For a Poetry Monday, something a little more modern than Modernism:
Market Forecast, Alexa Selph
Adjectives continue
their downward spiral,
with adverbs likely to follow.
Wisdom, grace, and beauty
can be had three for a dollar,
as they head for a recession.
Diaphanous, filigree,
pearlescent, and love
are now available
at wholesale prices.
Verbs are still blue-chip investments,
but not many are willing to sell.
The image market is still strong,
but only for those rated AA or higher.
Beware of cheap imitations
sold by the side of the road.
Only the most conservative
consider rhyme a good option,
but its success in certain circles
warrants a brief mention.
The ongoing search for fresh
metaphor has caused concern
among environmental activists,
who warn that both the moon and the sea
have measurably diminished
since the dawn of the Romantic era.
Latter-day prosodists are having to settle
for menial positions in poultry plants,
where an aptitude for repetitive rhythms
is considered a valuable trait.
The outlook for the future remains uncertain,
and troubled times may lie ahead.
Supply will continue to outpace demand,
and the best of the lot will remain unread.
(Published November 2001, to give a little cultural/political context.)
---L.
Subject quote from "Astrophel and Stella," #14, Philip Sidney.
Market Forecast, Alexa Selph
Adjectives continue
their downward spiral,
with adverbs likely to follow.
Wisdom, grace, and beauty
can be had three for a dollar,
as they head for a recession.
Diaphanous, filigree,
pearlescent, and love
are now available
at wholesale prices.
Verbs are still blue-chip investments,
but not many are willing to sell.
The image market is still strong,
but only for those rated AA or higher.
Beware of cheap imitations
sold by the side of the road.
Only the most conservative
consider rhyme a good option,
but its success in certain circles
warrants a brief mention.
The ongoing search for fresh
metaphor has caused concern
among environmental activists,
who warn that both the moon and the sea
have measurably diminished
since the dawn of the Romantic era.
Latter-day prosodists are having to settle
for menial positions in poultry plants,
where an aptitude for repetitive rhythms
is considered a valuable trait.
The outlook for the future remains uncertain,
and troubled times may lie ahead.
Supply will continue to outpace demand,
and the best of the lot will remain unread.
(Published November 2001, to give a little cultural/political context.)
---L.
Subject quote from "Astrophel and Stella," #14, Philip Sidney.
no subject
Date: 15 January 2018 04:35 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 15 January 2018 09:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 20 February 2018 11:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 21 February 2018 03:27 am (UTC)I think here it's rhubarb in the sense of a heated dispute -- so, argumentative in a barbed-comment sort of way. It's a surprisingly old sense, that.
It still sounds a bit silly to the modern ear, thus my using it for the subject -- for the silliness, and to highlight that the post is about words.
no subject
Date: 1 March 2018 03:30 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2 March 2018 03:06 pm (UTC)