LINGUISTICS CLASS
1.
What must it sound
like,
The idiom of our
tongue,
If you have come from other
shores:
Listening to
tapes
In classrooms below
ground,
Beads of dampness on cold
cinderblock,
Trying to apprehend small
meanings
(Preposterous
proposition):
Run in, run over, run
down;
Dress down, dress out, dress
up.
Would it be the
same
For someone to come on to
you,
Or come out?
2.
Language, quixotic, carries
weight
It cannot bear.
A boy spent hours in
practice—
Tennis, piano scales, free
throws.
Later he practiced
medicine,
His sister practiced
law,
Always getting ready, it
seemed,
For something
else.
At the
restaurant
He thought of a bad
pun
And made a
note:
He also waits who only stands and serves.
3.
Language tells you what it
sees,
So pejorative
becomes
Normative.
I want to hear about
people
Who are ept, couth,
Ruthful, clueful souls
with
Shevelled hair.
Do you remember when
we
Worried about creeping
-ism’s?
Neologism;
Barbarism,
An ancient word, meant
to
Mock the sound
of
Those who do not talk like
you.
- Robert Demaree 2012
Robert Demaree, a retired educator, is the
author of four collections of poems, including Mileposts (2009), published by Beech
River Books. He has had over 550 poems published in 125 periodicals. He lives in
Wolfeboro , N.H. , and Burlington , N.C.
I've been enjoying what I've found of Robert's poetry online, but rarely have the guts to come out and say so. The work has a certain quality to it, like a quality of light in an Old Master's oils, that informs the language and that underlies the imagery.
ReplyDelete