Tags
devouring diction, Eating Poetry by Mark Strand, licking a lascivious lexion, osculating onomastics, Perfectly pulchritudinous palate pleaser, terminology toffee, versed in English tongue
English Flavors by Laure-Anne Bosselaar
I love to lick English the way I licked the hard
round licorice sticks the Belgian nuns gave me for six
good conduct points on Sundays after mass.
I love it when ‘plethora’, ‘indolence’, ‘damask’,
or my new word: ‘lasciviousness,’ stain my tongue,
thicken my saliva, sweet as those sticks — black
and slick with every lick it took to make daggers
out of them: sticky spikes I brandished straight up
to the ebony crucifix in the dorm, with the pride
of a child more often punished than praised.
‘Amuck,’ ‘awkward,’ or ‘knuckles,’ have jaw-
breaker flavors; there’s honey in ‘hunter’s moon,’
hot pepper in ‘hunk,’ and ‘mellifluous’ has aromas
of almonds and milk . Those tastes of recompense
still bitter-sweet today as I roll, bend and shape
English in my mouth, repeating its syllables
like acts of contrition, then sticking out my new tongue —
flavored and sharp — to the ambiguities of meaning.
So very you.
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laughing I suppose it is, and that’s a compliment as well. Thank you Ben.
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And a cheeky little rosé too, I think.
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Esmeralda Cloud fact 4,789,298,963 – She doesn’t drink wine as all varients make her hinges and joints howl the next day. However, there’s always a way round these things.
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Well, it’s the thought that counts anyway and conversely my body doesn’t tolerate whiskey. It takes all kinds … 🙂
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Absolutely!
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Crumbs! Thanks.:)
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With all those delightful, exquisite, imaginative, adrenalizing and hypnotically palatable words and rhythm, I don’t see WHY on Earth you enjoy Professor Laure-Anne Bosselaar. 😉 😛
Mmmm, I am particularly fond of the very last stanza!
Ah, indeed “the ambiguities of meaning,” the puzzlement of human words versus its heart. Life playing and swimming in dazzling paradox while the huffy puffy kill-joys go mad! TAH DAH! 🎪🤡
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Spit them out.
Hahahahahahahaha. I’m glad you enjoyed the physicality of this one Professor, if you can’t feel a poem it’s no more than letters on a blank backgroud (copyrights that instantly).
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Wow – I miss English in my mouth. Thank you for kindling the pleasures Esme 💕
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You’re most welcome Val, get vocal with Esme any time you like! ❤
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Plumish is not part of American diction
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What a shame, you must get it in there, say it every day to someone. Hahahahahaha.
From plumish to glumish, a miserable face full of plums, which is what I’d have were any popped into my mouth as I think they taste vile, soot and poo level grim. Not as bad as their evil twin pruneish (usually prudish) mind you.
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Seven More Types of Ambiguity, by Aether EmpSoMEn comes to mind.
Yes, am big fan of ambiguity.
And a luscious sharpness dissolved in my mouth as I read these lines:
…slick with every lick it took to make daggers
out of them: sticky spikes I brandished straight up
to the ebony crucifix in the dorm, with the pride
of a child more often punished than praised.
As moist a rendering of my distressed youth at St. Dominic Elementary School as any four lines have ever conveyed.
Very much enjoyed Mark Strand’s “Eating Poetry.” Strand went to Antioch College, a highly regarded school just north of here.
Unfortunately, the link to *English in my Mouth” was 86’d by a 404 error. 🙂
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By “just north of here” I mean 222 miles (or 73 hours by foot). 🙂
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You can taste them can’t you? It’s very clever, and we all know exactly what she means re the child too. ‘A moist rendering’ – hahahahahaha. Brilliant. Mark Strand’s Eating Poetry is one one of my top ten poems, it’s the very essence of wordage love.
The link works when I click it, however I’ll paste it again here because WP can be an utter arse about these things.
https://esmeuponthecloud.com/2014/07/19/no-bliss-like-this/
No Bliss like This.
Thank you Bill!
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I do love words. My husband and I had a good discussion about the meaning of “avuncular” last night.
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Ooo avuncular, nice, it leads me by the hand and buys me a ticket on to funicular being kind as it is.
Many thanks for that.
-Esme enjoying her jaw-work for these two upon the Cloud
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😊
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Thanks so much for the Mark Strand link, Esme. Very cool poet indeed.
Keenly glad that you enjoyed “A moist rendering.” But, hey there, the words “mist rendering” have suddenly appeared in a metaphoric word balloon — remindering me of a bit of ponderage by my roommate in the Gießen, West Germany of 1971. ’twas a descriptor on a can of Mennen Deodorant I’d brought from home:
“Mist for Men.”
“Mist für Männer?”
https://translate.google.com/?source=gtx_c#auto/en/Mist%20f%C3%BCr%20M%C3%A4nner
Hoping that WordPress does not arse it up with that link!
Good words to you! — a signature line from another late great, John Ciardi.
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It works a treat! It’s hard work being a human, I suspect moss fares better in the long run, contentment-wise.
Thank you sir, Good words to you too, hahahahaha. I like that, I have been known to send bad words, but only when they would be enjoyed.
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Of course, it should be English Flavours.
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Hahahahahaha,I’ll let her know shall I? I’m sure she’ll be ever-so grateful.
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