Neuro nets or other circuits outside brought into a receiver - a brain -
which then tries to sort it out, to map it, with language.
Don't tell me otherwise! I like my reading of it :-)
Andrew
On 16 October 2014 06:26, Jill Jones <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> It's the sounds in this that seem important.
> Somehow, i also feel the ending on 'yet' to be extraordinarily
> poignant, if I can say that.
> J
>
> ________________________ ill Jones www.jilljones.com.au
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Poetryetc: poetry and poetics"
> To:
> Cc:
> Sent:Wed, 15 Oct 2014 11:27:26 +0100
> Subject:Still life
>
> A little noise, a little space; a little curvature; clicking of
> connections
> together, scraping of missed contacts, pain jammed with speech...
>
> a spill of laughter rolls down the side of its storage jar,
> spreading,
> thinning, slowing...
>
> speech pushed into pain to make it swish...
>
> curlicues of wire in a wire depth, cables trail the ground over
> distressed
> soil...
>
> sea breaks on a ridge of shingle; beech tree creaks against itself; a
> field
> begins to dry and crack...
>
> the talk is wearing thin; the pain sticks out, the drink runs out;
> the
> silence is wet and sticky, echoing inside itself..
>
> nothing fits properly yet
>
>
--
Andrew
http://hispirits.blogspot.com/
'Undercover of Lightness'
http://walleahpress.com.au/recent-publications.html
'Shikibu Shuffle'
http://abovegroundpress.blogspot.com.au/2012/03/new-from-aboveground-press-shikibu.html
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