Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
Jul 2018
/                            s                                   z


                                               ß

              
                             z                                   s

that's how the german grapheme
looks to me in english:

               a play, an interchange of
the two compounded letters...

needless to say, english already has
two grapheme examples:

        cheese
                                        and sheep...

at the moment, given that other european
languages, have some sort of
diacritical indicators to prevent
dyslexia...

                    why can't english have some
too?

           this: reverting into olde
     thee to a thou -
                                          as if that was
             even an indicator of nostalgia...

nostalgia: in all honesty has a limitation in
what, was, immediately prior -
   a dragging effect -

                  nostalgia is something tangible
in that there is a non-hindustan
   anti-reincaration grasp of a past...

     reicarnation as in: so there are only ever
a limited amount of people,
running around, "disembodied"
                              within a decent count
of other, complete bodies?

    which is why i don't bother with
metaphysics,
                        metaphysics is dead to me -

i know that orthography is literally non-existent
in the english language,
   and as someone who drinks heavily:

a drowning man will even attempt
to grasp and hold onto a razor blade
                 to save himself from drowning...

i.e. this whole "real" and other farting into
a leather armchair
    to add some excess warmth for the buttocks
questions
                               ... don't really
    wet my *****-nilly concern for
                    ... what could be deemed:
    artificial castration
                                   utilißing the psychiatric
circus of pharmacological implementation.
Mateuš Conrad
Written by
Mateuš Conrad  36/M/Essex (England)
(36/M/Essex (England))   
91
 
Please log in to view and add comments on poems