Looping corkscrews
In a previous post I referred to poems as "sparks." I also think of some poems as "looping corkscrews." The imagery in such poems throws one completely off guard. On purpose. The only defense against such poems is to avert one's eyes, stop reading, turn away. But if you let the looping corkscrew imagery in, it will twist and turn, this way and that and you will be reward, being touched by something you newver thought or felt before.
I think blog member Daniel Burke's poems Paracolobopsis and Crominox are good examples of "looping corkscrews."
Paracolobopsis
below is amerigo;
he's snuck through the fold
and up my arms.
six legs scurry
around a palm
of peppered soil.
and up above;
cacophony each way.
a mirror landing
shards shed
the paratree
that I am underneath.
pressing against church
brick, my hand went
near a slug.
reaching up its walls;
fog-paved ways tell of time
and stone.
I wonder if someone
could sneak me inside?
hidden in a twix packet...
into the square space
with four faces.
(weaving in situ; actually kneading)
where ants are carpenters
and charioteers.
(working on a stack of wood for burning)
Osiris
Neu
Tetramorium
...plunged into
nu-point starting;
never pausing satellite.
birth of the sun is split;
one-man's seizure spells
team carnage
ed is a portal;
snake wrapped around the sun,
ghost of a saber-toothed tiger.
Crominox
fire at the altar
top! supper served
tabula rasa.
the hues of
the body
are refined.
to stain with colour
is to touch
the body.
now made eminent,
hailing from
the bursting hills;
shortest,
trifling,
Min the Blond
attends adorned in gold and white,
to the once castrated;
Ox the Besprinkler.