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A Mash Up, Word Weaving Poem

 I read Andy Jackson's mash up poem 'Unhomely' in his anthology, 'Human Looking.' Andy Jackson chose to alternate lines with Randolph Bourne's 1911 essay 'The Handicapped.' 

Flowing on from this focused reading I find myself keen to also explore this poetic approach. I have subsequently chosen Jaan Kaplinski's 'The Washing Never Gets Done' to do a little word weaving of my own. 


Each Of Us Is In A State Of Becoming

Alternating lines with Jaan Kaplinski’s 'The Washing Never Gets Done'


Bob Dylan contends we are never complete

Existing in a state of forever becoming,

Always becoming

Something new, something different

All around Hanoi people continually tinker, install and rebuild, continually-

The washing never gets done

Resolution and completion seemingly less important than action

-Action matters more

The furnace doesn’t get heated,

Books never get read,

Incomplete buildings appear everywhere,

Construction in an obvious state of flux

When the fence is repaired at one end,

It collapses at the other

The consciously incomplete trulli houses of Alberobello

Have conveniently avoided the clutches of the tax collector

For centuries

We exist alongside a myriad of things

As perpetually evolving beings

Never totally finished

Never rubber stamped

Representing an incomplete metamorphous

Cousins to grasshoppers

In Turkey I drove past

Houses standing in an almost permanent state of becoming

-The roof leaks

The kitchen door won’t close

There are cracks in the foundation

Like the torn knees of children’s pants…

Never complete

Existing in a state of forever becoming,

Always becoming.

 ©Alan j Wright



It is once again -Poetry Friday and our genial host this time is Karen Edmiston. Karen presents a poem bby one of her favourite poets. Wendell Berry where he eulogises about the writing of a fellow poet. it presents as an ode to Hayden Carruth.





 

Comments

  1. Ah, this ties so nicely to the line from the poem Karen shared from Wendall Berry: I greet you at the beginning, for we are either beginning or we are dead. The theme for today must be “becoming.” It’s always becoming to always be becoming! Wonderful imagery in your rich poem, Alan.

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    Replies
    1. Thank you Tracey. Yes, becoming appears to be a recurring theme at present.

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  2. Ah, what a cool poem, Alan. I wrote one one time that alternated my lines with the lines of "America, the Beautiful."

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    Replies
    1. Thank you, Laura. It's re-assuring to know someone whose poetry perspectives I admire has also dabbled in this weaving of words.

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  3. Alan, I like the idea of a mashed poem where words are woven into an oroginal poem from another poem. I also like the background inserted into your poem. This is something I never thought of before. Great lines: Existing in a state of forever becoming,/Always becoming.

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    Replies
    1. Glad my poem and its structure struck a positive note, Carol. We all launch in hope, don't we?

      Delete
  4. I love it! Isn't it amazing how these lines look like these two pieces have always belonged together? And, the repetition is very reflective. Well done.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Thank you for the kind response. it feels so rewarding when the words knit together in a relatively seamless way. A lot of reading and rehearsal came before the writing in order to land on a poem most suitable to form this particular partnership.

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  5. Nicely done, Alan! The lines sound perfect together. I will have to try this sometime.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Rose. I hope you get to experience the joy that comes from this type of word weaving.

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  6. This reminds me of a poem I wrote in the style of/alternating some lines with "Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Blackbird." It's a marvelous exercise and I enjoyed your new creation.

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    Replies
    1. I know the poem you mention well, Karen. I agree about this word weaving being a worthwhile exercise. Glad you enjoyed my mash up.

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