“In order to write poetry, you must first invent the poet who will write it.” — Antonio Machado
In this year-long lab in Innovative Inventions, we shall experiment
With a variety of elements, chemical compositions, media (including bricks
And Legos, crayons, pen and ink, and the dreams of flightless waterfowl),
Books, of course, lots of books, starting with a dictionary, thesaurus, all
The Peterson’s Guides—for birds, trees, flowers, gems, and librarians of
All stripes. You never know when you will run into the need to identify
Friend or foe, ibex or oboe, atlas or armillary sphere. What kind of poet
Are you going to make? The kind with frilly cuffs or the kind with battered
Shoes and a flannel shirt? The kind with a black beret and a bicycle, or
The kind with cufflinks and a VW Bug? Will the poet write in Chinese
Characters all the way down the window shade, or type some beatnik
Manifesto on the back of small cards to slip into unsuspecting readers’
Pockets: sub rosa poetry. What kind of shamanic powers will you endow
Your poet with? Incense and Latin chant is good, as is a walk in the woods,
Or a picket line, a fife and drum parade; avoid public readings as they cause
An unfortunate increase in hatband size. The chemicals come last, cheap wine,
Margaritas, Gatorade, tea and much, much coffee, particularly if yours
Is a morning poet, trained to greet the day as soon as the birds declare it
Has begun. Add foam and cinnamon or a rim of salt. Add the tears of broken
Love, the sweat of labors performed to pay the rent, the blood of ancestors.
Stir carefully. Such ingredients are flamboyant and may explode.
Love the poem (especially that hatband line)!
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This is fabulous. I also liked the “hatband” line.
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