Free Fall Experimentation TwoA Poem by David Aiellowait.... where'd the first one go?
Jux the Bunny walking by, bonkers and superfluous, to the idling wasplike fly, hailed into the circumstance;
"Why Hail and hello, thee wasplike beetle, seems to be such lovely light!" And to delight, the feeble beetle, to Jux surmising, "But I'm a fly! And why doth hail me? Thee, in passing, Strangeness enacting upon my solitude!" (With stinger bared, the mood of sudden sombertry) {*ahem* som-ber-tree} But jux, not slightly flummoxed, see, returned the fly, "But gentle bee! See thee not the lovely evening? Sting thy fellow for kindness passing by?" The bee "But why a passing kindness! Expressed supression is the law that governs me! And thee, with lights and lightness wandering by, to I, perceives me the sudden enemy!" And as to thee, the bee would gather, rather, lost of dextrous thought, assault upon dear Jux the Bunny, funny, thus his intentions naught. And Jux, with wonton mirth aloft, surpassed the ducking of the wasp, and set off at a jaunty trot. © 2013 David AielloAuthor's Note
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1 Review Added on April 21, 2013 Last Updated on April 21, 2013 AuthorDavid AielloNYAboutBetween the dreaming and the moments of meditation, this rendition of transition is a beautiful outpouring tapestry of sensation. If I have a quote, it is thus: Art Exists to Help Us Remember to.. more..Writing
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