WITHOUT FOLLOWS
Light snow falling into this room's 
prospect changes
the weight of nothing
As the trees lodge still
I can type them, nearly
As my head moves solid
in its whim rest of flake
The room has turned to
a populous pastnoon, trees
Twigs that chase brain
to a network of cracks
Nothing rises, but
nothing, situate
Blocks of bark
shocks of the sky
In greater brain's stalling
the hoarding of reasons
or is it some light has fallen?
--Clark Coolidge  
This poem illustrates some of what I was talking about yesterday.   Coolidge simply (not so simply!) 
has a fantastic ear:  "Twigs that chase brain / to a network of cracks."  I am seriously envious.  It's 
one thing to master an established form, quite another to actually invent prosodically.  Those bursts of 
repeated accents:  "TREES LODGE STILL" or  "PASTNOON TREES // TWIGS."  What rhythmic dynamism!
There's some Creeley influence here, maybe.  But Creeley's rhythm patterns are quite different:
"However far
I'd gone
it was still
where it had all begun"  
  
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