Recursion



Recursion

The narrow hallway was deserted, dark, and still.
I made a careful entrance through the nearest door,
encountering a little room that might instill
a sense of dread about the impulse to explore.
Inside a door marked 'A' I felt a fit of pique
upon encountering another door marked A,
and then a steady stream of A rooms, each of bleak
design, with B's inside the A's -- an odd array
of rooms with no detectable escape in sight:
Door A, Door A, Door A, Door A, each time a B
inside the A, a lock to block return, my plight
recurring repetitiously, a litany
of walls and doorways, first in one room, then the next,
until I found myself unable to maintain
lucidity. And so, perspiring and perplexed,
I crumpled limply to the floor amidst insane
desires to wreak destruction (though except for doors
no targets were available). With gasping breath
I kicked a Doorway A, and there in metaphors
of Satan's fathoms loomed a sight defying death:
a great abyss, an endless plummet to a black
profundity that rendered me a quivering
and helpless soul; an all-consuming cul-de-sac
that forced me back against the wall and wavering
between the two extremes. Then unexpectedly
Door B was open! In a rush I bounded through --
as if the final A room had ejected me --
to find another open B, and déjà vu
unswervingly embraced me as I quickly stepped
from room to room to room as every Doorway B
reopened and released me, and I fairly leapt
through blurry thresholds like an inmate running free:
Door B, Door B, Door B, Door B, each time the B
extinguishing the pointless presence of an A.
My single-minded function as evacuee
propelled me through the doorways till the entranceway
that long before seduced me from the narrow hall
was safely out of reach. And in an atmosphere
of resurrecting stillness, now, I can't recall
the purpose or condition of my being here.

About this poem

A dreamlike passage through recurring rooms.

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Written on 2021

Submitted by paulbuchheit on May 02, 2023

1:44 min read
65

Quick analysis:

Scheme ABABCDCEFGFGHIHIJKJKLMLMGNGNOGOGGDGPQRQS
Closest metre Iambic hexameter
Characters 1,862
Words 344
Stanzas 1
Stanza Lengths 40

Paul J. Buchheit

Paul is an author of books, poems, progressive essays, and scientific journal articles. He recently completed his first historical novel, 1871: Rivers on Fire. His poetic rendering of Alice’s Adventures was published in 2022 by Kelsay Books. more…

All Paul J. Buchheit poems | Paul J. Buchheit Books

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Discuss the poem Recursion with the community...

2 Comments
  • Vixility
    Two things I loved about this poem.

    First, what caught my attention immediately was the cadence and rhythmic momentum the poet used to transmit his/her message (this certainly made it easier to read and absorb, and also shows a certain amount of 'deliberateness' in the construction of it).

    The second is the story itself: philosophical and with a sprinkle of existential absurdity, it reminded me of those old Twilight Zone episodes where all sense of meaning and purpose are turned on their heads. For example, after having discovered his or her predicament, and after having 'broken through' the puzzle to achieve freedom or escape, the protagonist questions the very reason for the trial at all:

    "And in an atmosphere
    of resurrecting stillness, now, I can't recall
    the purpose or condition of my being here."

    Lovely work, pleasant read, gifted poet ... thank you for sharing with us.
     
    LikeReply11 months ago
  • susan.brumel
    I found the rhyming pattern very interesting to read and the story intriguing. Serious, yet oddly comical in its final line.
    LikeReply11 months ago

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"Recursion" Poetry.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 13 May 2024. <https://www.poetry.com/poem/161252/recursion>.

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