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  The Hurtoise
« on: March 07, 2010, 11:16:16 AM » by jamesthomashoward

a fictional misprint in National Geographic


         Here, below,
pot-holes in the street are filled by tortoise feet
and any shadow cast is hidden by the bulbous
undercarriage of his belly. He’s never touched
a beer, poor thing. His back is slightly cracked
by the curiosity of children that took sticks
to his carapace like ham-fisted monsters
on palm Sunday. He moves slow so his eye is fast.

         A friend
is hard to acquire—the spirit is weak
since the hare was hard on him. Victory is
a small cup when you only have a shell
to share it with, and that whole escapade
was handled like a hot potato by the press.
Since then, avoiding sports days like the plague,
his social structure has fallen through like an egg.

         But old Harriet
did well for herself, he laments. She traveled
the globe on a rumour, inspired man’s love
that went to her head like the rod of god or some
sort of lightning shock, and how she led
and led the sermon well. When he went to visit
she babbled like a hell-hound on the matter
of charity; and now he carries his grief in a knapsack.

         A lover
is practically out of the question—he is oldish,
an octogenarian and full of moaning. Because
he’s too preachy, females often leave him
for members of the hell’s turtles clan,
and he might see her zip past peripherally,
clutching leather and ghosted by exhaust fumes.
What could he do but slow down his racing heart?

         Each night a choice
is made between earth and water, and each time
he wishes for the other. The grass is always
greener than the sea-weed, or vice versa.
He cries himself to sleep, his eyes full of salt,
the salt of walking the earth or plunging
the depths. He starts to dream of the world
banqueting beneath a perfect touch of sun and splash;

         deep in sleep
he clutches at an image of clown fish
and mini-man’o’war clams, his teeth softly grinding,
his face slightly gurning inwards. And he wakes
in the middle of one—a jerk—a gnash—
a mouthful of stale air. When the night is too much,
when the insomnia is too forceful, he opens
a book on Houdini and nibbles its spine a little.

         Look at him now—
how the wind pumps through him as though
he were a pan-pipe fluted by water-skimming airs!
There are songs that only he has heard, tunes that
eighty years on might keep sounding for another hundred.
Feel his rough thumb of toil and travel; how his feet
have mapped all roads and ports in and out of here;
how, lying flat, he heaps himself upon himself.





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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #1 on: March 07, 2010, 09:44:04 PM » by Tom Riordan
lovely, james. the "deep in sleep" S my favorite but all so enjoyable, and your character becomes quite a real presence. tom
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #2 on: March 08, 2010, 11:27:42 AM » by jamesthomashoward
Thanks very much, Tom. Obviously, it is my little homage to 'the man-moth' by Bishop. 
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #3 on: March 10, 2010, 09:59:47 PM » by Tom Riordan
well, it's a rich one. rereading tonight. tom
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #4 on: March 11, 2010, 06:19:09 AM » by jamesthomashoward
Thanks for reading again, Tom. On the subject of misprints, sometimes truth is stranger than fiction: I recently attended a salvation army funeral where the program stated that the deceased had been 'promtoed' to glory. Got to be a poem in there... Thanks again.
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #5 on: March 11, 2010, 08:54:27 AM » by Tom Riordan
Love the "promtoed"!
Two poems in that: "prom-toed" and "prom toad".
I hope I hear the low rumble of a few turtles lumbering in the direction of reading this poem, James - none of those jackass hares who take a quick glance and are gone! Myself, I'd like to hear how this reads to others...
Tom
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #6 on: March 12, 2010, 03:45:23 AM » by Jamie Foster
A very enjoyable read but it made me sad for him. He appears so lonely and left out of things. I must be a softie but this made me shed a tear. Great job of portraying him.
Jamie
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Jamie Foster

  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #7 on: March 12, 2010, 11:49:38 AM » by jamesthomashoward
Exactly, tom! How to tie promtoed and promtoad to a funeral, therein lies the challenge...

Thanks for reading jamie.

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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #8 on: March 12, 2010, 11:53:46 AM » by milner place
Like it much, James, in sun or shade.

milner
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'Caminante, no hay camino,
se hace camino al andar'
- Antonio Machado

Latest book 'naked invitation' $15 or £10, p&p inc milnerplace@msn.com

  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #9 on: March 13, 2010, 08:31:20 AM » by milner place
Going to pick this up, James, hoping I don't drop it on some old Greek's head.

Cheers

milner
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'Caminante, no hay camino,
se hace camino al andar'
- Antonio Machado

Latest book 'naked invitation' $15 or £10, p&p inc milnerplace@msn.com

  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #10 on: March 13, 2010, 11:14:56 AM » by Kevin Jackson
A delight James, and I'm carried back instantly to our childhood tortoise, so fascinating, so detached.

Many wonderful lines - "Feel his rough thumb of toil and travel" is a favourite.

Great to see it as a pick.

k
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Find out more about me and my poems at http://kevnjacksn.wordpress.com/

  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #11 on: March 14, 2010, 03:40:12 PM » by jamesthomashoward
Thanks Milner for adopting the hurtoise.

Thank you, kevin.
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #12 on: March 14, 2010, 06:07:36 PM » by Lavonne Westbrooks
Fascinating and familiar. The turtle is my spirit animal.  I hurt for him.
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #13 on: March 15, 2010, 05:04:36 PM » by Tom Riordan
A failure, James, - and no funeral - but I'm hoping to prompt you into doing better:

Homonymph Nightmare

Date prom-toed
me in the groin,
lifted her chiffon
in a great rustle
and fled out into
the kissing court
screaming, “This
night's worse than
I ever imagined!”
My knees would
not straighten up,
prince revamped
into a prom toad.
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  Re: The Hurtoise
« Reply #14 on: March 16, 2010, 08:18:14 PM » by larry jordan
Wonderful inventions here. It think the play in the language as conversational creates a sense of reportage that works given the context.

larry
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 (Read 826 times) [1]
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