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Savagery MAG
  You have not witnessed hubris
  In its purest form
  Until you’ve heard twenty-five spirited
  Geniuses rip apart a poem,
  Clawing at its stanzas like vultures
  On roadkill until all that’s left is
  A pathetic, mutilated carcass
  On the yellow lines of a midnight freeway.
  It starts innocently:
  Genius One suggests
  The author composed the prose in a
  tragic state,
  Alone (presumably) in a dark corner
  In a snow-laden studio in
  Bushwick.
  Genius Two disagrees;
  This was obviously a childhood
  Poem of raw and indecent descent,
  Some ode to mother never known,
  A father never understood.
  Then Genius Three and Four
  Chime in –
  And here’s the trouble.
  A poem can withstand the brute force
  Of two preying eyes, or a
  Feeble devil’s advocate.
  But Genius Three and Four swear
  They know that story
  Lived that lie
  Sailed that sinking ship
  And everyone listens with purpose and
  Bated breath as the metaphors
  That don’t exist
  Are savaged as the poem before it
  The beauty of the written word
  Is not enough
  It must be shouted crassly across
  Tiled floors and cinder blocks,
  Dragged around for weeks
  Crumpled up
  Thrown away,
  Offhandedly remembered at some
  Five-year reunion
  The stark energy of
  Silent imagery becomes lost in the craving
  For elaboration,
  Digitalized and painted
  In Technicolor hue so all may gawk
  And coo at one man’s portrayal of
  Another genius’ idea
  Of what the author must have meant
  As they rocked
  In the corner
  In Bushwick
  Genius One, Two, Three and Four
  Hash it out until they tire
  Of their own voices,
  Their disciples exhausted from
  Swiveling their heads back and
  Forth, so the class sighs,
  Stares,
  Checks their watches and
  Scramble on with their day
  Poem of brick and mortar in
  Shambles
  Poem of glass
  In
  Shards.

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Longing for a better way to share poetry, especially in modern school curriculums, I wrote this piece.