Allison's Poetics

(A Slant Terza Rima Acrostic)

Ah, that poem of your mother
(Living on in elegy) which
Leapt the page, unsure whether

It’d snare me with highs of such
Sensimillan breathlessness
Or its poet’s airy touch

Not doled out to curse or bless
Loss and madness, starry, wound
Our arcs launched on idols’ duress:

Richard Brautigan’s wry mind
Rotted (though not dulled one iota)
An unknown month; bad winds did

In Dante. And I, in Vita
Nuova boyhood, knew no
Epicist worth your time. But a

Heavenly voyager like you,
At it without a Virgil
Running you amok, could go

Places with pause and sound still
Elysian to even The Greats,
Rebuking our recondite hells.

Share this
Continue Reading
About the Author

Laurence Foshee is a Tulsa, Oklahoman with poetry and prose in Dragon Poet Review, The Drabble, The Tulsa Review, and a forthcoming Oklahoma anthology honoring the memory of The Greenwood District. When not reading and writing poetry, his work in patient transport during the entire first year of the Covid-19 pandemic has driven him to resume pre-health studies and pursue osteopathic medicine. He hopes to find commonalities in helping others within these disparate, higher callings.

Laurence Foshee
Follow On
More Posts by this author…