Wikipedia Poem, No. 287

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“first beast, then scholar, then abject and adored.” Kleinzahler

define abject earth and political 
      life 
         elements of 
          collective identity 
      and opening and high-lyric dictional book 
  award reviewing volume of 
california and political course 
    borrowing 
and occulture the language’s matter earth 
     meter and high-lyric dictional and the last 
     century practical courses 
borrowing 
      practical like 
        i feel 
      i 
     feel like i feel life-like an element 
of 
conversation 
the last 
century practical 
   course 
          borrowing and occult 
knowledge an emphasis on 
     fire followed 
    the fourth 
volume 
in 
metaphysics 
      and policy and 
       high-lyric diction the 
poetic 
    movement 
of california 
an 
    emphasis 
          on when-lands

Wikipedia Poem, No. 172

heathen-sm

“The viewing public demands an image of itself. … Light, dry, explosive snow.” Ben Lerner

 

domestic
organisms
  coprolites rarely unknown processes 
  wave also conduct world remains detected 
     that led 
         to 
proposed 
          belemnite-like classification as non-liquid animal bones
 
  my (Soma)tics provide timorous 
bridges to animal 
bones 
     first 
described 
         by William Buckland 
scales 
of the author other food required 
case diet of the book 

      the man is rarely identified unambiguously 
he he he the author he
during his extra-miniature parasite 
     approaching bridges 
indicates another fossil of his
originative viability his fabled animals 

     meaning that mineral domestics
such that the zoo indicates 
      reconstituted millet
Buckland's intestines trace fossils 
      lead to the bridge between self 
      and on spiral material 
         predations cause the stone

that 
 bezoar 
          of a man
        broken open animal 
     he gives 
     viability to poetry 
a 2011 pew fellow
a beautiful marsupial
a coprolite
Sources: 
- “C. A. Conrad.” Wikipedia. N.p.: Wikimedia Foundation, 17 Sept. 2015. Web. 17 Apr. 2016.
- “CAConrad.” The Poetry Foundation. 2015. Web. 17 Apr. 2016.
- “Coprolite.” Wikipedia. N.p.: Wikimedia Foundation, 1 Apr. 2016. Web. 17 Apr. 2016.