the separation of the world
fueling the engine of desire.

Entering, she holds me wetly and warmly.
Encouraging, finding sounds
to exchange love and lust and awkward sentences.

No, yes
What am I saying.
Discovering, touching, thirsting,
Release, collapse, silence, holding

A new beginning.
Andrew Furst Apr 2015
Gathering
all the worry available,
I’ll unite it on the roof top
With brave resolve I will not spoil it. I will show it the rod.

Muddled but willing
I’ll endure
With some future seed of injure
E.

It’s difficult to tell
If yesterday’s answers are obsolete
Zooming in, they seem ill,
Fated (or faded).
But distance makes them shiny,
hard to ignore.

Graceful and invincible in their turn.
Andrew Furst Jun 2015
It’s hard to see how you might tame a heart
Considering how we poke and **** it
Fact is watching mine is not exactly at the top of the list

I’m tempted to bring it out in public,
Into the heat or under the moon.
Fluttering to the rhythm of the earth.
You can watch the video version of this poem here https://youtu.be/VLN7roWmJHU
Now
Andrew Furst May 2015
Now
The clamor
The desire etched on her face
Her throat yearning, all the way down
Her thirst is tangible,
Her nostrils flair betraying anticipation

Give it to me
Give it to me now

Please, give me a glass of water
Andrew Furst Apr 2015
History without rooms, buildings or battlefields.
Bodies vacant of death.
Life, thy woman,
thy green glowing girl,
hath no sight, hands, or limbs;
breathing -
moving and unmoving -

Walking a narrow hazardous world.

Soft shoulders shrugging fear.
Opening slightly,
eyes hold signs penned by ordinary humans.
Returning the senses to earth.
Take mine back to the place
This poem was constructed from words collected from the following poems

No Place Like Home by Stephen Cushman
The Happy Place by Rawdon Tomlinson
Earth Your Dancing Place by May Swenson
Him rival to the gods I place (51) by Gaius Valerius Catullus
The Place Where in the End / We Find Our Happiness by Anne Boyer
Andrew Furst Jun 2015
Tenuous at best
This equilibrium I find myself clinging to.
Dangling from the earth by my cranium.
Watching as others, like birds must see fish,
flail about the universe,
feet bound to the firmament above us.

For us
it resembles suffocating
or haphazard design.
Unable to fathom the sensation of the skull
flopping about deleteriously.
As though hanging their brains as bait and net
to whatever hazards might glide below.

Yet, these impressions
would be invisible to the thinking mind, forgotten.
And ours pondered over as a peculiar mystery
born of some untamed imagination.
You can watch the video version of this poem here https://youtu.be/GN4gk8zjSBo
Andrew Furst May 2015
Tenuous at best
This equilibrium I find myself clinging to.
Dangling from the earth by my cranium.
Watching as others, like birds must see fish,
flail about the universe,
feet bound to the firmament above us.

For us
it resembles suffocating
or haphazard design.
Unable to fathom the sensation of the skull
flopping about deleteriously.
As though hanging their brains as bait and net
to whatever hazards might glide below.

Yet, these impressions
would be invisible to the thinking mind, forgotten.
And ours pondered over as a peculiar mystery
born of some untamed imagination.
This poem is written from the perspective of a being who lives in the world with the earth above them and the sky below.
Andrew Furst Apr 2015
There was a stage in my life
When I accepted what was told me
Thoughts etched, the acid leaving indelible patterns
Currents and tides of being
That invited loyalty

Tastes of doubt's power
left me dispossessed – finding new songs,
vainly pressing my own.
Tramping not so slow
warned - unheeding.

Unsensing to the shivering fault
I’m left to wonder
which rocks on the beach
found their smoothness the right way
and which did it all wrong?
Andrew Furst May 2015
Her irises darting, probing.
Her tastes floated and churned behind mine.
Brushed, warm, wet
lips and tongues.
We kissed until it burned,
numbed but unsated.
Fear, passion, pheromones blended
flammabley
and ignited on a fire of psychotic teen heartbreak.
Stalking, trembling, steering my soul
past it
(but always dragging it behind)
Andrew Furst May 2015
Must is a memory of the cellar.
My grandfather would sleep down there when they spent the night.
Me, not really keeping him company,
just being uncomfortably in the same space.

The plastered walls floated a talc-y powder that would linger
in my throat
And on my tongue.

Later when he was dying,
the discomfort still remained,
but subsided as he grew weak
in that big loud frame of his.
Andrew Furst May 2015
Gautama was conceived in the purifying water of the monsoons,
a sweetness aliting to invite the morning bell.
He came to a wealthy world, somehow impoverished,
yet bathed in the crimson light of life;
Blind and unable to shine our gaze into the void,
We complain of distance – when really
there is none between hearts.
Millennia later, the gratitude is mine,
only in the sense that I do not resist its source,
the light.
Andrew Furst Jun 2015
Our future was built on revolution.
A mythos of courageously vanquishing the empire.
Such is the birthright of our citizens.
Our history created us in its image.

Villains seeking conciliation
must bear the title and charge
of treason.

Wielders of swords and rifles
stand immortalized in every town square.
Liberty or Death proclaims the stone and bronze
in which they are cast.

What will be the names of these great black men,
who crush the oppression of the old revolution?
I've started reading James Baldwin's Notes of a Native Son. This poem was forced out of me after the first few pages of reading. This might be the first time I think I actually get the insidiousness of isms. In this particular case the book is about racism, but Baldwin hints at much broader themes here. Please read this book.

https://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/notes-of-a-native-son

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