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Poems- Not your own.
I've had this copied to my desktop for quite sometime.
Thought I'd share it................ (Please share any you have). THE WORLD IS A BEAUTIFUL PLACE... The world is a beautiful place to be born into if you don't mind happiness not always being so very much fun if you don't mind a touch of hell now and then just when everything is fine because even in heaven they don't sing all the time The world is a beautiful place to be born into if you don't mind some people dying all the time or maybe only starving some of the time which isn't half so bad if it isn't you Oh the world is a beautiful place to be born into if you don't much mind a few dead minds in the higher places or a bomb or two now and then in your upturned faces or such other improprieties as our Name Brand society is prey to with its men of distinction and its men of extinction and its priests and other patrolmen and its various segregations and congressional investigations and other constipations that our fool flesh is heir to Yes the world is the best place of all for a lot of such things as making the fun scene and making the love scene and making the sad scene and singing low songs and having inspirations and walking around looking at everything and smelling flowers and goosing statues and even thinking and kissing people and making babies and wearing pants and waving hats and dancing and going swimming in rivers on picnics in the middle of the summer and just generally 'living it up' Yes but then right in the middle of it comes the smiling mortician ~ Lawrence Ferlinghetti ~ |
The Art of Death by Jessy Liz
Death by murder- death by chance Death by secret night romance Death by number- paint the lines Death in color, or black and lie Accidental- planned, prolonged Death by always doing wrong Death by self- a timeless art Death by one last broken heart |
Sky, I adore you for starting a poetry thread
there is another one here I try not to post too many, but I am such a poetry fan - not many places you don't get rolled eyes at that admission |
The fabulous ee:
i carry your heart with me i carry your heart with me(i carry it in my heart)i am never without it(anywhere i go you go,my dear; and whatever is done by only me is your doing,my darling) i fear no fate(for you are my fate,my sweet)i want no world(for beautiful you are my world,my true) and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant and whatever a sun will always sing is you here is the deepest secret nobody knows (here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows higher than the soul can hope or mind can hide) and this is the wonder that's keeping the stars apart i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart) ee cummings |
aww :hearts: I am a poet from way back but I don't write ( hardly any ) anymore. I've forgotten how I think. Thanks for the link. Good poems on the other one too. I like the Hopkins and Sexton poem alot. Thanks for playing. both of you :)
If You Forget Me I want you to know one thing. You know how this is: if I look at the crystal moon, at the red branch of the slow autumn at my window, if I touch near the fire the impalpable ash or the wrinkled body of the log, everything carries me to you, as if everything that exists, aromas, light, metals, were little boats that sail toward those isles of yours that wait for me. Well, now, if little by little you stop loving me I shall stop loving you little by little. If suddenly you forget me do not look for me, for I shall already have forgotten you. If you think it long and mad, the wind of banners that passes through my life, and you decide to leave me at the shore of the heart where I have roots, remember that on that day, at that hour, I shall lift my arms and my roots will set off to seek another land. But if each day, each hour, you feel that you are destined for me with implacable sweetness, if each day a flower climbs up to your lips to seek me, ah my love, ah my own, in me all that fire is repeated, in me nothing is extinguished or forgotten, my love feeds on your love, beloved, and as long as you live it will be in your arms without leaving mine. Pablo Neruda |
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Thanks for the Pablo Neruda poem Sky - I only really know The Mermaid and the Drunks. I need to get myself better acquainted with poetry again. |
I really don't know all that much. I am sure Brianna is the knowlegable one. I think we can agree on that.
The Day Flies off without Me. by John Stammers The planes bound for all points everywhere etch lines on my office window. From the top floor London recedes in all directions, and beyond: the world with its teeming hearts. I am still, you move, I am a point of reference on a map; I am at zero meridian as you consume the longitudes. The pact we made to read our farewells exactly at two in the afternoon with you in the air holds me like a heavy winter coat. Your unopened letter is in my pocket, beating. |
Wolves
By Sundae Girl 11-21-2007 He was singing and playing guitar Each one louder than the last She in turn had headphones on And her Nintendo up full blast They didn't hear the wolves outside As they came in, red in tooth and claw They ate the noisy couple, then They licked their chops and went next door Now this pair had no music on They sat before the fire and read The wolves had no chance eating them - They went and ate their kids instead Don't pollute the world with noise Beware the deafening machines You'll miss your chance to 'scape the wolves And send them upstairs to your teens. |
Hahahaha
Sundae Girl, that was great. Thanks be to spudcon for drawing my attention to it. |
Tell it Sylvia! Go on!! Sylvia Plath reading: Daddy. It isn't pretty, it's scathing...Here she is reading her own work..
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hHjctqSBwM Edison recording Whitman: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wf7J2AvCQO4 |
since feeling is first... (VII) by E. E. Cummings
since feeling is first who pays any attention to the syntax of things will never wholly kiss you; wholly to be a fool while Spring is in the world my blood approves, and kisses are a better fate than wisdom lady i swear by all flowers. Don't cry - the best gesture of my brain is less than your eyelids' flutter which says we are for each other; then laugh, leaning back in my arms for life's not a paragraph And death i think is no parenthesis |
Anzac on the wall
The Anzac on the Wall
I wandered thru a country town 'cos I had time to spare, And went into an antique shop to see what was in there. Old Bikes and pumps and kero lamps, but hidden by it all, A photo of a soldier boy - an Anzac on the Wall. 'The Anzac have a name?' I asked. The old man answered 'No, The ones who could have told me mate, have passed on long ago. The old man kept on talking and, according to his tale, The photo was unwanted junk bought from a clearance sale. 'I asked around,' the old man said, 'but no one knows his face, He's been on that wall twenty years, deserves a better place. For some one must have loved him so, it seems a shame somehow. 'I nodded in agreement and then said, 'I'll take him now.' My nameless digger's photo, well it was a sorry sight A cracked glass pane and a broken frame - I had to make it right To pry the photo from its frame I took care just in case, 'Cause only sticky paper held the cardboard back in place. I peeled away the faded screed and much to my surprise, Two letters and a telegram appeared before my eyes The first reveals my Anzac's name, and regiment of course John Mathew Francis Stuart - of Australia's own Light Horse. This letter written from the front, my interest now was keen This note was dated August seventh 1917' Dear Mum, I'm at Khalasa Springs not far from the Red Sea They say it's in the Bible - looks like Billabong to me. 'My Kathy wrote I'm in her prayers she's still my bride to be I just cant wait to see you both you're all the world to me And Mum you'll soon meet Bluey, last month they shipped him out I told him to call on you when he's up and about.' 'That bluey is a larrikin, and we all thought it funny He lobbed a Turkish hand grenade into the Co's dunny. I told you how he dragged me wounded in from no man's land He stopped the bleeding closed the wound with only his bare hand. ''Then he copped it at the front from some stray shrapnel blast It was my turn to drag him in and I thought he wouldn't last He woke up in hospital, and nearly lost his mind Cause out there on the battlefield he'd left one leg behind. ''He's been in a bad way mum, he knows he'll ride no more Like me he loves a horse's back he was a champ before. So Please Mum can you take him in, he's been like my brother Raised in a Queensland orphanage he' s never known a mother. 'But Struth, I miss Australia mum, and in my mind each day I am a mountain cattleman on high plains far away I'm mustering white-faced cattle, with no camel's hump in sight And I waltz my Matilda by a campfire every night I wonder who rides Billy, I heard the pub burnt down I'll always love you and please say hooroo to all in town'. The second letter I could see was in a lady's hand An answer to her soldier son there in a foreign land Her copperplate was perfect, the pages neat and clean It bore the date November 3rd 1917. 'T'was hard enough to lose your Dad, without you at the war I'd hoped you would be home by now - each day I miss you more' 'Your Kathy calls around a lot since you have been away To share with me her hopes and dreams about your wedding day And Bluey has arrived - and what a godsend he has been We talked and laughed for days about the things you've done and seen ''He really is a comfort, and works hard around the farm, I read the same hope in his eyes that you wont come to harm. Mc Connell's kids rode Billy, but suddenly that changed We had a violent lightning storm, and it was really strange.' 'Last Wednesday just on midnight, not a single cloud in sight It raged for several minutes, it gave us all a fright It really spooked your Billy - and he screamed and bucked and reared And then he rushed the sliprail fence, which by a foot he cleared' 'They brought him back next afternoon, but something's changed I fear It's like the day you brought him home, for no one can get near Remember when you caught him with his black and flowing mane? Now Horse breakers fear the beast that only you can tame,' 'That's why we need you home son' - then the flow of ink went dry- This letter was unfinished, and I couldn't work out why. Until I started reading the letter number three A yellow telegram delivered news of tragedy Her son killed in action - oh - what pain that must have been The Same date as her letter - 3rd November 17 This letter which was never sent, became then one of three She sealed behind the photo's face - the face she longed to see. And John's home town's old timers -children when he went to war Would say no greater cattleman had left the town before. They knew his widowed mother well - and with respect did tell How when she lost her only boy she lost her mind as well. She could not face the awful truth, to strangers she would speak' My Johnny's at the war you know , he's coming home next week 'They all remembered Bluey he stayed on to the end A younger man with wooden leg became her closest friend And he would go and find her when she wandered old and weak And always softly say 'yes dear - John will be home next week. 'Then when she died Bluey moved on, to Queensland some did say I tried to find out where he went, but don't know to this day And Kathy never wed - a lonely spinster some found odd She wouldn't set foot in a church - she'd turned her back on God John's mother left no will I learned on my detective trail This explains my photo's journey, that clearance sale So I continued digging cause I wanted to know more I found John's name with thousands in the records of the war His last ride proved his courage - a ride you will acclaim The Light Horse Charge at Beersheba of everlasting fame That last day in October back in 1917 At 4pm our brave boys fell - that sad fact I did glean That's when John's life was sacrificed, the record's crystal clear But 4pm in Beersheba is midnight over here....... So as John's gallant sprit rose to cross the great divide Were lightning bolts back home a signal from the other side? Is that why Billy bolted and went racing as in pain? Because he'd never feel his master on his back again? Was it coincidental? same time - same day - same date? Some proof of numerology, or just a quirk of fate? I think it's more than that, you know, as I've heard wiser men, Acknowledge there are many things that go beyond our ken Where craggy peaks guard secrets neath dark skies torn asunder Where hoofbeats are companions to the rolling waves of thunder Where lightning cracks like 303's and ricochets again Where howling moaning gusts of wind sound just like dying men Some Mountain cattlemen have sworn on lonely alpine track They've glimpsed a huge black stallion - Light Horseman on his back. Yes Skeptics say, it's swirling clouds just forming apparitions Oh no, my friend you cant dismiss all this as superstition The desert of Beersheba - or windswept Aussie range John Stuart rides forever there - Now I don't find that strange. Now some gaze at this photo, and they often question me And I tell them a small white lie, and say he's family. 'You must be proud of him.' they say – I tell them, one and all, That's why he takes the pride of place – my Anzac on the Wall. |
'Spell Checker Blues'
Eye halve a spelling chequer It came with my pea sea It plainly marques four my revue Miss steaks eye kin knot sea. Eye strike a key and type a word And weight four it two say Weather eye am wrong oar write It shows me strait a weigh. As soon as a mist ache is maid It nose bee fore two long And eye can put the error rite Its rarely ever wrong. Eye have run this poem threw it I am shore your pleased two no Its letter perfect in it's weigh My chequer tolled me sew. Anon |
so much depends
upon a red wheel barrow glazed with rain water beside the white chickens. william carlos williams |
Oh! There's a William Carlos Williams in my top 10!
This Is Just to Say I have eaten the plums that were in the icebox and which you were probably saving for breakfast. Forgive me they were delicious so sweet and so cold. |
W.C. Williams? I'd rather read Skysidhe here:
http://cellar.org/showthread.php?t=14833&page=25 |
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thanks spud
"Soldier, rest! Thy warfare o'er,
Sleep the sleep that knows not breaking, Dream of battled fields no more. Days of danger, nights of waking." Sir Walter Scott :f207: :f205: :f32: All countries serving in Iraq http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita..._coalition.htm |
Reminded me of todays media
A Legend of Truth
Once on a time, the ancient legends tell, Truth, rising from the bottom of her well, Looked on the world, but, hearing how it lied, Returned to her seclusion horrified. There she abode, so conscious of her worth, Not even Pilate's Question called her forth, Nor Galileo, kneeling to deny The Laws that hold our Planet 'neath the sky. Meantime, her kindlier sister, whom men call Fiction, did all her work and more than all, With so much zeal, devotion, tact, and care, That no one noticed Truth was otherwhere. Then came a War when, bombed and gassed and mined, Truth rose once more, perforce, to meet mankind, And through the dust and glare and wreck of things, Beheld a phantom on unbalanced wings, Reeling and groping, dazed, dishevelled, dumb, But semaphoring direr deeds to come. Truth hailed and bade her stand; the quavering shade Clung to her knees and babbled, "Sister, aid! I am--I was--thy Deputy, and men Besought me for my useful tongue or pen To gloss their gentle deeds, and I complied, And they, and thy demands, were satisfied. But this--" she pointed o'er the blistered plain, Where men as Gods and devils wrought amain-- "This is beyond me! Take thy work again." Tablets and pen transferred, she fled afar, And Truth assumed the record of the War... She saw, she heard, she read, she tried to tell Facts beyond precedent and parallel-- Unfit to hint or breathe, much less to write, But happening every minute, day and night. She called for proof. It came. The dossiers grew. She marked them, first, "Return. This can't be true." Then, underneath the cold official word: "This is not really half of what occurred." She faced herself at last, the story runs, And telegraphed her sister: "Come at once. Facts out of hand. Unable overtake Without your aid. Come back for Truth's own sake! Co-equal rank and powers if you agree. They need us both, but you far more than me!" Rudyard Kipling |
I've been looking for a poem I read at school for years.
I don't know the title, the first line or the poet - so anthology indexes don't help. The scattered phrases I remember don't come up on Google. I'm a bit lost, and anyone offering help will have my undying gratitude. The subject is Winter. It's set in England (specific geography is mentioned) so it's likely an English poet. It's quite bleak in a beautiful way - whic is perfect for the subject. Snippets: "From Salisbury Plain to [something] Tor, the hills are islands in a sea of fog" "The moon, impassive as a fish's eye" "The stars have got their flick-knives out" I know it's not much. But if anyone knows of a great poetry finder...? |
Three
This was originally published as you see it here, with my son's picture, far away in another galaxy......(From memory) http://i122.photobucket.com/albums/o...ShaneTHREE.jpg My eyes are like rockets They catch each fleeting flick, Nothing can escape me I'm cunning, I'm slick I can outrun a wildcat match it bound for bound, It would take forty wranglers just to tie me down I fear no being I'm brave and I'm bold, I'm king of the mountain I'm three years old. [Clell West] |
great photo Juanco
Luxuriant days of hope Obsessed nights of lustful energy Virgin minds sown together Exasperated Humanity by Gary Hess |
"The Lanyard"
by Billy Collins The other day as I was ricocheting slowly off the pale blue walls of this room, bouncing from typrewriter to piano, from bookshelf to an envelope lying on the floor, I found myself in the L section of the dictionary where my eyes fell upon the word lanyard. No cookie nibbled by a French novelist could send one more suddenly into the past -- a past where I sat at a workbench at a camp by a deep Adirondack lake learning how to braid thin plastic strips into a lanyard, a gift for my mother. I had never seen anyone use a lanyard or wear one, if that's what you did with them, but that did not keep me from crossing strand over strand again and again until I had made a boxy red and white lanyard for my mother. She gave me life and milk from her breasts, and I gave her a lanyard. She nursed me in many a sickroom, lifted teaspoons of medicine to my lips, set cold face-cloths on my forehead, and then led me out into the airy light and taught me to walk and swim, and I, in turn, presented her with a lanyard. Here are thousands of meals, she said, and here is clothing and a good education. And here is your lanyard, I replied, which I made with a little help from a counselor. Here is a breathing body and a beating heart, strong legs, bones and teeth, adn two clear eyes to read the world, she whispered, and here, I said, is the lanyard I made at camp. And here, I wish to say to her now, is a smaller gift -- not the archaic truth that you can never repay your mother, but the ruefl admission that when she took the two-tone lanyard from my hands, I was as sure as a boy could be that this useless, worthless thing I wove out of boredom would be enough to make us even. |
Dover Beach
The sea is calm to-night. The tide is full, the moon lies fair Upon the straits; on the French coast the light Gleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand; Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay. Come to the window, sweet is the night-air! Only, from the long line of spray Where the sea meets the moon-blanched land, Listen! you hear the grating roar Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling, At their return, up the high strand, Begin, and cease, and then again begin, With tremulous cadence slow, and bring The eternal note of sadness in. Sophocles long ago Heard it on the Agaean, and it brought Into his mind the turbid ebb and flow Of human misery; we Find also in the sound a thought, Hearing it by this distant northern sea. The Sea of Faith Was once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furled. But now I only hear Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar, Retreating, to the breath Of the night-wind, down the vast edges drear And naked shingles of the world. Ah, love, let us be true To one another! for the world, which seems To lie before us like a land of dreams, So various, so beautiful, so new, Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light, Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain; And we are here as on a darkling plain Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight, Where ignorant armies clash by night. --Matthew Arnold Emphasized the part I love. |
Choco, thank you for posting that. I have expressed my extreme dislike of all poetry before... but I really liked that one. :)
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The Lanyard is one of those poems that I figured every Cellar parent would be able to relate to. :)
Billy Collins is by far my favorite poet -- I highly recommend his stuff even if you don't usually like poetry. |
End of Summer
by James Richardson Just an uncommon lull in the traffic so you hear some guy in an apron, sleeves rolled up, with his brusque sweep brusque sweep of the sidewalk, and the slap shut of a too thin rental van, and I told him no a gust has snatched from a conversation and brought to you, loud. It would be so different if any of these were missing is the feeling you always have on the first day of autumn, no, the first day you think of autumn, when somehow the sun singling out high windows, a waiter settling a billow of white cloth with glasses and silver, and the sparrows shattering to nowhere are the Summer waving that here is where it turns and will no longer be walking with you, traveller, who now leave all of this behind, carrying only what it has made of you. Already the crowds seem darker and more hurried and the slang grows stranger and stranger, and you do not understand what you love, yet here, rounding a corner in mild sunset, is the world again, wide-eyed as a child holding up a toy even you can fix. How light your step down the narrowing avenue to the cross streets, October, small November, barely legible December. |
Help me choose -- whose poetry would you choose for a paper:
Mary Oliver Galway Kinnell Seamus Heaney or Rita Dove? |
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Fixed it for ya'. Sorry, couldn't resist. :D |
I’d rather be thin than famous,
I don’t wanta be fat, And a woman throws me outta bed Callin me Gordo, & everytime I bend to pickup my suspenders from the davenport floor I explode loud huge grunt-o and disgust every one in the familio I’d rather be thin than famous But I’m fat Paste that in yr. Broadway Show --Kerouac |
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:muse: |
Wild Geese
by Mary Oliver You do not have to be good. You do not have to walk on your knees for a hundred miles through the desert repenting. You only have to let the soft animal of your body love what it loves. Tell me about despair, yours, and I will tell you mine. Meanwhile the world goes on. Meanwhile the sun and the clear pebbles of the rain are moving across the landscapes, over the prairies and the deep trees, the mountains and the rivers. Meanwhile the wild geese, high in the clean blue air, are heading home again. Whoever you are, no matter how lonely, the world offers itself to your imagination, calls to you like the wild geese, harsh and exciting — over and over announcing your place in the family of things. |
Who is the cat
that wears the world as a hat ? What's the name of the guy who is greeted when he wakes by the St. Pauli girl and a tray of pancakes! |
is it Shaft?
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Ray Q. Smuckles
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William Shakespeare (1564-1616)
from Macbeth A dark Cave. In the middle, a Caldron boiling. Thunder. Enter the three Witches. 1 WITCH. Thrice the brinded cat hath mew'd. 2 WITCH. Thrice and once, the hedge-pig whin'd. 3 WITCH. Harpier cries:—'tis time! 'tis time! 1 WITCH. Round about the caldron go; In the poison'd entrails throw.— Toad, that under cold stone, Days and nights has thirty-one; Swelter'd venom sleeping got, Boil thou first i' the charmed pot! ALL. Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn, and caldron bubble. 2 WITCH. Fillet of a fenny snake, In the caldron boil and bake; Eye of newt, and toe of frog, Wool of bat, and tongue of dog, Adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting, Lizard's leg, and owlet's wing,— For a charm of powerful trouble, Like a hell-broth boil and bubble. ALL. Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn, and caldron bubble. 3 WITCH. Scale of dragon; tooth of wolf; Witches' mummy; maw and gulf Of the ravin'd salt-sea shark; Root of hemlock digg'd i the dark; Liver of blaspheming Jew; Gall of goat, and slips of yew Sliver'd in the moon's eclipse; Nose of Turk, and Tartar's lips; Finger of birth-strangled babe Ditch-deliver'd by a drab,— Make the gruel thick and slab: Add thereto a tiger's chaudron, For the ingrediants of our caldron. ALL. Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn, and caldron bubble. 2 WITCH. Cool it with a baboon's blood, Then the charm is firm and good. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- brinded - having obscure dark streaks or flecks on gray gulf - the throat drab - prostitute chaudron - entrails The above appears at the beginning of Act IV, Scene 1 as found in: Shakespeare, William. The Globe Illustrated Shakespeare: The Complete Works Annotated. Howard Staunton ed. New York: Gramercy Books, 1993. |
In Flanders Fields
by John McCrae, May 1915 In Flanders fields the poppies blow Between the crosses, row on row, That mark our place; and in the sky The larks, still bravely singing, fly Scarce heard amid the guns below. We are the Dead. Short days ago We lived, felt dawn, saw sunset glow, Loved and were loved, and now we lie In Flanders fields. Take up our quarrel with the foe: To you from failing hands we throw The torch; be yours to hold it high. If ye break faith with us who die We shall not sleep, though poppies grow In Flanders fields. Inspiration for the Poem On 2 May, 1915, in the second week of fighting during the Second Battle of Ypres Lieutenant Alexis Helmer was killed by a German artillery shell. He was a friend of the Canadian military doctor Major John McCrae. It is believed that John began the draft for his famous poem 'In Flanders Fields' that evening. Inspiration for The Poppy Umbrella On Armistice Day in Ieper (Ypres) the idea for The Poppy Umbrella was inspired by the powerful image of poppies growing amongst the soldiers' graves in John McCrae's poem. http://www.greatwar.co.uk/umbrella/poppyidea.htm |
well. Now I'm depressed.
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A counterspell:
How do I love thee? Let me count the ways. I love thee to the depth and breadth and height My soul can reach, when feeling out of sight For the ends of Being and ideal Grace. I love thee to the level of everyday's Most quiet need, by sun and candle-light. I love thee freely, as men strive for Right; I love thee purely, as they turn from Praise. I love thee with a passion put to use In my old griefs, and with my childhood's faith. I love thee with a love I seemed to lose With my lost saints, --- I love thee with the breath, Smiles, tears, of all my life! --- and, if God choose, I shall but love thee better after death. |
I like that version Bri.
About December "I speak cold silent words a stone might speak If it had words or consciousness, Watching December moonlight on the mountain peak, Relieved of mortal hungers, the whole mess Of needs, desires, ambitions, wishes, hopes. This stillness in me knows the sky's abyss, Reflected by blank snow along bare slopes, If it had words or consciousness, Would echo what a thinking stone might say To praise oblivion words can't possess As inorganic muteness goes its way. There's no serenity without the thought serene, Owl-flight without spread wings, honed eyes, hooked beak, Absence without the meaning absence means. To rescue bleakness from the bleak, I speak cold silent words a stone might speak." - Robert Pack, Stone Thoughts |
"You darkness, that I come from,
I love you more than all the fires that fence in the world, for the fire makes a circle of light for everyone, and then no one outside learns of you. But the darkness pulls in everything; shapes and fires, animals and myself, how easily it gathers them!— powers and people— and it is possible a great energy is moving near me. I have faith in nights." - Rainer Maria Rilke, On Darkness |
"kitty". sixteen,5'1",white,prostitute.
by E. E. Cummings
"kitty". sixteen,5'1",white,prostitute. ducking always the touch of must and shall, whose slippery body is Death's littlest pal, skilled in quick softness. Unspontaneous. cute. the signal perfume of whose unrepute focusses in the sweet slow animal bottomless eyes importantly banal, Kitty. a whore. Sixteen you corking brute amused from time to time by clever drolls fearsomely who do keep their sunday flower. The babybreasted broad "kitty" twice eight —beer nothing,the lady'll have a whiskey-sour— whose least amazing smile is the most great common divisor of unequal souls. |
Any fool can get into an ocean
But it takes a Goddess To get out of one. What's true of oceans is true, of course, Of labyrinths and poems. When you start swimming Through riptide of rhythms and the metaphor's seaweed You need to be a good swimmer or a born Goddess To get back out of them Look at the sea otters bobbing wildly Out in the middle of the poem They look so eager and peaceful playing out there where the water hardly moves You might get out through all the waves and rocks Into the middle of the poem to touch them But when you've tried the blessed water long Enough to want to start backward That's when the fun starts Unless you're a poet or an otter or something supernatural You'll drown, dear. You'll drown Any Greek can get you into a labyrinth But it takes a hero to get out of one What's true of labyrinths is true of course Of love and memory. When you start remembering. by Jack Spicer |
The Murder of Two Men by a Young Kid Wearing Lemon-colored Gloves
by Kenneth Patchen Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. W a i t. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. Wait. NOW. |
In the Secular Night
In the secular night you wander around
alone in your house. It's two-thirty. Everyone has deserted you, or this is your story; you remember it from being sixteen, when the others were out somewhere, having a good time, or so you suspected, and you had to baby-sit. You took a large scoop of vanilla ice-cream and filled up the glass with grapejuice and ginger ale, and put on Glenn Miller with his big-band sound, and lit a cigarette and blew the smoke up the chimney, and cried for a while because you were not dancing, and then danced, by yourself, your mouth circled with purple. Now, forty years later, things have changed, and it's baby lima beans. It's necessary to reserve a secret vice. This is what comes from forgetting to eat at the stated mealtimes. You simmer them carefully, drain, add cream and pepper, and amble up and down the stairs, scooping them up with your fingers right out of the bowl, talking to yourself out loud. You'd be surprised if you got an answer, but that part will come later. There is so much silence between the words, you say. You say, The sensed absence of God and the sensed presence amount to much the same thing, only in reverse. You say, I have too much white clothing. You start to hum. Several hundred years ago this could have been mysticism or heresy. It isn't now. Outside there are sirens. Someone's been run over. The century grinds on. -Margaret Atwood it's so pathetic it's good |
Another Larkin for you.
Sky made me think of it, with the poem above. Even as a teenager, who felt attractive and loved, the sheer desperation of this poem gripped me by the throat. Well, that and the lovely sounds of the words - read it out loud. Hear how the "love songs" are described in such drowsy dragging syllables and reality in sharp staccato sounds. Knowing you had love - whatever that means - once, but now it is squandered, gone and nothing to take its place. Its horrible, but at the same time true and therefore beautiful in its starkness Love Songs in Age She kept her songs, they kept so little space, The covers pleased her: One bleached from lying in a sunny place, One marked in circles by a vase of water, One mended, when a tidy fit had seized her, And coloured, by her daughter - So they had waited, till, in widowhood She found them, looking for something else, and stood Relearning how each frank submissive chord Had ushered in Word after sprawling hyphenated word, And the unfailing sense of being young Spread out like a spring-woken tree, wherein That hidden freshness sung, That certainty of time laid up in store As when she played them first. But, even more, The glare of that much-mentioned brilliance, love, Broke out, to show Its bright incipience sailing above, Still promising to solve, and satisfy, And set unchangeably in order. So To pile them back, to cry, Was hard, without lamely admitting how It had not done so then, and could not now. Philip Larkin |
Bertolt Brecht, The Interrogation of the Good.
Step foward: we hear That you are a good man. You cannot be bought, but the lightning Which strikes the house, also Cannot be bought. You hold to what you said. But what did you say? You are honest, you say your opinion. Which opinion? You are brave. Against whom? You are wise. For whom? You do not consider personal advantages. Whose advantages do you consider then? You are a good friend Are you also a good friend of the good people? Hear us then: we know You are our enemy. This is why we shall Now put you in front of a wall. But in consideration of your merits and good qualities We shall put you in front of a good wall and shoot you With a good bullet from from a good gun and bury you With a good shovel in the good earth. |
I heart Rilke.:D I love his short stories and would love a copy of his "dreambook" in english but I am afraid that does not exist. I am not learning German just to read it either.
Requiem for a Friend Part I (Paula Modersohn-Becker 1876-1907) I have dead ones, and I have let them go, and was astonished to see them so peaceful, so quickly at home in being dead, so just, so other than their reputation. Only you, you turn back: you brush against me, and go by, you try to knock against something, so that it resounds and betrays you. O don’t take from me what I am slowly learning. I’m sure you err when you deign to be homesick at all for any Thing. We change them round: they are not present, we reflect them here out of our being, as soon as we see them. I thought you were much further on. It disturbs me that you especially err and return, who have changed more than any other woman. That we were frightened when you died, no, that your harsh death broke in on us darkly, tearing the until-then from the since-that: it concerns us: that it become a unique order is the task we must always be about. But that even you were frightened, and now too are in terror, where terror is no longer valid: that you lose a little of your eternity, my friend, and that you appear here, where nothing yet is: that you, scattered for the first time, scattered and split in the universe, that you did not grasp the rise of events, as here you grasped every Thing: that from the cycle that has already received you the silent gravity of some unrest pulls you down to measured time – this often wakes me at night like a thief breaking in. And if only I might say that you deign to come out of magnanimity, out of over-fullness, because so certain, so within yourself, that you wander about like a child, not anxious in the face of anything one might do – but no: you are asking. This enters so into my bones, and cuts like a saw. A reproach, which you might offer me, as a ghost, impose on me, when I withdraw at night, into my lungs, into the innards, into the last poor chamber of my heart – such a reproach would not be as cruel as this asking is. What do you ask? Say, shall I travel? Have you left some Thing behind somewhere, that torments itself and yearns for you? Shall I enter a land you never saw, though it was close to you like the other side of your senses? I will travel its rivers: go ashore and ask about its ancient customs: speak to women in their doorways and watch when they call their children. I’ll note how they wrap the landscape round them, going about their ancient work in meadow and field: I’ll demand to be led before their king, and I’ll win their priests with bribes to place me in front of their most powerful statues, and leave, and close the temple gates. Only then when I know enough, will I simply look at creatures, so that something of their manner will glide over my limbs: and I will possess a limited being in their eyes, which hold me and slowly release me, calmly, without judgment. I’ll let the gardeners recite many flowers to me, so that I might bring back in the fragments of their lovely names a remnant of their hundred perfumes. And I’ll buy fruits, fruits in which that land exists once more, as far as the heavens. That is what you understood: the ripe fruits. You placed them in bowls there in front of you and weighed out their heaviness with pigments. And so you saw women as fruits too, and saw the children likewise, driven from inside into the forms of their being. And you saw yourself in the end as a fruit, removed yourself from your clothes, brought yourself in front of the mirror, allowed yourself within, as far as your gaze that stayed huge outside and did not say: ‘I am that’: no, rather: ‘this is.’ So your gaze was finally free of curiosity and so un-possessive, of such real poverty, it no longer desired self: was sacred. So I’ll remember you, as you placed yourself within the mirror, deep within and far from all. Why do you appear otherwise? What do you countermand in yourself? Why do you want me to believe that in the amber beads at your throat there was still some heaviness of that heaviness that never exists in the other-side calm of paintings: why do you show me an evil presentiment in your stance: what do the contours of your body mean, laid out like the lines on a hand, so that I no longer see them except as fate? Come here, to the candlelight. I’m not afraid to look on the dead. When they come they too have the right to hold themselves out to our gaze, like other Things. Come here: we’ll be still for a while. See this rose, close by on my desk: isn’t the light around it precisely as hesitant as that over you: it too shouldn’t be here. Outside in the garden, unmixed with me, it should have remained or passed – now it lives, so: what is my consciousness to it? Don’t be afraid if I understand now, ah, it climbs in me: I can do no other, I must understand, even if I die of it. Understand, that you are here. I understand. Just as a blind man understands a Thing, I feel your fate and do not know its name Let us grieve together that someone drew you out of your mirror. Can you still weep? You cannot. You turned the force and pressure of your tears into your ripe gaze, and every juice in you besides you added into a heavy reality, that climbed and spun in balance blindly. Then chance tore at you, a final chance tore you back from your furthest advance, back into a world where juices have will. Not tearing you wholly: tore only a piece at first, but when around this piece, day after day reality grew, so that it became heavy, you needed your whole self: you went and broke yourself, in pieces, out of its control, painfully, out, because you needed yourself. Then you lifted yourself out, and dug the still green seeds out of the night-warmed earth of your heart, from which your death would rise: yours, your own death for your own life. And ate them, the kernels of your death, like all the others, ate the kernels, and found an aftertaste of sweetness you did not expect, found sweetness on the lips, you: who were already sweet within your senses. O let us grieve. Do you know how your blood hesitated in its unequalled gyre, and reluctantly returned, when you called it back? How confused it was to take up once more the body’s narrow circulation: how full of mistrust and amazement, entering into the placenta, and suddenly tired by the long way back. You drove it on: you pushed it along, you dragged it to the fireplace, as one drags a herd-animal to the sacrifice: and still wished that it would be happy too. And you finally forced it: it was happy and ran over to you and gave itself up. You thought because you’d grown used to other rules, it was only for a while: but now you were within Time, and Time is long. And Time runs on, and Time takes away, and Time is like a relapse in a lengthy illness. |
Requiem for a Friend Part II.
How short your life was, if you compare it with those hours where you sat and bent the varied powers of your varied future silently into the bud of the child, that was fate once more. O painful task. O task beyond all strength. You did it from day to day, you dragged yourself to it, and drew the lovely weft through the loom, and used up all the threads in another way. And finally you still had courage to celebrate. When it was done, you wanted to be rewarded, like a child when it has drunk the bittersweet tea that might perhaps make it well. So you rewarded yourself: you were still so far from other people, even then: no one was able to think through, what gift would please you. You knew. You sat up in childbed, and in front of you stood a mirror, that returned the whole thing to you. This everything was you, and wholly before, and within was only illusion, the sweet illusion of every woman, who gladly takes up her jewelry, and combs, and alters her hair. So you died, as women used to die, you died, in the old-fashioned way, in the warm house, the death of women who have given birth, who wish to shut themselves again and no longer can, because that darkness, that they have borne, returns once more, and thrusts, and enters. Still, shouldn’t a wailing of women have been raised? Where women would have lamented, for gold, and one could pay for them to howl through the night, when all becomes silent. A custom once! We have too few customs. They all vanish and become disowned. So you had to come, in death, and, here with me, retrieve the lament. Can you hear that I lament? I wish that my voice were a cloth thrown down over the broken fragments of your death and pulled about until it were torn to pieces, and all that I say would have to walk around, ragged, in that voice, and shiver: what remains belongs to lament. But now I lament, not the man who pulled you back out of yourself, (I don’t discover him: he’s like everyone) but I lament all in him: mankind. When, somewhere, from deep within me, a sense of having been a child rises, which I still don’t understand, perhaps the pure being-a-child of my childhood: I don’t wish to understand. I wish to form an angel from it, without addition, and wish to hurl him into the front rank of the screaming angels who remind God. Because this suffering’s lasted far too long, and no one can bear it: it’s too heavy for us, this confused suffering of false love, that builds on limitation, like a custom, calls itself right and makes profit out of wrong. Where is the man who has the right of possession? Who can possess what cannot hold its own self, what only from time to time catches itself happily, and throws itself down again, as a child does a ball. No more than the captain of the ship can grasp the Nike jutting outwards from the prow when the secret lightness of her divinity lifts her suddenly into the bright ocean-wind: no more can one of us call back the woman who walks on, no longer seeing us, along a small strip of her being as if by a miracle, without disaster: unless his desire and trade is in crime. For this is a crime, if anything’s a crime: not to increase the freedom of a Love with all the freedom we can summon in ourselves. We have, indeed, when we love, only this one thing: to loose one another: because holding on to ourselves comes easily to us, and does not first have to be learned. Are you still there? Are you in some corner? – You understood all of this so well and used it so well, as you passed through open to everything, like the dawn of a day. Women do suffer: love means being alone, and artists sometimes suspect in their work that they must transform where they love. You began both: both are in that which now fame disfigures, and takes from you. Oh you were far beyond any fame. You were barely apparent: you’d withdrawn your beauty as a man takes down a flag on the grey morning of a working day, and wished for nothing, except the long work – which is unfinished: and yet is not finished. If you are still here, if in this darkness there is still a place where your sensitive spirit resonates on the shallow waves of a voice, isolated in the night, vibrating in the high room’s current: then hear me: help me. See, we can slip back so unknowingly, out of our forward stride, into something we didn’t intend: find that we’re trapped there as if in dream and we die there, without waking. No one is far from it. Anyone who has fired their blood through work that endures, may find that they can no longer sustain it and that it falls according to its weight, worthless. For somewhere there is an ancient enmity between life and the great work. Help me, so that I might see it and know it. Come no more. If you can bear it so, be dead among the dead. The dead are occupied. But help me like this, so you are not scattered, as the furthest things sometimes help me: within. This poem was great solace to me in grief. A couple of times. |
ELDORADO
by Poe Gaily bedight, A gallant knight, In sunshine and in shadow, Had journeyed long, Singing a song, In search of Eldorado. But he grew old - This knight so bold - And o'er his heart a shadow Fell, as he found No spot of ground That looked like Eldorado. And, as his strength Failed him at length, He met a pilgrim shadow - 'Shadow,' said he, 'Where can it be - This land of Eldorado?' 'Over the Mountains Of the Moon, Down the Valley of the Shadow, Ride, boldly ride,' The shade replied, - 'If you seek for Eldorado!' |
I got a ranch in downtown Dallas,
I buy diamonds by the ton. Chase cuties in my Cadillac, and drill oil wells just for fun. But when it comes to boots, I need a deal that'll fit me right--toe to heel. So I get my boots at W e s t e r n W a r e h o u s e |
Flint, that's, that's...so beautiful. *sniffles*
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Popped into my head today: I always thought this was one of the better recent teeny-bopper movies, loosely based on The Taming of the Shrew. *shrugs* I've said I'm sappy; I know it's not particularly "good."
10 Things I Hate About You I hate the way you talk to me, and the way you cut your hair. I hate the way you drive my car, I hate it when you stare. I hate your big dumb combat boots and the way you read my mind. I hate you so much it makes me sick, it even makes me rhyme. I hate the way you’re always right, I hate it when you lie. I hate it when you make me laugh, even worse when you make me cry. I hate it when you’re not around, and the fact that you didn’t call. But mostly I hate the way I don’t hate you, not even close not even a little bit not even at all. |
If you can keep your head when all about you
Are losing theirs and blaming it on you; If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you, But make allowance for their doubting too; If you can wait and not be tired by waiting, Or, being lied about, don't deal in lies, Or, being hated, don't give way to hating, And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise; If you can dream - and not make dreams your master; If you can think - and not make thoughts your aim; If you can meet with triumph and disaster And treat those two imposters just the same; If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools, Or watch the things you gave your life to broken, And stoop and build 'em up with wornout tools; If you can make one heap of all your winnings And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss, And lose, and start again at your beginnings And never breath a word about your loss; If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew To serve your turn long after they are gone, And so hold on when there is nothing in you Except the Will which says to them: "Hold on"; If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, Or walk with kings - nor lose the common touch; If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you; If all men count with you, but none too much; If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds' worth of distance run - Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it, And - which is more - you'll be a Man my son! -- Rudyard Kipling |
The Most Beautiful Poem Ever
by George Carlin
Rat shit, bat shit Dirty old twat, Sixty-nine assholes Tied in a knot, Hooray, Lizard shit, Fuck! |
The RW who usually performs the Masonic Funeral service for my one lodge adds this poem -
In My Father's Mansion It is not cold beneath the grasses, Nor close-walled within the tomb; Rather, in my Father's mansion, Living, in another room. Nearer than the one who loves me, Like yon child with cheeks abloom, Out of sight, at desk or Schoolbook, Busy, in another room. Nearer than the youth whom fortune Beckons where the strange lands loom; Just behind the hanging curtain, Serving, in another room. Shall I doubt my Father's mercy? Shall I think of death as doom, Or the stepping o'er the threshold To a bigger, brighter room? Shall I blame my Father's wisdom? Shall I sit enswathed in gloom, When I know my Love is happy Waiting, in another room? Robert Freeman |
Crow Blacker Than Ever: Ted Hughes
When God, disgusted with man, Turned towards heaven, And man, disgusted with God, Turned towards Eve, Things looked like falling apart. But Crow Crow Crow nailed them together, Nailing heaven and earth together- So man cried, but with God's voice. And God bled, but with man's blood. Then heaven and earth creaked at the joint Which became gangrenous and stank- A horror beyond redemption. The agony did not diminish. Man could not be man nor God God. The agony Grew. Crow Grinned Crying: "This is my Creation," Flying the black flag of himself. |
Very nice!
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"Forward!" he cried, from the rear, and the front rank died.
The general he sat, and the lines on the map, moved from side to side. --Richard Wright; Roger Waters |
Anger by Linda Pastan
You tell me that it's all right to let it out of its cage, though it may claw someone, even bite. You say that letting it out may tame it somehow. But loose it may turn on me, draw blood. Ah, you think you know so much, you whose anger is a pet dog, its canines dull with disuse. But mine is a rabid thing, sharpening its teeth on my very bones, and I will never let it go. |
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