Inclusion refers to one or more texts being contained within another. (Several different Oulipian methods can be classified under the heading of inclusion.) The poem below was composed using a procedure invented by poet Paul Braffort, whereby the blanks in the poem can be filled by either one of two specific letters, producing a coherent text in each case. In this example, the reader fills the blanks with either ‘m’ or ‘d.’
Circle 8 1/2
A certain drea_ came back to me
As I was walking through the _oor;
A _eal I’d finished once at dawn;
The desolate ri_e the day before.
That night, greeting the sinister _en,
I _ulled, with gin, my looming choice:
To tell the agents it was hi_,
And show the constancy of _ice—
Or to refuse, and in my pri_e,
Give cover to my treasonous _ate.
As evening spreads its silent _ark,
I _ock my years with the poppy’s taste--
And spy the co_ing of the guilt
That whispers to me every _ay.
Sunday, April 5, 2009
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Avalanche
An avalanche is a series of snowballs, with each individual snowball consisting of one more line than its predecessor. (For an explanation of the snowball form, please follow this link: http://reoulipo.blogspot.com/2007/07/diamond-snowball.html)
The following is an eight-stanza avalanche:
Outside
I—
O,
Me—
I
Am
Not.
I
Am
All
Gone—
A
By-
The-
Book-
Death,
A
No-
Win,
Time-
Spent
Corpse.
I
Go
Out
Past
Flesh,
Toward
Nothing;
“I”
Is
The
Dark
Thing
Beyond
Eulogy’s
Precinct.
The following is an eight-stanza avalanche:
Outside
I—
O,
Me—
I
Am
Not.
I
Am
All
Gone—
A
By-
The-
Book-
Death,
A
No-
Win,
Time-
Spent
Corpse.
I
Go
Out
Past
Flesh,
Toward
Nothing;
“I”
Is
The
Dark
Thing
Beyond
Eulogy’s
Precinct.
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