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Monday, 4 February 2008

Yang Chung's Poem 70 by Duane Locke

Mandarin ducks, ascendant gray splash of
Side feathers,
Circle the fallen, stick pine, rust-fuzzed bark.

...................................................................The wake

Left behind the quivers of tail feathers
....................................................................Is scissors.

.................................The air is cut

Into scraps,
......................Stitched,
.......................................To become quilts of
Multicolored Matissean odalisque tin
..............................................That taps
The kimono wind
To twist tight over contours.


Duane Locke, Florida, USA

8 comments:

  1. Lives in rural Lakeland, Florida, Duane Locke, Ph. D. (Metaphysical Poetry) has had (as of September 07) 5,917 poems published in print and e zines.[Not one poem self-published, all published by others] 17 print and e books published. Also, a painter, exhibited widely--a discussion of his work appears in Gary Monroe's Extraordinary Interpretations (U of Fla press). Recent exhibition, 'Outsider Art' at
    Polk Museum. A photographer, 289 photos published on internet. Does close-ups of tossed away trash, Mystic vegetation, visual music and nature (primarily small insects).

    ReplyDelete
  2. Gorgeous.

    The words are delightful as is the structure itself.

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  3. Oh, I like this. Well done.

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  4. I've reposted this poem now with the proper layout. Duane had kindly allowed me to post it originally without the layout as i hadn't been able to work out how to format it, but now I can so here is the poem as it should look.

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  5. Anonymous10:21 am

    This is very good.

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  6. This was such a delight to view, read and envision. Lovely.

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  7. Hi Duane, this poem of yours is
    exquisitely written and formed.
    An ethereal quality, the movement
    of falling echoed. Poem 70 may
    be read as two poems, actually.

    ReplyDelete

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