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Thread: Larry Lies

  1. #106
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    Vernon, BC, Canada, wintering in Mexico
    Posts
    7,070
    Hey Larry,
    an autobiographical note at the close,
    if it is,
    revealing ambivalence, or a moment of doubt in faith.
    touching, maybe beautiful, I like it.
    Reminds me of Keats in a way, not the technical quality (sorry),
    but the content, Keats wrote:
    "Beauty is truth, truth beauty,—that is all
    *************** Ye know on earth, and all ye need to know."
    - Ode to a Grecian Urn

    "a billion mirrors of snow" is also an intriguing image to me.
    - the book-darkened office with the empty calls is poignant, even eerie
    Sue - is it a generation gap, or just the difference between the enlightened and the educated?
    Trigger also echoes Keats for me. This introspection theme is interesting.
    Marrow -
    Works and Days - has elements I too have written about - the relief from celebration, for instance.
    I see a book MS in all of this the lawyer feeling trapped by the quotidian and a little doubt about the meaning of it all, taking refuge in writing and poetry. Sounds like John Grisham a bit.
    Memory of Fire - needs more time for me to contemplate
    Late - is full of worthy elements to think on, I like that.
    Storage - the personification is telling, and compelling. It makes me think on my own habits.

    I must go work now but I will read 'em all eventually.
    Glad you finished.

    cheers,
    Geoff

  2. #107
    Dunc is offline but say it is my humour
    Join Date
    May 2001
    Location
    Sydney, Australia
    Posts
    13,414
    Larry

    Late - Magritte-like surrealism. And a perfect ending.

    Memory of Fire - that's one great memory, if I follow the story right.

    Marrow - hideously direct, very powerful, hell of a thump at the end.

    Trigger Warning - subtle, various, clever.

    Sue - teach 'em young, I guess. Don't know why I'm astonished.

    Start Over - delicate desolation and a fine sequence of images.

    Larry Lies - Self-portrait as a desert prophet? Indeed I trust you don't intend to stay lost.


    Thanks for your thread, excellent as usual.

    Regards / Dunc

  3. #108
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Quito
    Posts
    1,771
    A great close to this thread, Larry. 'Larry Lies' is terse and elliptical and the ending is nicely constructed.

    The high quality in this thread is without question and it has been a pleasure to read.

    Thank you.

  4. #109
    Join Date
    Feb 2000
    Location
    Washington State
    Posts
    21,424
    Hi, Larry,

    Your work seems to be evolving provocatively. "Trigger Warning" and "Sue" especially struck me that way and I'm going to want to come back to absorb more from them, lines like this:

    yet everything seemed to be humming a common song.

    "Seemed" being the key, I think. And these:

    At the next table a woman taps her phone
    as her baby cries. Soon a melody bubbles from her hand.
    She hands the device to the baby, who wraps tiny fingers around it,
    fixes its gaze through the tears and smiles.


    reminded me of how in the pre-smart phone era I used to set my son in front of the TV news when he was a baby because he was fascinated soothed by the "talking heads" he couldn't yet understand. I'm sure mothers from time immemorial have found ways to distract their babies' crying.

    Donner
    Moderator
    Let the poem do the talking. Then hide behind it.

    Get your copy of Try to Have Your Writing Make Sense - The Quintessential PFFA Anthology!

  5. #110
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    chicagoland
    Posts
    1,414
    Larry, I feel I have not been appreciative enough of the time you spent in my thread. Not just this year but every year. I meant to remedy this by a full read through. But again my eyes are bigger than my alarm clocks. I almost made it though.
    As far as I got, I offer quick impressions and lines quoted back. They all deserve deeper consideration, proof being that I called it a night when you really wowed me with 20, 21.

    1
    Our ship will soon sail with no flag on its mast
    This suggests that the master will leave spokesmen and “the dull” behind. The late warblings can’t be parsed because on the other side the ship will be unmarked and there will be no last lesson.

    2
    Forgive us also,
    our bright brothers, our cruel and perfect sons
    Interesting that the switch from I/we to a deformed they pivots on the God strophe. Seems that God’s absence leaves a cycle of revenge.

    3
    the husk of a moth/…/a letter from the battered night.
    This is beautiful

    4
    Such mornings makes misery seems like blindness
    I have to believe the odd subject/verb agreements are intentional. I keep playing them on my tongue.
    And chlorophyll bliss must certainly lead to swimming in air.

    5
    The baby is eternally falling. Is this Midrash? “The courtyard seethes with grievance” a phrase that could seat a thousand tales.

    6
    This anecdote reminds me of the poems of Kandinsky

    7
    Hairless, the Musical. Not a rock opera but a camp song. Ominous.

    8
    ASMR is an exciting idea. I suppose it can be learned. The mystery of the poem my be the content of the whispered trigger.

    9
    Stump City
    The rage of cut flowers

    10
    It’s hard to read whether there is hope in this poem or resignation. But this image is brilliant
    treading footpaths
    that hold the earth together like cords.

    11
    Should a falcon waste any tears on the shell it once called a nest?
    And you who claim to envy the birds, would you give up your fingers to fly?

    12
    though it would be hard to know from reading
    that during the epic struggle to line up his vowels precisely right,
    two hundred million were killed by starvation and war.
    — The thing is, we almost never read without a context, even if the art is hermetic the content is filtered through biographers and our own haphazard educations.

    13
    “Youth faking youth, / yet young/…./Berger, seventy”
    I bought the 5th Dimension’s Aquarius at a record sale the other day. Some things don’t age well, but should Peter Pan surrender to Hook?

    14
    Notes Towards Meeting the Other
    Nice twist at the end

    15
    I’m fond of the word “let’s” in poems. This is a good example.
    Let’s tumble like seals,
    surprising the deep
    with small packets of sky.

    16
    A difficult proposition for a poem, but it holds. Especially like “In celebration when you fabricate a smile” and the last couplet.

    17
    but a mind which unfolds as you enter
    Is a great line. I’m pondering if this is about infidelity or possibly a metaphoric brothel.

    18
    to the only grave we were happy to sweat for
    One of those unexpected lines that lifts the others. The” perhaps” leads to a nice closure.

    19
    Another good turn here, and a twist on 18’s musicians. A nice pair.
    outgrown our need
    to suffer the music, the music and the honey.

    20 and 21
    Larry, do you send your work out. Where can I find the work you consider finished? These certainly belong out in the world.
    This poem
    has no web. No body. No skin.
    It will never age.
    It belongs to us all.
    It is the better poem.
    embrace the eyeball ethic

  6. #111
    Join Date
    Feb 2013
    Location
    UK
    Posts
    8,397
    Quote Originally Posted by billdozer View Post
    Larry, do you send your work out. Where can I find the work you consider finished?
    I'd love to know too.

    -Matt

  7. #112
    Join Date
    Dec 2014
    Location
    England
    Posts
    3,913
    Me too. I've given up trying to fluff you. I would like to buy you instead (my, doesn't that sound sinister).

    Sarah

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