SOME SHORT POEMS & TITLES
August 24, 2008
There are forty-eight short poems here are some of them:
All poems © Sophia Wellbeloved.
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Her emanations ring like a child’s glass
harpsichord, her eyes and skin are clear
she offers a set of small domestic
difficulties on a porcelain plate
and I take one.
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The halo of light cast on the ceiling
is reflected in the window-pane,
projected out into the dawn sky.
Within its radiance the twiggy
top of a tree rests like Japanese
calligraphy on porcelain. Hours
of dazed looking into glass cases,
and centuries of bowl making come
together in this moment.
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I call upon the most high and the most
high comes into being. Like a sliver of
new moon it augments the night sky.
The ends of branches open and close
like gills letting the sky flow through
blue and speckley, everything I see
strokes my skin. lets me be.
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The poem which rose last night is waiting
to be skimmed, or I am waiting while the poem
lips into the skimming spoon, or my waiting is
the skimming process, or else the skimming
is the poem, the writing a trace of procedures.
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Five a.m., I see particles of dust
shining and swirling, pulled
into the shade of my
reading lamp, and expelled
smartly, floating at different
speeds. It is a shock to see them,
as though the dead were
suddenly and briefly made visible.
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Seven grains of salt sit on my right
palm like a constellation, they shine
translucent without glitter, I picked
them up idly with the tip of my left
hand middle finger and put them
there prior to throwing them away,
when I turn my hand from the light
they shine more brightly.
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What is a story? If a man’s hat blew off,
That would be archaic, hats don’t blow
off now, still, it would be an incident,
and if the hat were to be run over by a
bus that would be an extended incident,
but, if the hat began singing as the bus
ran over it “my eyes have seen the glory
of the coming of the Lord” that could be
the beginning of a story. If the hat blew
off and after a while the man forgot it,
that would be a whole story, archaic
and tragic.
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Titles of Short Poems
1. The poem which rose last night is waiting
2. Five a.m., I see particles of dust
3. Seven grains of salt sit on my right
4. What is a story? If a man’s hat blew off,
5. As I stir in my chair it makes
6. God forgot to teach us how to turn and spin
7. If I had a clay pipe I could suck on it
8. The seventeenth reminds me of my brother,
9. When I came home covered in blood my mother
10. My hands appear on the keys, the right hand
11. Subjects go by like minor stations as
12. Waking from a dream of being lost
13. In separation we can be distinguished,
14. Still wrapped in sleep I open the door, looking
15. These gods could not be anything but Greek,
16. A decade ago in Berlin there were women
17. Clouds as lonely as a single person in the park
18. In here the air is thick, dusty with darkness
19. Long ago my heart’s gates were made secure
20. I am
21. Time chews on me like a locust:
22. It was unexpected your head coming down,
23. I might be more pavonine, now that I know
24. All rivers run towards their own oblivion
25. Into the ghostly body of my mother I
26. Every now and then I do not long for
27. You took your own toenails out with pliers
28. Now that the tide has gone out we could
29. This Uccello bird sits
30. So the narrative is a snake skin
31. She looks lacy, frail like a plant
32. His words come whirling out, fast
33. In the library, or the sitting room
34. When I talked to her on the phone I could
35. I get the sense of a leaden worm within her
36. Her emanations ring like a child’s glass
37. There are other ghosts, the ones who live
38. Thursday is the right day to set out on long
39. The halo of light cast on the ceiling
40. The topmost fan of the tree undulates
41. The roof has an heraldic diagonal
42. O Plum! I fear you are not as the label
43. Finding skewed evidence of an old world *
44. The interval between these beings’ *
45. You see the golden hills, not the rucked tracks
46. What the music does is spit itself
47. Hundreds and hundreds of milk-green
48. I call upon the most high and the most
49. Note re Praying For Flow
50. Tripidium
*note: these poems arose from seeing found images in John Stezaker’s 3rd Person Archive, forthcoming Walter König, 2008.
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