Now I've done it.
In today's poem I've used a made-up word to describe what I think is going on.
I was going to say that I made it up out of thin air, but I think thick air would be more like it ... thick, moisture-laden summer air, so heavy with dampness that it feels like layer-upon-layer of water bearing down on us.
There's a related ... real word ... that has something to do with water and a cavity created in it.
I pictured the fan as doing something similar to that with the heavy summer air. So, not finding a suitable word in my handy-dandy dictionary, I made up one.
It's like grabbing a tool ... one not really intended for the task at hand ... and making it serve a different function.
And my photo which accompanies today's entry?
Oh, that's a tranquil scene at Cox Arboretum, a local favorite walking place, with lots of shady places in the summer to sit and just enjoy the view.
But enough of that. The poem:
SLICE OF SUMMER
The cavitating fan,
patiently oscillating,
slicing the air,
lets it fall
like cold bacon
across the griddle
of my overheating
horizontal body.
© 1996
(originally published in Anterior Poetry Monthly)
Today's word: cavitating
patiently oscillating,
slicing the air,
lets it fall
like cold bacon
across the griddle
of my overheating
horizontal body.
© 1996
(originally published in Anterior Poetry Monthly)
Today's word: cavitating
1 comment:
a great write.
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