With wit and cunning, Noble's poems insinuate themselves into the mediations of "we use language" / "language uses us," into the objectification of "mind," into the struggles and cracking of
systems. Cuing on Hegel's epochal revitalization of the syllogism, they begin with sentences-cum-arguments that issue from an everyman's intentions and insights, playing into and baiting the
"sociality of reason." In the cut-up sentences then come the restless, accelerated themes--themes that exist only in their variations, ghosting into one another like the dusk and the dawn in a
winging, distended now.