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For instance, recall daisies, or if you have not seen one, so much the better. Paint me a crass picture and sleep on the shallow crevasse. Stilt through the orchard and search there: nothing still. Even the nothingness is form-fitting, and thus, your vestigial image of daisies. Mold something out of the vacuity, and there a retrograde sculpture will wind back to clay. Cornerstones have your name, and your name even so, has taciturnly placed stones. Stones. These tiny bodies that lay, undemanding, scourged by the rapid passage of a carriage. I wait there, with them, still thinking of daisies. I know of a child, cylindrically obtuse, in front of the mirror. Have you seen yourself in the hazy windows of the Metro? What do you see? I still see daisies. Or people with heads of daisies. But remember your forethought of daisies? They are nothing. I am a beheaded daisy in the lackadaisical wind of Summer. There is nothing to gain here but the sadness of cold passing. And the child that I am speaking of, his name, Magno. Sturdy like the rucksack he’s carrying, lovelessly trundling altogether with the pipes and the handrails, almost signaling the alarm without warning. This uncared-for sultry evening decides to splinter itself against the masses. Again, the daisies appear to me, this time, in heady form rogue with peripatetic fragrance. Magno used to unearth daisies and give them to her mother when he was stiflingly young – he hustled through the carefully placed furniture. Whatever happened to him, I know not. And just like the daisies we have come to know now, trains that do not belong to anyone, and the daisies too, that go unheard of and unknown to the behest of the city, have gone into the subtle beginning of everything that once started in itself, the form of splendor. Nothing.
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Jan 27, 2016
Jan 27, 2016 at 3:27 AM UTC
A Poem About Daisies, Trains, and Magno
For instance, recall daisies, or if you have not seen one, so much the better. Paint me a crass picture and sleep on the shallow crevasse. Stilt through the orchard and search there: nothing still. Even the nothingness is form-fitting, and thus, your vestigial image of daisies. Mold something out of the vacuity, and there a retrograde sculpture will wind back to clay. Cornerstones have your name, and your name even so, has taciturnly placed stones. Stones. These tiny bodies that lay, undemanding, scourged by the rapid passage of a carriage. I wait there, with them, still thinking of daisies. I know of a child, cylindrically obtuse, in front of the mirror. Have you seen yourself in the hazy windows of the Metro? What do you see? I still see daisies. Or people with heads of daisies. But remember your forethought of daisies? They are nothing. I am a beheaded daisy in the lackadaisical wind of Summer. There is nothing to gain here but the sadness of cold passing. And the child that I am speaking of, his name, Magno. Sturdy like the rucksack he’s carrying, lovelessly trundling altogether with the pipes and the handrails, almost signaling the alarm without warning. This uncared-for sultry evening decides to splinter itself against the masses. Again, the daisies appear to me, this time, in heady form rogue with peripatetic fragrance. Magno used to unearth daisies and give them to her mother when he was stiflingly young – he hustled through the carefully placed furniture. Whatever happened to him, I know not. And just like the daisies we have come to know now, trains that do not belong to anyone, and the daisies too, that go unheard of and unknown to the behest of the city, have gone into the subtle beginning of everything that once started in itself, the form of splendor. Nothing.
windsor-i-guadalupe-jr
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Jan 27, 2016
Jan 27, 2016 at 3:27 AM UTC
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