| Title : | Astro-Gymnastics | |||||
| Poet : | Piet Hein | |||||
| Date : | 29 Jun 2001 | |||||
| 1stLine: | Do-it-yourself grook | |||||
| Length : | 17 | Text-only version | ||||
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| Your comments on this poem to attach to the end [microfaq] | ||||||
Do-it-yourself grook Go on a starlit night, stand on your head, leave your feet dangling outwards into space, and let the starry firmament you tread be, for the moment, your elected base. Feel Earth's colossal weight of ice and granite, of molten magma, water, iron, and lead; and briefly hold this strangely solid planet balanced upon your strangely solid head. -- Piet Hein |
Today's grook is rather atypical, in that it is not particularly epigrammatic, pithy or aphoristic. However, it does share in the other main quality that most of the grooks possess - it reveals Hein's delightfully quirky sense of play, to say nothing of his keen perception and his occasional trick of deftly turning established ideas on their heads. The paradigm shift is handled beautifully - from the initial 'leave your feet dangling outwards into space' to the wonderful image in the last four lines, I can not just visualise but almost *feel* what he means. Definitely one of my favourite grooks, despite its unconventional nature. Links: We've run one other grook: poem #668 The comments to which also contain a biography http://www.powerweb.net/playandlive/piethein.htm and a bunch of other links. -martin