The
performance is over; the applauding audience is now asleep at home, dreaming of
fire eaters, trapeze artists, and dancing elephants. So what does a clown do at
midnight?
Down
these mean streets a bad joke walks alone,
bruised
head held low, chin tucked in tight, eyes down,
defiant.
He laughs and it turns into a moan.
His
wife left years ago, and his kids all groan,
claim
they have never of him, and frown,
Down
these mean streets a bad joke walks alone…
What
does a clown do after midnight? He uses rhyme, and homonyms, poetic lines all
ending in the same sound, a “new formalism” that seems almost offhand,
deliberately careless, but still very tightly structured and controlled.
A
Clown Walks at Midnight: Poems is Andrew Hudgins’s new collection,
officially published today by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
To
continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak
Poetry.
Photography by George GrimmHowell via Public
Domain Pictures. Used with permission.
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