Men are ennobled
for their wisdom
eluding them.
But by what those
admirable
little
odious
vermin
perfect toward
procurement
I cannot but conclude
corruption.
(cut-up: Gulliver’s Travels – Jonathan Swift)
Men are ennobled
for their wisdom
eluding them.
But by what those
admirable
little
odious
vermin
perfect toward
procurement
I cannot but conclude
corruption.
(cut-up: Gulliver’s Travels – Jonathan Swift)

My thanks to IT and Rupert for posting my poem here today. Also thanks to Claire Palmer for the great image.
The writer
speaks to images
rather than craft
from which,
to look ahead,
is seen as professional.
The writer
chooses that
convenient moment
to believe
images choose me
slanting like a god across
his technical ability.
Professional,
he had seriously noted it
with inaccurate pride.
(cut-up: The End of the Affair – Graham Greene)
It was a wonderful early morning surprise – via my email feed – to find this close, thoughtful and appreciative review of my poetry collection Agri Culture by Rupert Loydell. My sincere thanks to him for this reading, and to Tears in the Fence for sharing.
You can read it here.
America
got wind
they had died:
trying to influence
in a wasp’s nest,
they had been stung
dead –
hybrid, infidel
evil, this
wasp-Selection
buried America,
Darwin daisies
blooming beside
what they did.
Wasps!
Congregations of,
they believed in
their churches,
infidels,
a volcano of
evil
with never
a thought for Santa
or America.
(cut-up: USA – John Dos Passos)
Only a man who knows reason talks of
reasoning – that or he is French, unfathomably
French, knowing the limits of reason as a
paradox of principles, a thinking man at the
same time, but without a thinking machine.
The method of his is clear and commonplace,
French. The French electrify the world with
French thought: a machine cannot motor without
petrol. Starting any paradox from such a naked
state – if he is a French man at the same time – he
is carrying modern fatalism as a truism of
commonplace French thought. Nothing of motors
talks to reason, for that is brainless. Intelligence
is French; the paradox of the truism is nescience.
(cut-up/found: The Innocence of Father Brown – G.K. Chesterton)
The persons concerned in consideration of
finished pleasure have on certain occasions a
little eternity, a leisure in life of brilliant colours,
a dense pattern long upon the smooth ceremony
of unconscious sex. We should call it the
perfect dusk, known also as to ebb in these
circumstances, shadows of an old man who
smoked cigarettes when grown mellow on such
a privilege. On this occasion a part of the after-
noon was left, itself delightful, and time for tea
with his face turned to a large cup, and now a
little feast of a different quality at this interval
for an elder, and what had waned was with much
circumspection votaries of when shadows were.
(text-mix/found in: The Portrait of a Lady – Henry James)
“Hm,” he said.
“Well,” I sighed.
“It’s not easy to describe. I really am ashamed of my long tongue.”
“Yes, I think it is,” I said.
I want to ask, but with weight of consideration and obviously sullenness in the bargain I can’t.
“You see,” he said.
“Must be deformed?” I inquired.
“No, sir,” he presently resumed, “something displeasing. I use it I know.”
“What sort of man…..”
“I am of the other party.”
“You might have warned me. Detestable.”
He was an extraordinary looking man. Pedantically exact. A down-right long tongue. I saw him use it.
(cut-up: Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde – Robert Louis Stevenson)
To be a poet
on the playing chords
of emotion
quality escapes,
but
finely-ordered
knowledge
and discernment
passes back as shade.
Instantaneously
into
feeling
feeling
feeling
and
feeling
is to have a soul.
(cut-up: Middlemarch – George Eliot)
As a man
a man
cast-away
simplicity of
the noun
‘man’
the adjective
manly
and this word
gentlemanly
lonely
spoken of
as a man
endurance
strength
exaggerated
used
inappropriately
unacknowledged
distortion
to his
to his
fellow men
immured in
himself
meaning as
relation to
others
in a term
that only
he
is often
prisoner to
(cut-up: North and South – Elizabeth Gaskell)