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Poetry is a destructive force with its parochial themes and metaphors of a magnifico. Even the occasional earthy anecdote or the nuances of a theme by Williams do nothing to dispel the disillusionment that sets in by ten o'clock.
The poems of our climate read like the anatomy of monotony, a dance of macabre mice to the sad strains of a gay waltz. Anything is beautiful if you say it is even men made out of words.
Of modern poetry it can only be said that it is primitive like an orb, casting asides on the oboe. A poem written at morning, a Sunday morning, is like a banal sojourn into a depression before Spring.
The ultimate poem is abstract mixing the pure good of theory with the course of a particular. A world without peculiarity, no possum, no sop, no taters, just the plain sense of things.
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