ta, doug
L
On Wed, September 21, 2011 16:14, Douglas Barbour wrote:
> Getting at the lyric lay of the land, Lawrence. I find the sounding of
> the final line finely concludes this one, as a separate piece.
>
> Doug
> On 2011-09-19, at 12:07 PM, Lawrence Upton wrote:
>
>
>> Much of the song is from roosting crowds;
>> the occasional bird goes hurrying home, aware of curfew. On day minds.
>> Colour thickens, depth of field flattening.
>> The geological and human ambiguate.
>>
>>
>> Once more the harbour’s dry,
>> sky full of stretched rain udders following each other’s arses over
>> upside-down hills. Lights glare in night desert.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ----
>> Lawrence Upton
>> Dept of Music
>> Goldsmiths, University of London
>>
>>
>
> Douglas Barbour
> [log in to unmask] [log in to unmask]
>
> http://www.ualberta.ca/~dbarbour/
> http://eclecticruckus.wordpress.com/
>
>
> Latest books:
> Continuations (with Sheila E Murphy)
> http://www.uap.ualberta.ca/UAP.asp?LID=41&bookID=664
> Wednesdays'
> http://abovegroundpress.blogspot.com/2008/03/new-from-aboveground-press_10
> .html
>
>
> People say they have to express their emotions.
> I'm sick of that. Photography doesn't teach
> you to express your emotions; it teaches you how to see.
>
> Berenice Abbott
>
>
-----
UNFRAMED GRAPHICS by Lawrence Upton
42 pages; A5 paperback; colour cover
Writers Forum 978 1 84254 277 4
wfuk.org.uk/blog
----
Lawrence Upton
Dept of Music
Goldsmiths, University of London
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