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James Connolly was an Irish republican and socialist leader. He was born in the Cowgate area of Edinburgh, Scotland, to Irish immigrant parents and spoke with a Scottish accent throughout his life.

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This is a likely description of Merrion Square in Dublin where Yeats lived.

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An excerpt from Stephanie Barber’s Night Moves, a conceptual novel made from the comments section of the You Tube video of Bob Seger’s Night Moves.

Out now from Publishing Genius.

Buy it here

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In X, Dan Chelotti’s new book out from McSweeney’s, he conjures voices that wander, pause, analyze, articulate, attempt to enlighten, fail to enlighten, and then answer that failure with laughter. The wildly inventive imagery in these cinematic pieces lodges them somewhere between the surreal and the pure symbol, colorful and smooth like the lyrics of John Ashbery or Linda Pastan. In Chelotti’s poems, diamonds talk and sheriffs balance frogs on the tips of pens.

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Qua – a Latin term meaning “in the capacity of” is often used by scholars. By repeating it here Lucky is mimicking the use of the word as a rhetorical device but he deploys it in a absurd way.

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The ironically named character Lucky in Samuel Beckett’s 1953 absurdist play Waiting For Godot is the servant (or lackey) of Pozzo. In this speech he is preforming at the request of his master for the two main characters the tramps Vladimir and Estragon.

The Grove Companion to Samuel Beckett describes the speech as a “word salad parodying the music-hall demented lecture, with three incoherent premises, one major and two minor, but no logical reconciliation.”

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palac (Serbian) – toe + HCE’s five toes: up, turn, pike, point, place + FDV: Two facts have come down to us Their resting The upturnpikepoint for place is at the knock out in the park where there have always been oranges on laid on the green always & ever ever & evermore since the Devlin Devlins first loved liffey livy.

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A poem from Gregory Sherl’s collection The Oregon Trail Is the Oregon Trail, out from Mud Luscious Press. The book was shortlisted for the Believer Book Award. You can buy it here.

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FDV: The story tale of the fall is retailed early in bed and later in life throughout most christian minstrelsy. The great fall of the wall at once entailed at such short notice the fall of Finnigan, the solid man and that the humpty hill hillhead himself promptly prumptly sends an inquiring unquiring one well to the west in quest of his tumptytumtoes.

This is the fall of man. The story of Adam and Eve, the Earth Father & Earth Mother. It is followed by the voice of God (Thunderwords).

PROPOSED SUGGESTION: Likely a pun on the Hungarian word ‘fal’, meaning ‘wall’.

PROPOSED SUGGESTION: The fall

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