erasure
#1
“thus, art is subjective, as human beings
are not inherently objective creatures…”

the instructor says, and I nod, drawing
a caricature of her in my notebook
alongside scribbles about the Willow Tea Room
and twentieth century Scottish architecture.

I pull the eraser out
of my mechanical pencil,
roll it between my fingertips,
feel the rubber heat up.
It is active, warm, useful—
everything that I am currently not.
I want to rub it on my skin,
obliterate myself from the day.

Instead, I erase the crude drawing,
replace it with notes on Neuschwanstein castle
and daydream of throwing myself from a turret.
Reply
#2
Oh, I enjoyed this. I have great admiration for successful students, I could never tolerate the feeling you describe so well.

Quote:I pull the eraser out
of my mechanical pencil,
roll it between my fingertips,
feel the rubber heat up.
It is active, warm, useful—
everything that I am currently not.
I want to rub it on my skin,
obliterate myself from the day.

would be a fine poem on its own, titled Student, Class or Bad Professor. Smile

Well done, thanks for posting it.

(09-09-2014, 01:29 PM)cjchaffin Wrote:  “thus, art is subjective, as human beings
are not inherently objective creatures…”

the instructor says, and I nod, drawing
a caricature of her in my notebook
alongside scribbles about the Willow Tea Room
and twentieth century Scottish architecture.

I pull the eraser out
of my mechanical pencil,
roll it between my fingertips,
feel the rubber heat up.
It is active, warm, useful—
everything that I am currently not.
I want to rub it on my skin,
obliterate myself from the day.

Instead, I erase the crude drawing,
replace it with notes on Neuschwanstein castle
and daydream of throwing myself from a turret.
billy wrote:welcome to the site. make it your own, wear it like a well loved slipper and wear it out. ella pleads:please click forum titles for posting guidelines, important threads. New poet? Try Poetic DevicesandWard's Tips

Reply
#3
Bad Professor! i love it.

she really wasn't bad. just a little underwhelming in her delivery. i suppose art historians aren't particularly known for jumping up and down during lecture, but there are times when i just really wanted her to get excited about the day's subject.

thank you, miss ella.
Reply




Users browsing this thread: 1 Guest(s)
Do NOT follow this link or you will be banned from the site!