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Palindrome:
a Tactical Composition
Try to dare to dare to try
to be naïve. To be naïve.
Not wanting to say something about.
About dare, about seeing and reading.
Between seeing naïve and reading naïve.
Not wanting to say something about the
repudiation of breath. About the daring
sight of naïve breath. About reading
or trying to read. To want to dare to
repudiate sight and breath, to repudiate
reading. About breath. About reading.
About seeing. Daring not to say something
naïve about repudiating sight, reading,
or breath. About daring to read
naïve breath and saying something
about not saying something about
saying something daring, sounding naïve.
<<We all want something tender.>>
We all want tender breath, not wanting
to say something about tenderness is
nauive, is reading about reading or
reading about seeing, but tender.
Daring to say tender. About breath
and seeing //To have and to hold.//
About something say between breath Not
dare something about reading //From
this day forward.// Breath.
Sight of repudiate for about sight.
//Till death do us part.// Death.
Breath. Death-Breath. Not wanting
to say something about Death. To try.
To try not wanting. Say something
about the. ReadSeeBreathe. SeeSeeSee.
Joan of Arc, Army, and the Duration
of a Marriage. The duration of saying
something about breath. The army saying
something about dare. About Earth Earth
Air Air Fire Fire Water Water.
Earth Earth Dare Dare Fire Fire
Water Water. Dare Dare Dare Dare
Dare Dare Fire Water. Try to be
Naïve about, trying to read about
Joan of Arc. We all want something
Tender. We all want to breathe
fire. Till death do us part.
Poet shut up eat my word.
My word about reading, my word
about seeing, my word about
marriage. The duration of wanting
a marriage, about then not wanting
a marriage. Poet shut up eat my
breath, poet to have and to
hold, poet earth earth air air
fire fire water water. Joan;
marriage, army, repudiation of
sight. Poet shut up eat my sight.
To want to dare to. Breathe. Anglo-
Saxon breath, Anglo-Saxon sight.
Breathe to see. See Anglo-Saxon riddles
do not confine themselves to things of this earth.
Anglo-Saxon riddles do not confine
themselves to breath or sight.
Anglo-Saxon riddles repudiate breath, repudiate
sight. Tender riddles shut up,
eat my word. Breathe my riddle-sight,
sight my riddle-breath. My fire-water,
my earth-air. My tender sky.
Not wanting to say something about earth,
my Anglo-Saxon breath, my Joan of
Arc sight, Our naïve death.
Poet shut up, do not confine yourself
to things of this earth.
Naïve sounding, daring something saying,
about something saying not about,
something saying about breath, naïve,
read to, daring about breath or reading,
sight repudiating, about naïve
something say, to not, Daring seeing about
reading about breath about reading,
repudiate to breath and sight, repudiate
to dare to want to read to, trying or
reading about breath, naïve of sight
daring the about. Breath of repudiation.
<<Tender something all want we,>> the about
something say to, wanting not, naïve
reading and naïve seeing between reading
and seeing about dare, About about
something. Say to wanting not naïve be to.
Naïve be to.
Try to dare to dare to try.
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