(Poem #165 on new numbering scheme)
I've seen my mortality, face forward squarely toward death's city, at least three times; self pity fell to something more witty.
– an englyn unodl union
(Poem #165 on new numbering scheme)
I've seen my mortality, face forward squarely toward death's city, at least three times; self pity fell to something more witty.
– an englyn unodl union
(Poem #164 on new numbering scheme)
The sentences formed and flowed, spilling forth, flowers in flood, but still no one understood the words - no real person could.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #163 on new numbering scheme)
The monkey met the raven to talk about which option they might choose to try to win their war against the demon.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #162 on new numbering scheme)
I saw, stranded there, a leaf, caught like a weak man's hand, half on and half off a bookshelf, as he fell, slain by her laugh.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #161 on new numbering scheme)
I saw a bug on the floor. A cluster of dust or fur, a small black machine or more, weird, mysterious cypher.
– an englyn proest dalgron
[daily log: walking, 1km]
(Poem #160 on new numbering scheme)
I saw bits of wood arrayed along the path's side, like dead insects, or some bones, which could come from some strange beast, though flawed.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #159 on new numbering scheme)
He layered brick upon brick, creating a kind of fake mountain up which he might walk, plotting God's death at its peak.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #158 on new numbering scheme)
A semi-automatic weapon, some semiotic reasons, a panegyric to be said to the dead. Terrific.
– an englyn unodl crwca
(Poem #157 on new numbering scheme)
Do the things that make you glad despite the fact that you did things undeniably bad... you did them because you could.
– an englyn proest dalgron – apropos my posting earlier today, I guess, and tongue-in-cheek.
(Poem #156 on new numbering scheme)
The magpie cocked its head, then paused to watch a leaf, began to step into the strong sun - a blue, black and white machine.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #155 on new numbering scheme)
The teacher's droning was not comprehensible. Some scant words made sense. She passed a note. Faithless, time flowed like cement.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #154 on new numbering scheme)
On the first day of the year, I feel kinda sad. There are so many things that I care to achieve... yet I sit here.
– an englyn proest dalgron
[daily log: walking, 1km]
(Poem #153 on new numbering scheme)
Due to the smog from Beijing, red stains the light in morning, as if the gods are burning - at least one - as if the sun's setting.
– an englyn unodl crwca
(Poem #152 on new numbering scheme)
I walk home. The sun has gone, such that all that's left is then a kind of distillation of dusk, flavored by the moon.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #151 on new numbering scheme)
He sat down with the grim gods to play poker. He dealt cards, spinning them out from his hands, preparing his daring deeds.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #150 on new numbering scheme)
The monkey, magnificent with his rainbow-hued, bent limbs, all bendy, at last sent, hurled along headlong, by some student.
(Poem #149 on new numbering scheme)
The cold air hung like a stone, and its surface, not so thin, demarcated a vague line between the earth and the sun.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #148 on new numbering scheme)
These sacks of bones, meat and blood have a small fragment of cold, strange intellect, and thus should try to discover what's good.
– an englyn proest dalgron
(Poem #147 on new numbering scheme)
Maybe I don't like Christmas; it often seems to mean less to those who have known some loss: all the cheer's extraneous.
– an englyn proest dalgron
[daily log: walking, 1.5km]
(Poem #146 on new numbering scheme)
In cold wind, a few leaves swirled. Grey, inchoate gods unfurled their pale fingers, stale spirit, here at the end of the world.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #145 on new numbering scheme)
That was a horrible day: Students quit and went away. The boss gave an angry rant, and I can't think what to say.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #144 on new numbering scheme)
The kids travel by rainbow, hopping from desert to snow interdimensionally. Through alleys and clouds they go!
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #143 on new numbering scheme)
Two cats discussed solitude across gulfs of feline mood. The one suggested, "Look here, without fear." The other mewed.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #142 on new numbering scheme)
I excavated a hole pushing the earth, like a mole. And there I buried my brain. With rain, I might grow a soul.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #141 on new numbering scheme)
For now, exquisite disgust sketches out my doubts and must indicate the neglect felt where I knelt in spinning dust.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #140 on new numbering scheme)
Try something. Open your head. Find some ghosts. Talk to the dead. Let apophenic meaning come screaming through what they said.
– an englyn cyrch
[daily log: walking, 1km]
(Poem #139 on new numbering scheme)
Two AM, and I can't sleep - Thinking stuff, and it feels deep. But it's not - just wasting time. The climb out is very steep.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #138 on new numbering scheme)
They hate the establishment, their vote's against government, so a man whose soul's frozen is chosen for president.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #137 on new numbering scheme)
The struggle with gravity, with the strange concavity of spacetime, is blamed on splines and Einstein's depravity.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #136 on new numbering scheme)
Dead leaves caught on a street grate trace an unspeakable fate on a moment so bitter the winter wind tastes like slate.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #135 on new numbering scheme)
I worry about small things. Peace of mind is hard to find. Doubtings unfold, like coils or springs. A clockwork beetle grows wings.
– an englyn unodl union
(Poem #134 on new numbering scheme)
Deciduous dawn redwoods shed their needles so they could make small piles on the sidewalks and blocks of my neighborhood.
– an englyn cyrch
(Poem #133 on new numbering scheme)
I grow weary of oatmeal: its amorphousness, surreal, brooding in its little bowl its sole purpose, to congeal.
– an englyn cyrch