basket wordweaving

basket wordweaving
.
a nest is a basket of birdies;
a basket for peaches changed histories;
and ella sang in the late thirties
of tiskets and taskets and mysteries.
.
containers of stiff-fibered lattices
hold picnics or handhelds or bread,
while catholic uniforms plaid a sis
who basketless may go unfed.
.
the slangness of basket weaves parity
with genitals, bowlsmoke and bastards,
a versatile twisting of clarity
and provenance dim-distant-pastwards.
.
“so silly”–oh, really? believing
that wordplay and mindflex may yield
new pathways to language beweaving
new verbiage is this poet’s shield.
.
so gather your own stalky fibers
and weave–it is not a big ask,
you may become language macgyvers
and in your own basketing bask.
.
Notes: The early game of Basketball involved a peach basket. Ella Fitzgerald recorded “A-Tisket A-Tasket” in 1938, overriding the objections of her record label, and her career skyrocketed. Baskets come in many different custom, function-related designs. The Urban Dictionary has five pages’ worth of words and phrases involving variations of “basket.” “MacGyver” was a TV series whose main character was famous for improvising solutions to dire situations with unusual materials at hand. And Catholic uniforms got dragged in by the heels simply because of a need for a rhyme with “lattices.”