Excerpt from an unfinished, unnamed collection
Reconstruction
One word, one sentence at a time I will reconstruct the story. I've written it before on countless scraps of paper. One word, one sentence at a time I will reconstruct the story. Forgive me. It is composed of a seemingly endless succession of beginnings. The original order of the words has been lost. I rely on you to supply the details. One word, one sentence at a time I will reconstruct the story. Forgive me. The original has been lost but I promise to stay true to its drift. That is not a matter of memory. It is a matter of being. One world at, one word at a time. Forgive me. The original version of this story does not exist. One word, one sentence at a time, this is its drift. This is the drift. The notes are scattered. No. Not scattered. The notes were never collected. Jotted. Scribbled. On scraps, in notebooks, on flaps. They have never been collected. They have seldom been re-read. Or read. The words, disjointed, have been set down and abandon. No, not abandon. There is much thinking between them, the phrases, the paragraph and elimination of words. And ideas. "Why?" I am telling a story. Build the house. Paint it later. And later still introduce the particulars. Each letter reverberates but ... I digress.
asha
31/07/2010
Poetry: lost & found
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4 comments:
At first I thought you were searching for yourself, in the "California" sense of the word, then I realized you were searching for yourself. So I did, too, and found truth and "rightness," which I thought was pretty cool, along with some days on the Zoroastrian calendar, also cool--he was the guy with the sword, right?
Then I read your excerpt again, and I don't claim to understand it, but it had a nice ring. Seriously.
Thanks, Roy. I trust your sense of things.
As for Zoroastrian calendar? Dunno anything about the guy but I do know that the meteor 2002 QY6 just missed Earth by a mere twenty-one million, four hundred thousand km so that's good.
meteor 2002 QY6
I thought I was just having a bad hair day.
Roy, I suspect earth's near brushes with meteors is the true but hidden cause of bad hair days.
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