Romantics class lecture. |
he says, he says. he says. like the squirrel is dead on the lawn, interrupting my walk on this day (thrown there), (died there), red blood matted to its hair head crushed against the ground; stop talking about death, the dead the dying, stop talking about that. if you're there i don't want to be there. there you are walking down the street, with your iridescence hanging capaciously behind you like the flag of a foreign place i need to go to. look at you looking at your incompetent admirers. he says it, stares strangely around the room (strange is a beautiful word, but does not count near manifestos, new moves, romance is dying); the irony in the classroom is stupid, hangs heavy like the blood in the fur, we're all here to be different, and come out all the same - with some exceptions, romance. a dead squirrel does nothing to impede these thoughts of you and or these thoughts of stability (as i have been on a downslope lately thinking about the dead, dying, etc). poetry is dead, and or dying, and along with it, the lot of us who give a damn about the words not worth a damn in themselves. |