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I was asked to write about a girl I’d never had at all- It was an easy enough task.   I haven’t written about anything else since I can remember. I’ve imagined her as the source behind all of Whitman’s Eidolins And every young boy’s first faustian plea- I’ve imagined her as the reason I sold my soul to a wooden box and torch songs- and forty thousand thimbles full of tequila. I addressed her earlier today when I should’ve been relating my own moral codex- To Mitchell’s ‘The Other Bird.’ I had, instead, stumbled across the Blue Tail Fly and thought of how could I slip that into- A simple (humbly shouted) mantra about getting her to step outside with me. What a beautiful day to try, To destroy the things that have left you ary- You’re just as marvelous as you are shy We’ll brush away that blue-tail fly, It’s alright-alright-alright. How could I address her without the least bit of Americana? Though, I highly doubt trading spit with me constitutes marvelous dissent. It might- but only in the context that she’d be as weary of those estival fumes- Those threadbare summers. The divulsion from stick wars to stick wars that end with- a coral flush and real bruises. That business of cruelty as William Carlos Williams describes it. It’d be easy to talk about her throughout every-day. I could tell you that she’d have the incantations to make nature act, She would have never seen a tornado outside of a television, but she’d say they emit a wonderful cobalt blue when they’re intruding on peace and plain. She might even chalk them up to table-legs prone to constant spiraling and amorphous shape- And up there we’d be- exchanging comments on the land beneath She’d drink her coffee without any sugar But, I’d offer it every time While I focused on keeping my nerves from making the table shake- Avoiding upsetting anything, that might get to make it to her lips. I’d tell her I’ve seen those blocks Emitted those midnight-shrieks Pulled from those basement-band symposiums Tailored those half-alpha ***** tongues If it made her comfortable with my lack of attention, My eyes and mind having been reserved for that night- When she runs in with a copy of The Love Song of J.Alfred Pufrock Yelling- ‘Hey, isn’t this the only poem you give a **** about?’ And I slap it out of her hands.
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Dec 12, 2011
Dec 12, 2011 at 10:19 AM UTC
A request-
I was asked to write about a girl I’d never had at all- It was an easy enough task.   I haven’t written about anything else since I can remember. I’ve imagined her as the source behind all of Whitman’s Eidolins And every young boy’s first faustian plea- I’ve imagined her as the reason I sold my soul to a wooden box and torch songs- and forty thousand thimbles full of tequila. I addressed her earlier today when I should’ve been relating my own moral codex- To Mitchell’s ‘The Other Bird.’ I had, instead, stumbled across the Blue Tail Fly and thought of how could I slip that into- A simple (humbly shouted) mantra about getting her to step outside with me. What a beautiful day to try, To destroy the things that have left you ary- You’re just as marvelous as you are shy We’ll brush away that blue-tail fly, It’s alright-alright-alright. How could I address her without the least bit of Americana? Though, I highly doubt trading spit with me constitutes marvelous dissent. It might- but only in the context that she’d be as weary of those estival fumes- Those threadbare summers. The divulsion from stick wars to stick wars that end with- a coral flush and real bruises. That business of cruelty as William Carlos Williams describes it. It’d be easy to talk about her throughout every-day. I could tell you that she’d have the incantations to make nature act, She would have never seen a tornado outside of a television, but she’d say they emit a wonderful cobalt blue when they’re intruding on peace and plain. She might even chalk them up to table-legs prone to constant spiraling and amorphous shape- And up there we’d be- exchanging comments on the land beneath She’d drink her coffee without any sugar But, I’d offer it every time While I focused on keeping my nerves from making the table shake- Avoiding upsetting anything, that might get to make it to her lips. I’d tell her I’ve seen those blocks Emitted those midnight-shrieks Pulled from those basement-band symposiums Tailored those half-alpha ***** tongues If it made her comfortable with my lack of attention, My eyes and mind having been reserved for that night- When she runs in with a copy of The Love Song of J.Alfred Pufrock Yelling- ‘Hey, isn’t this the only poem you give a **** about?’ And I slap it out of her hands.
judd-orsburn
Written by
American
Dec 12, 2011
Dec 12, 2011 at 10:19 AM UTC
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