Double Speak Without Without

by Sam Markewich

[: When a door is ajar
it is in motion
When not in motion
hours is to sit still engraving pronounsiation.

The is, the eye problem, It is., with faces pasted
with faced with.(D.S. al. sign)

To wit, his odor:
an I for an in, a knows for a no.

I sit on moieties, upon which foregrounds loiter,
on the tail of a coin reading W.E.B. Dubois,
whose book lies ajar in our center.

D.S.

Where what is still not in motion, when is not to till(,)2
the problem[-]1is[.]1(. . .)2

("No, please, she was saying? . . .")2

(The problem)2 With a door ajar (is)2 one of them is only half seen; with your eyes ajar, only quarter seen. :]
Lips ajar put a lid on it.

What where a jar is a door, topologically their is something strange.

Go read double-use `till your lips go blind, your eyes salivate,
your hair falls into place like everything else.
Now she can only pronounce, "W?", from when.
Her nose still runs with the wit of the problem you face:
now-our odd when or his wafting where a door is a jar, lid removed.
_____________________________________________________
* :] = go back to [: and repeat once up to the (D.S. al.. sign).
** (D.S. al.. sign) = skip to D.S. during the repeat.
*** [ ]1 = read what is in the brackets and not what is in the parenthesis when reading up to the :].
**** ( )2 = read what is in the parenthesis and not the brackets when reading after the (D.S. al. sign) (after the repeat)