A. J. Huffman
Three Stories
jumped
out of a burning
building,
screamed their dying
content
into the wind
on their
way
down
↓
↓
→ The first story was a comedy of errors.
Bounced twice landing.
before
face ↑, staring at its own
dangling
participles.
(They got tangled in the back-alley laundry lines.
They’ll be wrinkled as hell in the morning.)
→ The second story was an ethereal piece.
Prosaic metaphors drove it
into the ground,
but not before it terrified the remaining
tenants by passing through a few
walls
as it weaved
its way
into solid
impact.
(Don’t mourn too heavily, ghostly vessels have
a penchant for resurfacing in the odd hours before dawn.)
→ The third story was short and straight
to the point. A minimalistic epic
in sixteen words:
One match.
One alarm.
Thirteen floors.
No good option.
Quick beats cooked.
We all fall down.
(Too bad this isn’t that fairy tale. A few king’s
men and some Krazy Glue just might put us back
together again.)
Of Icebergs
misleading
molehills
migrating
underwater
mountains
clink!
sink
ships
historically
Sensing Poetry
A flash, forward vision falls into repetition. Mind
catches, cannot release the replay. Momentary
encapsulation stretches to infinity. The solution,
forced reconstruction of mental palace, plain
paper and pseudo-intellectual drops of ink.
I. Smelling Poetry
The blank
expanse of white 8
x 11½ pre-scarred with appropriate
ly spaced
rules, emits subtle hints
of stifling.
I slant it backwards,
breathing in the easy break of leaded
cacophony. Erasers be damned! My hand
relays the sanitized scrub
of anarchy.
II. Seeing Poetry
Bastardized vocabularic terminologies
s c a t t e r Skip
the frame of contemporary standardized
line
breaks. Forget
to remember basic rules of elementary
grammar
punctuation. Pretentious
eyes paralyzed
by my
disregard
for prehistorical precedent.
III. Hearing Poetry
Laughing
back from the page, disdainful
alliteration dares to defy contentions
that sound
and meaning cannot
co-exist in the same
phrase. Phase
out their belligerent banter.
This is basic
definition of term:
art of rhythmical composition . . .
for exciting pleasure . . . imaginative,
or elevated
thoughts. The echo of this retort
splits the masses,
minds begin to take
sides.
IV. Touching Poetry
Fingers purse against pen, pound with excitement. Ink
salivates, bleeds through its square
catalyst without concern. Words,
like scars,
are intended to heal.
V. Tasting Poetry
Page grows pulse when devoured
by practice
d tongue. Regurgitated regailment
of syllabolic symbalistic diatritribe resonates
against even the most resistant organs.
Irrespective of stylization,
formation,
intonation, and enunciation, the pen must be
allowed to speak.
A.J. Huffman has published nine solo chapbooks and one joint chapbook through various small presses. She also has two new full-length poetry collections forthcoming, Another Blood Jet (Eldritch Press) and A Few Bullets Short of Home (mgv2>publishing). She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, and her poetry, fiction, and haiku have appeared in hundreds of national and international journals, including Labletter, The James Dickey Review, Bone Orchard, EgoPHobia, Kritya, and Offerta Speciale, in which her work appeared in both English and Italian translation. She is also the founding editor of Kind of a Hurricane Press.
previous page contents next page
Three Stories
jumped
out of a burning
building,
screamed their dying
content
into the wind
on their
way
down
↓
↓
→ The first story was a comedy of errors.
Bounced twice landing.
before
face ↑, staring at its own
dangling
participles.
(They got tangled in the back-alley laundry lines.
They’ll be wrinkled as hell in the morning.)
→ The second story was an ethereal piece.
Prosaic metaphors drove it
into the ground,
but not before it terrified the remaining
tenants by passing through a few
walls
as it weaved
its way
into solid
impact.
(Don’t mourn too heavily, ghostly vessels have
a penchant for resurfacing in the odd hours before dawn.)
→ The third story was short and straight
to the point. A minimalistic epic
in sixteen words:
One match.
One alarm.
Thirteen floors.
No good option.
Quick beats cooked.
We all fall down.
(Too bad this isn’t that fairy tale. A few king’s
men and some Krazy Glue just might put us back
together again.)
Of Icebergs
misleading
molehills
migrating
underwater
mountains
clink!
sink
ships
historically
Sensing Poetry
A flash, forward vision falls into repetition. Mind
catches, cannot release the replay. Momentary
encapsulation stretches to infinity. The solution,
forced reconstruction of mental palace, plain
paper and pseudo-intellectual drops of ink.
I. Smelling Poetry
The blank
expanse of white 8
x 11½ pre-scarred with appropriate
ly spaced
rules, emits subtle hints
of stifling.
I slant it backwards,
breathing in the easy break of leaded
cacophony. Erasers be damned! My hand
relays the sanitized scrub
of anarchy.
II. Seeing Poetry
Bastardized vocabularic terminologies
s c a t t e r Skip
the frame of contemporary standardized
line
breaks. Forget
to remember basic rules of elementary
grammar
punctuation. Pretentious
eyes paralyzed
by my
disregard
for prehistorical precedent.
III. Hearing Poetry
Laughing
back from the page, disdainful
alliteration dares to defy contentions
that sound
and meaning cannot
co-exist in the same
phrase. Phase
out their belligerent banter.
This is basic
definition of term:
art of rhythmical composition . . .
for exciting pleasure . . . imaginative,
or elevated
thoughts. The echo of this retort
splits the masses,
minds begin to take
sides.
IV. Touching Poetry
Fingers purse against pen, pound with excitement. Ink
salivates, bleeds through its square
catalyst without concern. Words,
like scars,
are intended to heal.
V. Tasting Poetry
Page grows pulse when devoured
by practice
d tongue. Regurgitated regailment
of syllabolic symbalistic diatritribe resonates
against even the most resistant organs.
Irrespective of stylization,
formation,
intonation, and enunciation, the pen must be
allowed to speak.
A.J. Huffman has published nine solo chapbooks and one joint chapbook through various small presses. She also has two new full-length poetry collections forthcoming, Another Blood Jet (Eldritch Press) and A Few Bullets Short of Home (mgv2>publishing). She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, and her poetry, fiction, and haiku have appeared in hundreds of national and international journals, including Labletter, The James Dickey Review, Bone Orchard, EgoPHobia, Kritya, and Offerta Speciale, in which her work appeared in both English and Italian translation. She is also the founding editor of Kind of a Hurricane Press.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home