Advertisement
What's in My Journal
Odd things, like a button drawer. Mean things, fishooks, barbs in your hand.
But marbles too. A genius for being agreeable.
Junkyard crucifixes, voluptuous
discards. Space for knickknacks, and for
Alaska. Evidence to hang me, or to beatify.
Clues that lead nowhere, that never connected anyway.
Deliberate obfuscation, the kind that takes genius. Chasms in character.
Loud omissions. Mornings that yawn
above a new grave. Pages you know exist but you can't find them. Someone's terribly inevitable life story, maybe mine.
William Stafford
Odd things, like a button drawer. Mean things, fishooks, barbs in your hand.
But marbles too. A genius for being agreeable.
Junkyard crucifixes, voluptuous
discards. Space for knickknacks, and for
Alaska. Evidence to hang me, or to beatify.
Clues that lead nowhere, that never connected anyway.
Deliberate obfuscation, the kind that takes genius. Chasms in character.
Loud omissions. Mornings that yawn
above a new grave. Pages you know exist but you can't find them. Someone's terribly inevitable life story, maybe mine.
William Stafford
posted by:
|
|
Unsubscribed |
Advertisement
Advertisement
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 7, 2007 - 6:29 PMPity would be no more,
If we did not make somebody Poor;
And Mercy no more could be,
If all were as happy as we;
And mutual fear brings peace,
Till the selfish loves increase;
Then Cruelty knits a snare,
And spreads his baits with care.
He sits down with holy fears,
And waters the ground with tears;
Then Humility takes its root
Underneath his foot.
Soon spreads the dismal shade
Of Mystery over his head;
And the Caterpillar and Fly
Feed on the Mystery.
And it bears the fruit of Deceit,
Ruddy and sweet to eat;
And the Raven his nest has made
In its thickest shade.
The Gods of the earth and sea,
Sought through Nature to find this Tree,
But their search was all in vain;
There grows one in the Human Brain.
-Wiliam Blake -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 7, 2007 - 7:06 PMThe human abstract is one of my favorite blake poems. -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 7, 2007 - 8:03 PMThanks for including the title, Dan; one of my faves from Billy, too.
Side note: In my 1999 2-act play, "Hungry Ghosts of Albion", I incorporated The Human Abstract as a monologue performed by the character, "the ghost of Sir Isaac Newton" who was shipwrecked on a life raft (lost at sea) with the ghost of William Blake. Needless to say, they had some ontological bones to pick. The poem ended the play and was performed by Newton as he struggled to emerge from a large gossamer coccoon generated by his overactive intellect.
Some photos are posted at:
www.paratheatrical.com/pages/...ts.html -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 7, 2007 - 10:21 PM(yet another) fascinating premise, sherpa.
for the Tree grows
in the human brain -
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, May 8, 2007 - 4:29 AMThe wheel of the quivering meat conception
Turns in the void expelling human beings,
Pigs, turtles, frogs, insects, nits
Mice, lice, lizards, rats, roan
Racinghorses, poxy bucolic pigtics,
Horrible unnameable lice of vultures
Murderous attacking dog-armies
Of Africa, Rhinos roaming in the jungle,
Vast boars and huge gigantic bull
Elephants, rams, eagles, condors,
Pones and Porcupines and Pills –
All the endless conception of living beings
Gnashing everywhere in Consciousness
Throughout the ten directions of space
Occupying all the quarters in & out,
From supermicroscopic no-bug
To huge Galaxy Lightyear Bowell
Illuminating the sky of one Mind –
Poor baby! I wish I was free
Of that slaving meat wheel
And safe in heaven dead
-
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, October 30, 2007 - 4:38 PMwearing the collar
I live with a lady and four cats
and some days we all get
along.
some days I have trouble with
one of the
cats.
other days I have trouble with
two of the
cats.
other days,
three.
some days I have trouble with
all four of the
cats
and the
lady:
ten eyes looking at me
as if I was a dog.
Charles Bukowski -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Wed, October 31, 2007 - 6:24 AMWe were so poor I had to take the place of the bait in the mousetrap. All alone in the cellar, I could hear them pacing upstairs, tossing and turning in their beds. "These are dark and evil days," the mouse told me as he nibbled my ear. Years passed. My mother wore a cat-fur collar which she stroked until its sparks lit up the cellar.
~Charles Simic -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Wed, October 31, 2007 - 7:05 AMThe dog went to dancing school. The dog's owner sniffed vials of Viennese air. One day the two heard the new Master of the Universe pass their door with a heavy step. After that, the man exchanged clothes with his dog. It was a dog on two legs, wearing a tuxedo, that they led to the edge of the common grave. As for the man, blind and deaf as he came to be, he still wags his tail at the approach of a stranger.
~Charles Simic
-
-
-
Feeding Frenzy
Tue, December 2, 2008 - 3:54 PMre:\
<Soon spreads the dismal shade
Of Mystery over his head;
And the Caterpillar and Fly
Feed on the Mystery. >
This evokes interesting imagery. Feed on the Mystery. Wow.
-
-
Re: Feeding Frenzy
Tue, December 2, 2008 - 4:08 PM"This won't just be a matter of political organization. It will also require us to be continually at work on ourselves, purging the parts of us that resonate in harmony with the dying world and feeding the parts of ourselves that are capable of creating a paradise-on-earth."
-Brezney
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 7, 2007 - 9:54 PMIn my jewel-encrusted cage, two songbirds sing, but not in harmony.
Solemn dirges and shrieking accusations
keep me from sleep or silent contemplation.
Why not let them fly free?
They will not leave.
They know not how to live out of captivity,
in a land of icy stares and treeless streets.
They shriek and cry, and I, I know no solace for we three.
We feed on stale crusts, dipped in champagne
so bubbly.
There's not much else to say.
In these sleepless hours
I learn new dancesteps
timed to familiar refrains.
(c) May 7, 2007 Laurie Corzett -
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, May 8, 2007 - 6:21 AMIDEAL AUDIENCE
Not scattered legions,
not a dozen from
a single region
for whom accent
matters, not a seven-
member coven,
not five shirttail
cousins; just
one free citizen--
maybe not alive
now even--who
will know with
exquisite gloom
that only we two
ever found this room.
-- by Kay Ryan -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, May 8, 2007 - 4:52 PMseeker of truth
follow no path
all paths lead where
truth is here
~ e. e. cummings ~ -
-
Unsu...
kindness
Tue, May 8, 2007 - 5:45 PMFor a Five-Year-Old
A snail is climbing up the window-sill into your room, after a night of rain.
You call me in to see, and I explain that it would be unkind to leave it there: it might crawl to the floor; we must take care that no one squashes it.You understand,
and carry it outside, with careful hand, to eat a daffodil.
I see, then, that a kind of faith prevails: your gentleness is moulded still by words from me,
who have trapped mice and shot wild birds, from me, who drowned your kittens, who betrayed
your closest relatives, and who purveyed the harshest kind of truth to many another.
But that is how things are: I am
your mother,
and we are kind to snails.
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Wed, May 9, 2007 - 5:23 AMour times are slight
sat as stone spirits danced
shadows in the starlit void
laughter paradise
whispered screams
just as dreams
eternity passes
I ride the train
that is aflame
where one man dies
amidst the cries
from burning flesh
I learn the sweetness
of the smell of death
rooms just one
fire lit
domicile closet
visions of
a time of love
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, May 8, 2007 - 7:59 PMThis being human is a guest house.
Every morning a new arrival.
A joy, a depression, a meanness,
some momentary awareness comes
as an unexpected visitor.
Welcome and entertain them all!
Even if they're a crowd of sorrows,
who violently sweep your house
empty of its furniture,
still, treat each guest honorably.
He may be clearing you out
for some new delight.
The dark thought, the shame, the malice,
meet them at the door laughing,
and invite them in.
Be grateful for whoever comes,
because each has been sent
as a guide from beyond.
~Jelaluddin Rumi -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, May 11, 2007 - 1:21 PMLoons Mating
Their necks and their dark heads lifted into a dawn
Blurred smooth by mist, the loons
Beside each other are swimming slowly
In charmed circles, their bodies stretched uner water
Through ripples quivering and sweeping apart
The gray sky now held close by the lake's mercurial threshold
Whose face and underface they share
In wheeling and diving tandem, rising together
To swell their breasts like swans, to go breasting forward
With beaks turned down and in, near shore,
Out of sight behind a windbreak of birch and alder,
And now the haunted uprisen wailing call,
And again, and now the beautiful sane laughter.
David Wagoner -
-
Unsu...
ok, one more bird poem and i'll stop
Fri, May 11, 2007 - 2:39 PMLike They Say
Underneath the tree on some
soft grass I sat, I
watched two happy
woodpeckers be dis-
turbed by my presence. And
why not, I thought to
myself, why
not.
Robert Creeley -
-
Unsu...
Re: ok, one more bird poem and i'll stop
Fri, May 11, 2007 - 10:52 PMDelirium
The black snow runs down from the rooftops;
A red finger dips into your brow;
Blue snow flakes sink into the empty room,
They are a lovers’ dying mirrors.
Heavy and torn to pieces the mind muses,
Follows the shadow in the mirror of blue snow flakes,
The cold smile of a deceased harlot.
The evening’s wind weeps in the scent of carnations.
-- Georg Trakl
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, May 12, 2007 - 7:39 PMWILD PLUM
They are unholy who are born
To love wild plum at night,
Who once have passed it on a road
Glimmering and white.
It is as though the darkness had
Speech of silver words,
Or as though a cloud of stars
Perched like ghostly birds.
They are unpitied from their birth
And homeless in men's sight,
Who love, better than the earth,
Wild plum at night.
~Orrick Johns~ -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 14, 2007 - 6:38 PMCutting Loose
Sometimes from sorrow, for no reason,
you sing. For no reason, you accept
the way of being lost, cutting loose from all else and electing a world where you go
where you want to.
Arbitrary, sound comes, a reminder
that a steady center is holding
all else. If you listen, that sound will tell where it is, and you can slide your way past trouble.
Certain twisted monsters
always bar the path--but that's when you get going best, glad to be lost, learning how real it is
here on the earth, again and again.
William Stafford -
-
-
The Garden of Love
Fri, May 25, 2007 - 12:01 PMI went to the Garden of Love,
And saw what I never had seen:
A Chapel was built in the midst,
Where I used to play on the green.
And the gates of this Chapel were shut,
And "Thou Shall Not" writ over the door;
So I turn'd to the Garden of Love
That so many sweet flowers bore;
And I saw it was filled with graves,
And tombstones where flowers should be;
And priests in black gowns were walking their rounds,
And binding with briars my joys and desires.
William Blake
-
-
Unsu...
Re: SONG
Mon, June 11, 2007 - 4:42 PMSong
by Frank Bidart
You know that it is there, lair
where the bear ceases
for a time even to exist.
Crawl in. You have at last killed
enough and eaten enough to be fat
enough to cease for a time to exist.
Crawl in. It takes talent to live at night, and scorning
others you had that talent, but now you sniff
the season when you must cease to exist.
Crawl in. Whatever for good or ill
grows within you needs
you for a time to cease to exist.
It is not raining inside
tonight. You know that it is there. Crawl in.
-
-
Re: 211th
Thu, June 14, 2007 - 10:46 AMThe wheel of the quivering meat conception
Turns in the void expelling human beings,
Pigs, turtles, frogs, insects, nits,
Mice, lice, lizards, rats, roan
Racinghorses, poxy bucolic pigtics,
Horrible unnameable lice of vultures,
Murderous attacking dog-armies
Of Africa, Rhinos roaming in the jungle,
Vast boars and huge gigantic bull
Elephants, rams, eagles, condors,
Pones and Porcupines and Pills—
All the endless conception of living beings
Gnashing everywhere in Consciousness
Throughout the ten directions of space
Occupying all the quarters in & out,
From supermicroscopic no-bug
To huge Galaxy Lightyear Bowell
Illuminating the sky of one Mind—
Poor! I wish I was free
Of the slaving meat wheel
and safe in heaven dead
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sun, June 17, 2007 - 11:19 AMGrief Calls Us to the Things of This World
by Sherman Alexie
The morning air is all awash with angels . . .
- Richard Wilbur
The eyes open to a blue telephone
In the bathroom of this five-star hotel.
I wonder whom I should call? A plumber,
Proctologist, urologist, or priest?
Who is most among us and most deserves
The first call? I choose my father because
He's astounded by bathroom telephones.
I dial home. My mother answers. "Hey, Ma,
I say, "Can I talk to Poppa?" She gasps,
And then I remember that my father
Has been dead for nearly a year. "Shit, Mom,"
I say. "I forgot he’s dead. I’m sorry—
How did I forget?" "It’s okay," she says.
"I made him a cup of instant coffee
This morning and left it on the table—
Like I have for, what, twenty-seven years—
And I didn't realize my mistake
Until this afternoon." My mother laughs
At the angels who wait for us to pause
During the most ordinary of days
And sing our praise to forgetfulness
Before they slap our souls with their cold wings.
Those angels burden and unbalance us.
Those fucking angels ride us piggyback.
Those angels, forever falling, snare us
And haul us, prey and praying, into dust.
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, June 19, 2007 - 7:47 PMBeware of Things in Duplicate
by Dana Gioia
Beware of things in duplicate:
a set of knives, the cufflink in a drawer,
the dice, the pair of Queens, the eyes
of someone sitting next to you:
Attend that empty minute in the evening
when looking at the clock, you see
its hand are fixed on the same hour
you noticed at your morning coffee.
These are the moments to beware
when there is nothing so familiar
or so close that cannot betray you:
a twin, an extra key, an echo,
your own reflection in the glass.
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, June 19, 2007 - 8:32 PMMOUVEMENT
The swaying motion on the bank of the river falls,
The chasm at the sternpost,
The swiftness of the hand-rail,
The huge passing of the current
Conduct by unimaginable lights
And chemical renewal
Voyagers surrounded by the waterspouts of the valley
And the current.
They are the conquerors of the world
Seeking a personal chemical fortune;
Sports and comfort travel with them;
They take the education
Of races, classes, and animals, on this Boat.
Repose and dizziness
To the torrential light,
To the terrible nights of study.
For from the talk among the apparatus,—blood, flowers, fire, jewels—
From the agitated accounts on this fleeing deck,
—You can see, rolling like a dyke beyond the hydraulic motor road,
Monstrous, illuminated endlessly,—their stock of studies;
Themselves driven into harmonic ecstasy
And the heroism of discovery.
In the most startling atmospheric happenings
A youthful couple withdraws into the archway,
—Is it ancient shyness that can be forgiven?—
And sings and stands guard.
-Arthur Rimbaud -
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, June 19, 2007 - 10:16 PM -
-
Unsu...
re: none-see-ation
Wed, June 20, 2007 - 8:51 PMThe Consolation of Apricots
Especially in early spring,
when the sun offers a thin treacle of warmth,
I love to sit outdoors
and eat sense-ravishing apricots.
Born on sun-drenched trees in Morocco,
the apricots have flown the Atlantic
like small comets, and I can taste
broiling North Africa in their flesh.
Somewhere between a peach and a prayer,
they taste of well water and butterscotch and dried apples
and desert simooms and lust.
Sweet with a twang of spice,
a ripe apricot is small enough to devour
as two hemispheres.
Ambiguity is its hallmark.
How to eat an apricot:
first warm its continuous curve
in cupped hands, holding it
as you might a brandy snifter,
then caress the velvety sheen
with one thumb, and run your fingertips
over its nap, which is shorter
than peach fuzz, closer to chamois.
Tawny gold with a blush on its cheeks,
an apricot is the color of shame and dawn.
One should not expect to drink wine
at mid-winter, Boethius warned.
What could be more thrilling
than ripe apricots out of season,
a gush of taboo sweetness
to offset the savage wistfulness of early spring?
Always eat apricots at twilight,
preferably while sitting in a sunset park,
with valley lights starting to flicker on
and the lake spangled like a shield.
Then, while a trail of bright ink tattoos the sky,
notice how the sun washes the earth
like a woman pouring her gaze
along her lover's naked body,
each cell receiving the tattoo of her glance.
Wait for that moment
of arousal and revelation,
then sink your teeth into the flesh of an apricot.
Diane Ackerman
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Wed, June 27, 2007 - 5:44 PMwww.diaart.org/prg/poetry...idart1.html
TO THE DEAD
by Frank Bidart
What I hope (when I hope) is that we'll
see each other again,--
. . . and again reach the VEIN
in which we loved each other . .
It existed. It existed.
There is a NIGHT within the NIGHT,--
. . . for, like the detectives (the Ritz Brothers)
in The Gorilla,
once we'd been battered by the gorilla
we searched the walls, the intricately carved
impenetrable paneling
for a button, lever, latch
that unlocks a secret door that
reveals at last the secret chambers,
CORRIDORS within WALLS,
(the disenthralling, necessary, dreamed structure
beneath the structure we see,)
that is the HOUSE within the HOUSE . . .
There is a NIGHT within the NIGHT,--
. . . there were (for example) months when I seemed only
to displease, frustrate,
disappoint you--; then, something triggered
a drunk lasting for days, and as you
slowly and shakily sobered up,
sick, throbbing with remorse and self-loathing,
insight like ashes: clung
to; useless; hated . . .
This was the viewing of the power of the waters
while the waters were asleep:--
secrets, histories of loves, betrayals, double-binds
not fit (you thought) for the light of day . . .
There is a NIGHT within the NIGHT,--
. . . for, there at times at night, still we
inhabit the secret place together . . .
Is this wisdom, or self-pity?--
The love I've known is the love of
two people staring
not at each other, but in the same direction.
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Thu, June 28, 2007 - 10:58 AMLady Lazarus, by Sylvia Plath
I have done it again.
One year in every ten
I manage it----
A sort of walking miracle, my skin
Bright as a Nazi lampshade,
My right foot
A paperweight,
My face a featureless, fine
Jew linen.
Peel off the napkin
0 my enemy.
Do I terrify?----
The nose, the eye pits, the full set of teeth?
The sour breath
Will vanish in a day.
Soon, soon the flesh
The grave cave ate will be
At home on me
And I a smiling woman.
I am only thirty.
And like the cat I have nine times to die.
This is Number Three.
What a trash
To annihilate each decade.
What a million filaments.
The peanut-crunching crowd
Shoves in to see
Them unwrap me hand and foot
The big strip tease.
Gentlemen, ladies
These are my hands
My knees.
I may be skin and bone,
Nevertheless, I am the same, identical woman.
The first time it happened I was ten.
It was an accident.
The second time I meant
To last it out and not come back at all.
I rocked shut
As a seashell.
They had to call and call
And pick the worms off me like sticky pearls.
Dying
Is an art, like everything else,
I do it exceptionally well.
I do it so it feels like hell.
I do it so it feels real.
I guess you could say I've a call.
It's easy enough to do it in a cell.
It's easy enough to do it and stay put.
It's the theatrical
Comeback in broad day
To the same place, the same face, the same brute
Amused shout:
'A miracle!'
That knocks me out.
There is a charge
For the eyeing of my scars, there is a charge
For the hearing of my heart----
It really goes.
And there is a charge, a very large charge
For a word or a touch
Or a bit of blood
Or a piece of my hair or my clothes.
So, so, Herr Doktor.
So, Herr Enemy.
I am your opus,
I am your valuable,
The pure gold baby
That melts to a shriek.
I turn and burn.
Do not think I underestimate your great concern.
Ash, ash ---
You poke and stir.
Flesh, bone, there is nothing there----
A cake of soap,
A wedding ring,
A gold filling.
Herr God, Herr Lucifer
Beware
Beware.
Out of the ash
I rise with my red hair
And I eat men like air. -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, June 28, 2007 - 5:39 PMThat melts to a shriek. >>>
what a line.....
"He kissed me bang smash on the mouth and ripped my hairband off . . . and when he kissed my neck I bit him long and hard on the cheek . . . blood was running down his face."
(Plath's recalling of her first encounter with former husband Ted Hughes) -
-
This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.
Re: poem de jour
Fri, June 29, 2007 - 1:38 AMCrossing the Water by Sylvia Plath
Black lake, black boat, two black, cut-paper people.
Where do the black trees go that drink here?
Their shadows must cover Canada.
A little light is filtering from the water flowers.
Their leaves do not wish us to hurry:
They are round and flat and full of dark advice.
Cold worlds shake from the oar.
The spirit of blackness is in us, it is in the fishes.
A snag is lifting a valedictory, pale hand;
Stars open among the lilies.
Are you not blinded by such expressionless sirens?
This is the silence of astounded souls. -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, June 29, 2007 - 1:35 PMFULL
TIME
LOSER
STOP THAT HORSE
HE WEARS MY SHIRT
REGRET REMORSE
O HOW THEY HURT
I KNOCK ON DOORS
THEY TURN TO DIRT
ALWAYS THE BEGGAR
NEVER THE CHOOSER
HALF-CLEVER
FULL-TIME LOSER
FROM THE SLUMBERLAND
THAT TIME FORGOT
TO THE WONDERLAND
OF A SPINELESS CLOT
WHO UNDERSTANDS
WHO CALLS THE SHOTS
YOU MIGHT KNOW
IT'S ANOTHER USER
PART-TIME POET
FULL-TIME LOSER
LYRICS © JOHN COOPER CLARKE -
-
poem in transition
Sun, July 8, 2007 - 12:16 AM
Play Date
She was a little lamb,
a sweet red balloon,
pink and peppermint ribbons
tailed like a kite.
She flew into whatever was doing --
a rage,
a whirlwind,
sunny blue skies.
I met her with a mandolin,
a mannequin,
a ruined man.
She gave me sacred words,
back-slapping laughs,
tinkling tingling touch.
We flew on clouds of ambergris
raining absinthe
absorbed in love.
I've not
seen her again
except now and then
encrypted in a crowded face.
She ran into some random world,
a rapid sea,
a separate place.
I fell into a sickly scented bed,
a crippling crowd,
a narrow lane that edges
into oceanic streets.
(c) July 7, 2007 Laurie Corzett
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, July 12, 2007 - 6:35 PMSuchoon Mo
DESTINY AND DESTINATION
1.
I have no inspiration
it has expired
I used to have a theory
about something
or something else
it drifted away
I have no need of enlightenment
or awakening
or nirvana
wisdom is a fraud
once spoken or understood
or practiced
2.
a stray dog
or a stray woman
or a stray shadow
may follow me
my destiny
has no destination
my destination
has no destiny
3.
time is not what
time is when
now is now
now is just now
one day passes one day per day
one second passes one second per second
one day is just one day
one second is just one second
time is not speed limit
4.
I am here and now
that does make no difference
I am not here and not now
that does make no sense
ultimate truth is not true
tomorrow and yesterday
they may dance together
until today is gone
or will never come
5.
I am indifferent
to comedy or tragedy
life is neither a drama nor an opera
I have no need of stage
6.
I am real -
-
Re: poem de jour
Thu, July 12, 2007 - 7:47 PMReality is for those who can't handle drugs.
Giving up, giving in
seems so realistic
so where it is
so savior faire
There is no REALITY
There is no final resting saga
We persevere
We procrastinate
We create
Again and again and again
until the polesters show
anti-creation exceeds the median
and then we create
another realm in which
Creation rules!
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 14, 2007 - 6:08 PMThe Hanging Man
By the roots of my hair some god got hold of me.
I sizzled in his blue volts like a desert prophet.
The nights snapped out of sight like a lizard's eyelid:
A world of bald white days in a shadeless socket.
A vulturous boredom pinned me in this tree.
If he were I, he would do what I did.
sylvia plath -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, July 17, 2007 - 5:58 PMBEFORE YOU PLAY
You shut one eye
You peer into yourself
Peep into every corner
Make sure there are no nails no burglars
No cuckoos' eggs
Then you shut the other eye as well
You crouch, then jump
Jump high, high, high
Right up to the top of yourself
Then your weight drags you down
You fall for days and days as deep as deep
Down to the bottom of your abyss
If you're not smashed to bits
If you're still in one piece and get up in one piece
You can start playing.
~Vasko Popa~ -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, July 19, 2007 - 6:08 PMFeeling Sorry for Myself
I start with a groan, swelling to a moan,
rising to a keen, ascending
to a shriek that tapers off in a thin wail.
I hug myself and, whimpering,
rock back and forth on my heels.
No one has ever known such sadness.
No one can grasp how I feel.
I smash an egg over each eye.
I smear my face with coal and pepper.
I wear a paper bag soaked through
with spoiled watermelon and pork grease.
I shred my happy past - my books,
pictures, and poems, published or not.
Ill never fly fish again.
Ill never make love again.
Ill never sit outside and watch night
stretch its starry tent over the sky.
There will be no more metaphors.
I am more sorrowful than a sorrowing man.
Life has no more meaning to me
than a life without meaning.
My heart slows. My blood congeals
to brown, vein-clogging mush.
My stomach goes on strike; my colon
bars its door. People assume
I'm terminal. They imagine what
would make them feel the way I look,
and project their paltry problems onto me.
As if they could fathom my misery
by waterwinging over its abyss!
My pain is too heavy to lift,
too vast to measure, too ineffable to name,
and incalculably too precious to share.
I dig my grave in a landfill, and topple in.
I rub dirt and dog droppings in my hair.
Ive sunk so low its funny; so I start to giggle.
Then to chortle. Then to roar. Mothers
clutch their bleating kids, and rush away.
Gangbangers dash to the far side of the street.
I crawl out of my grave, strip, and shower
with a gunk-filled water hose.
I shake and shiver, grinning, in the filty air.
~Charles Harper Webb~ -
-
Re: poem de jour
Thu, July 19, 2007 - 6:12 PMC'est écrit
Chanson : Francis Cabrel - C'est écrit
Paroles : Francis Cabrel
Elle te fera changer la course des nuages,
Balayer tes projets, vieillir bien avant l'âge,
Tu la perdras cent fois dans les vapeurs des ports,
C'est écrit…
Elle rentrera blessée dans les parfums d'un autre,
Tu t'entendras hurler “ que les diables l'emportent “
Elle voudra que tu pardonnes et tu pardonneras,
C'est écrit…
Elle n'en sort plus de ta mémoire
Ni la nuit ni le jour
Elle danse derrière les brouillards
Et toi, tu cherches et tu cours.
Tu prieras jusqu'aux heures où personne n'écoute,
Tu videras tous les bars qu'elle mettra sur ta route,
T'en passes des nuits à regarder dehors
C'est écrit…
Elle n'en sort plus de ta mémoire
Ni la nuit ni le jour
Elle danse derrière les brouillards
Et toi, tu cherches et tu cours.
Mais y'a pas d'amour sans histoires.
Tu rêves, tu rêves…
Qu'est-ce qu'elle aime, qu'est-ce qu'elle veut ?
Et ces ombres qu'elle te dessine autour des yeux ?
Qu'est-ce qu'elle aime ?
Je t'écouterai me dire ses soupirs, ses dentelles
Qu'à bien y réfléchir, elle n'est plus vraiment belle,
Que t'es déjà passé par des moments plus forts,
Depuis…
Elle n'en sort plus de ta mémoire
Ni la nuit ni le jour
Elle danse derrière les brouillards
Et toi, tu cherches et tu cours.
Mais y'a pas d'amour sans histoires.
Tu rêves, tu rêves…
Elle n'en sort plus de ta mémoire
Elle danse derrière les brouillards
Et moi j'ai vécu ma même histoire
Depuis je compte les jours… (3 fois)
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, July 20, 2007 - 1:57 PMNostalgia
Once Life and I have divorced
After the estate has been divided
(I playing noble disdain
have thrown it all to her)
I shall find a villa upon a hill
To paint my masterpiece
Discarded bodily fluids
Upon the walls.
Murals carefully sprayed upon
Bohemian brownstones
Sauntering down the city street
Aglow
Lighting oily puddles,
Intellectual cafes,
Art houses,
Freak show casas,
Anointing the effervescent night
Playing to the jaded,
The amputeed,
Outcast drifters.
There is a sweetly drifting tune
Meandering like wisteria
Is it a dirge?
A sassy New Orleans carriage ride?
Is it the beating of my heart
Spraying a trail of bleeding homage?
It is a wedding march,
Played slowly, out of time,
Beat by beat, more slowly
Rewinding.
(c) Feb. 25, 2006 Laurie Corzett -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 21, 2007 - 6:00 PMStevie Smith - Not Waving But Drowning
Nobody heard him, the dead man,
But still he lay moaning:
I was much further out than you thought
And not waving but drowning.
Poor chap, he always loved larking
And now he's dead
It must have been too cold for him his heart gave way,
They said.
Oh, no no no, it was too cold always
(Still the dead one lay moaning)
I was much too far out all my life
And not waving but drowning. -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, September 11, 2007 - 5:46 PMFOR EACH OF YOU
Be who you are and will be
learn to cherish that boisterous Black Angel that drives you
up one day and down another
protecting the place where your power rises
running like hot blood
from the same source
as your pain.
When you are hungry
learn to eat
whatever sustains you
until morning
but do not be misled by details
simply because you live them.
Do not let your head deny
your hands
any memory of what passes through them
nor your eyes
nor your heart
everything can be useful
except what is wasteful
(you will need
to remember this when you are accused of destruction.)
Even when they are dangerous
examine the heart of those machines you hate
before you discard them
and never mourn the lack of their power
lest you be condemned
to relive them.
If you do not learn to hate
you will never be lonely
enough
to love easily
nor will you always be brave
although it does not grow any easier.
Do not pretend to convenient beliefs
even when they are righteous
you will never be able to defend your city
while shouting.
Remember our sun
is not the most noteworthy star
only the nearest.
Respect whatever pain you bring back
from your dreaming
but do not look for new gods
in the sea
nor in any part of a rainbow.
Each time you love
love as deeply
as if it were
forever
only nothing is
eternal.
Speak proudly to your children
wherever you may find them
tell them
you are the offspring of slaves
and your mother was
a princess
in darkness.
~Audre Lorde~ -
-
Re: poem de jour
Thu, September 13, 2007 - 2:43 PMTravel Guide
The desert is a place
of holiness
ether thinned
between the worlds
Visions take on meaning
Coyote howls
Luminescent petals bloom
in echoing moonlight.
The desert is a place
of adventure
Ask Carlos Castaneda or
Ishmael or Lawrence
Ask of the Prophet's dream
Yarrow stalks
arranged as clues
to buried mysteries
Starfish husks implicate
nature deities
long dead histories
a sea risen into cloud
into clay.
The desert is neither silent
nor demur.
Here is a chance for
wondrous magiks
haunting melodies
trance dancing ecstasy
whirling winds whispering fate.
The desert is a place
we create
to carry in some secret pocket
breathing the breath of life
when we think to sneak
a hit of hidden time.
(c) September 6, 2007 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, September 18, 2007 - 3:58 PMYOU TAKE MY HAND
You take my hand and
I'm suddenly in a bad movie,
it goes on and on and
why am I fascinated
We waltz in slow motion
through an air stale with aphrodisms
we meet behind the endless ptted palms
you climb through the wrong windows
Other people are leaving
but I always stay till the end
I paid my money, I
want to see what happens.
In chance bathtubs I have to
peel you off me
in the form of smoke and melted
celluloid
Have to face it I'm
finally an addict,
the smell of popcorn and worn plush
lingers for weeks
~Margaret Atwood -
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, September 18, 2007 - 11:34 PMCinema Show
Darkness at the Break of Noon:
the malevolence of disconnection in chilling allegory
globally replace each noun with the pronoun of your choice
mix well
replace each verb with passivity
shade in the shadows to represent perspective
add background hellfire and brimstone for dimensionality
orchestrate with thrash metal out-of-phase syncopation
and booming bombing artillery -- donder und blitzen
analyze, organize, digitize, advertize
project to sell-out crowds
rewind, repeat, replete with popcorn, pepsi and promos.
(c) Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: poem de jour
Thu, September 20, 2007 - 8:26 PMO what is laughter, Hafiz?
What is this precious love and laughter
Budding in our hearts?
It is the glorious sound
Of a soul waking up!
~ Hafiz ~ -
-
Re: poem de jour
Wed, September 26, 2007 - 12:11 AM
spectres
Where do I start?
Where do I end?
What are the boundaries,
the steps, the definitions?
I am great aching fear,
an abyss from past
to future.
Yet I scale those depths,
those moldy prison walls,
holding to bright stars
to light my way.
In a land of empty barriers,
faery-dust dragons
breathing cellophane
warn me to desist from
combat.
Such simple disguises
do not hold me long.
But the people ...
.
.
(c) September 26, 2007 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: poem de jour
Wed, September 26, 2007 - 12:24 AM"Landscape with the Fall of Icarus"
According to Brueghel
when Icarus fell
it was spring
a farmer was ploughing
his field
the whole pageantry
of the year was
awake tingling
near
the edge of the sea
concerned
with itself
sweating in the sun
that melted
the wings' wax
unsignificantly
off the coast
there was
a splash quite unnoticed
this was
Icarus drowning
~ William Carlos Williams
& the Pieter Brueghel painting that inspired it:
upload.wikimedia.org/wikiped...arus.jpg -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, September 29, 2007 - 6:32 PMWho so shall telle a tale after a man,
He moste reherse, as neighe as ever he can,
Everich word, if it be in his charge,
All speke he never so rudely and so large;
Or elles he moste tellen his tale untrewe,
Or feinen thinges, or finden wordes newe.
-Geoffrey Chaucer, Canterbury Tales. Prologue. Line 733
Somehow this seemed particularly appropriate tonight.
-K -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sun, September 30, 2007 - 11:59 PMSpiraling
Where do I start?
How do I end?
Where am I going
in circles, in circles
Can't catch a break
or a smile, or a friend
Tell me true, would someone like you
hold me encircled
in sweet, strong arms
hold me close and whisper
"all is well"?
It's Hell! I tell you
when Heaven seems so near
But the fear, it circles
keeping me so tight,
so trembling,
so dis-eased.
It's not that there's someone
who needs to be pleased
by my shame, by my fame
which escaped me,
by my deep prone supplication,
by my pain.
But if I don't please them,
they're sure to shut me down.
I know, you must know
what I mean.
I see you hiding those tears,
acting like fear is the killer
of souls.
What I need to know:
Could someone like you
hold me so tight
make it all right
tell me you care
always be there
deep in the night when I
just need to write
one more freak-out poem?
Could you be a safe home
for my poetry and me
in those times when it
kills me to hide
in circles, in circles?
(c) October 1, 2007 Laurie Corzett/libramoon
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, October 1, 2007 - 12:24 AMTHE BELLS
by Edgar Allan Poe
Hear the sledges with the bells-
Silver bells!
What a world of merriment their melody foretells!
How they tinkle, tinkle, tinkle,
In the icy air of night!
While the stars that oversprinkle
All the heavens, seem to twinkle
With a crystalline delight;
Keeping time, time, time,
In a sort of Runic rhyme,
To the tintinnabulation that so musically wells
From the bells, bells, bells, bells,
Bells, bells, bells-
From the jingling and the tinkling of the bells.
II
Hear the mellow wedding bells,
Golden bells!
What a world of happiness their harmony foretells!
Through the balmy air of night
How they ring out their delight!
From the molten-golden notes,
And an in tune,
What a liquid ditty floats
To the turtle-dove that listens, while she gloats
On the moon!
Oh, from out the sounding cells,
What a gush of euphony voluminously wells!
How it swells!
How it dwells
On the Future! how it tells
Of the rapture that impels
To the swinging and the ringing
Of the bells, bells, bells,
Of the bells, bells, bells,bells,
Bells, bells, bells-
To the rhyming and the chiming of the bells!
III
Hear the loud alarum bells-
Brazen bells!
What a tale of terror, now, their turbulency tells!
In the startled ear of night
How they scream out their affright!
Too much horrified to speak,
They can only shriek, shriek,
Out of tune,
In a clamorous appealing to the mercy of the fire,
In a mad expostulation with the deaf and frantic fire,
Leaping higher, higher, higher,
With a desperate desire,
And a resolute endeavor,
Now–now to sit or never,
By the side of the pale-faced moon.
Oh, the bells, bells, bells!
What a tale their terror tells
Of Despair!
How they clang, and clash, and roar!
What a horror they outpour
On the bosom of the palpitating air!
Yet the ear it fully knows,
By the twanging,
And the clanging,
How the danger ebbs and flows:
Yet the ear distinctly tells,
In the jangling,
And the wrangling,
How the danger sinks and swells,
By the sinking or the swelling in the anger of the bells-
Of the bells-
Of the bells, bells, bells,bells,
Bells, bells, bells-
In the clamor and the clangor of the bells!
IV
Hear the tolling of the bells-
Iron Bells!
What a world of solemn thought their monody compels!
In the silence of the night,
How we shiver with affright
At the melancholy menace of their tone!
For every sound that floats
From the rust within their throats
Is a groan.
And the people–ah, the people-
They that dwell up in the steeple,
All Alone
And who, tolling, tolling, tolling,
In that muffled monotone,
Feel a glory in so rolling
On the human heart a stone-
They are neither man nor woman-
They are neither brute nor human-
They are Ghouls:
And their king it is who tolls;
And he rolls, rolls, rolls,
Rolls
A paean from the bells!
And his merry bosom swells
With the paean of the bells!
And he dances, and he yells;
Keeping time, time, time,
In a sort of Runic rhyme,
To the paean of the bells-
Of the bells:
Keeping time, time, time,
In a sort of Runic rhyme,
To the throbbing of the bells-
Of the bells, bells, bells-
To the sobbing of the bells;
Keeping time, time, time,
As he knells, knells, knells,
In a happy Runic rhyme,
To the rolling of the bells-
Of the bells, bells, bells:
To the tolling of the bells,
Of the bells, bells, bells, bells-
Bells, bells, bells-
To the moaning and the groaning of the bells. -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, October 1, 2007 - 1:19 AM -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Wed, October 3, 2007 - 4:55 PMMODERN SORCERY
You could have benn just another maggot
Squirming over history's roadkill.
Instead a witch took pity on you, lucky fellow,
Made you say abracadbra, and much else
You didn't understand
While you held on to the hem of her skirt.
You know neither the place nor the hour
Of your transfiguration.
A kitten lapping a drop of milk
Fallen from the Blessed Virgin's breast
In a church at dawn. That's how it felt:
The two of you kneeling there.
Outside, there was a flash of lightning
Like a tongue passing over a bloody knife,
But you were safe.
Hexed once and for all in her open arms,
Giddy and tickled pink with here sorcery.
~Charles Simic -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sun, October 14, 2007 - 4:43 PMGHOST CRABS
At nightfall, as the sea darkens,
A depth darkness thickens, mustering from the gulfs and the submarine badlands,
To the sea's edge. To begin with
It looks like rocks uncovering, mangling their pallor.
Gradually the labouring of the tide
Falls back from its productions,
Its power slips back from glistening nacelles, and they are crabs.
Giant crabs, under flat skulls, staring inland
Like a packed trench of helmets.
Ghosts, they are ghost-crabs.
They emerge
An invisible disgorging of the sea's cold
Over the man who strolls along the sands.
They spill inland, into the smoking purple
Of our woods and towns—a bristling surge
Of tall and staggering specters
Gliding like shocks through water.
Our walls, our bodies, are no problem to them.
Their hungers are homing elsewhere.
We cannot see them or turn our minds from them.
Their bubbling mouths, their eyes
In a slow mineral fury
Press through our nothingness where we sprawl on beds,
Or sit in rooms. Our dreams are ruffled maybe,
Or we jerk awake to the world of possessions
With a gasp, in a sweat burst, brains jamming blind
Into the bulb-light. Sometimes, for minutes, a sliding
Staring
Thickness of silence
Presses between us. These crabs own this world.
All night, around us or through us,
They stalk each other, they fasten on to each other,
They mount each other, they tear each other to pieces,
They utterly exhaust each other.
They are the powers of this world.
We are their bacteria,
Dying their lives and living their deaths.
At dawn, they sidle back under the sea's edge.
They are the turmoil of history, the convulsion
In the roots of blood, in the cycles of concurrence.
To them, our cluttered countries are empty battleground.
All day they recuperate under the sea.
Their singing is like a thin sea-wind flexing in the rocks of a headland,
Where only crabs listen.
They are God's only toys.
~Ted Hughes -
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sun, October 28, 2007 - 7:12 PMorpheus
fantastic. whos' the voice ? whose words are those ? -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, October 29, 2007 - 1:47 AMit's a clip of kerouac and ginsberg et al in nyc with some pound reading bits of cantos...
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, October 29, 2007 - 5:44 AMAnne Sexton.......Her Kind
www.youtube.com/watch
I have gone out, a possessed witch,
haunting the black air, braver at night;
dreaming evil, I have done my hitch
over the plain houses, light by light:
lonely thing, twelve-fingered, out of mind.
A woman like that is not a woman, quite.
I have been her kind.
I have found the warm caves in the woods,
filled them with skillets, carvings, shelves,
closets, silks, innumerable goods;
fixed the suppers for the worms and the elves:
whining, rearranging the disaligned.
A woman like that is misunderstood.
I have been her kind.
I have ridden in your cart, driver,
waved my nude arms at villages going by,
learning the last bright routes, survivor
where your flames still bite my thigh
and my ribs crack where your wheels wind.
A woman like that is not ashamed to die.
I have been her kind. -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, October 29, 2007 - 8:15 PMHere is a bulldog Reading Dylan Thomas' poem "Do Not Go Gently into That Good Night". It is Dylan Thomas' voice, but the animated bulldog is (believe it or not) truly less weird than the animated Dylan Thomas version with his lips moving in a strange Chapel Perilous manner.
Bulldog reading the poem:
www.youtube.com/watch
Dylan Thomas reading the poem:
www.youtube.com/watch
Do No Go Gentle Into That Good Night
Do not go gentle into that good night,
Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
Because their words had forked no lightning they
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
Rage, rage against the dying of the light.
And you, my father, there on the sad height,
Curse, bless me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
Do not go gentle into that good night.
Rage, rage against the dying of the light. -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, October 30, 2007 - 1:45 AM -
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, October 30, 2007 - 3:25 AM -
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, October 30, 2007 - 6:48 AMWillem Defoe.......4 quarters
www.youtube.com/watch
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, November 2, 2007 - 11:31 AM'The intelligible forms of ancient poets,
The fair humanities of old religion,
The Power, the Beauty, and the Majesty
That had their haunts in dale or piny mountain,
Or forest, by slow stream, or pebbly spring,
Or chasms and watery depths; all these have vanished;
They live no longer in the faith of reason;
But still the heart doth need a language; still
Doth the old instinct bring back the old names;
Spirits or gods that used to share this earth
With man as with their friend; and at this day
'Tis Jupiter who brings whate'er is great,
And Venus who brings every thing that's fair.'
Coleridge
The Piccolomini, Act 2, Scene 4 -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, November 2, 2007 - 12:35 PM“The age demanded an image
Of its accelerated grimace,
Something for the modern stage,
Not, at any rate, an Attic grace;
Not, not certainly, the obscure reveries
Of the inward gaze;
Better mendacities
Than the classics in paraphrase!
The ‘age demanded’ chiefly a mould in plaster,
Made with no loss of time,
A prose kinema, not, not assuredly, alabaster
Or the ‘sculpture’ of rhyme.”
(Ezra Pound, from Hugh Selwyn Mauberly) -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 21, 2007 - 6:10 PMTo the One Upstairs
Boss of all bosses of the universe.
Mr know-it-all, wheeler-dealer, wire-puller,
And whatever else you're good at.
Go ahead, shuffle your zeros tonight.
Dip in ink the comets' tails.
Staple the night with starlight.
You'd be better off reading coffee dregs,
Thumbing the pages of the Farmer's Almanac.
But no! You love to put on airs,
And cultivate your famous serenity
While you sit behind your big desk
With zilch in your in-tray, zilch
In your out-tray,
And all of eternity around you.
Doesn't it give you the creeps
To hear them begging you on their knees,
Sputtering endearments,
As if you were an inflatable, life-size doll?
Tell them to button up and go to bed.
Stop pretending you're too busy to notice.
Your hands are empty and so are your eyes.
There's nothing to put your signature to,
Even if you knew your own name,
Or believed the ones I keep inventing,
As I scribble this note to you in the dark.
~Charles Simic -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 21, 2007 - 6:17 PMO GOD OF THE END OF THE WORLD
I am afraid to take you seriously; tell me you’re only kidding,
Show me how to be a greater fool than I already am
B y making me laugh at death without forgetting my mortality.
O GODDESS OF BEAUTY IS BETTER THAN TRUTH
I am embarrassed by my need to be right all the time.
Send me your most gorgeous dropdead image, the Mother of All Visions,
The vision that outgrows and destroys all other visions including itself,
So I can see through myself when I am lying.
O WRATHFUL DEITIES OF DOOMSAYING EVANGELICALS
& DOGMATIC LITTLE BIGOTS,
I am bored to tears with my intolerances.
Grant me the enchantment to be entertained by the hidden pixie agendas
Behind all dreary, dismal grey-faced warnings so I can stop
Taking myself more seriously than the life I am actually living.
O DEMIGOD OF POETIC TERRORISM,
I am utterly and royally confused.
Make me go crazy in the name of Creation, not Destruction,
So I may freely sabotage the literalist virus immobilizing my imagination
And learn to incite riots in the minds asleep to your splendor and glory.
O GODS & GODDESSES OF EVERYBODY’S
HOLY GUARDIAN ANGEL,
I am fucked up beyond all recognition.
Trick me into not knowing whether I am really a good person or really a bad person.
Give me the wisdom to never believe my own PR and what other people think of me,
No matter how much money they pay me.
Deepen my gratitude for being a nobody in an UnWorld
Of wannabe somebodies and hungry ghosts, so I can be touched in the head
By your benevolence and tell your truths
Without wanting the credit.
-A. Alli -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 21, 2007 - 11:18 PM"The Truth Catcher"
I looked at the "truth" and I did not like what I saw ,
What "truth" I saw was not a truth at all!
I looked and I looked but found nothing real,
Only emptiness and the "burden of life" could I feel.
Terror now entered and colored my dark world,
My psyche to endless darkness was now hurled.
With reeling brain and heart beating mad,
I clinged to the "truth" with all that I had.
Unrelenting visions of terrifying force,
Breathtaking facts I could not divorce!
Help me! Help me! I silently cried!
Please let this "truth" in me now die!
But for a moment of lucidity like a candle at night
A thought like a match lit that candle bright,
"If this truth is a lie, then the truth cannot heal,
Seek not the truth to find what is real."
I wish to claim wisdom hath brought me here,
But twas necessity, terror and unbridled fear.
A simple truth which all shamans have taught
That "truth" cannot be caught in thought.
Robert -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, December 22, 2007 - 5:36 PMTruth is not the other side of lies
Nor is it trustworthy, or eternal
Truth is a bit of script
uttered in the moment
to catch up the drama and
release the denouement
Only staring at Truth,
repeating the words until
they are long gone from meaning,
finding that silvery glint into
a hidden crevice of delight,
will set you free -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sun, December 23, 2007 - 2:11 AM -
-
Unsu...
A Prelude (Into the Real)
Thu, December 27, 2007 - 1:47 AMI looked at the "truth" and I did not like what I saw,
What "truth" I saw was not a truth at all.
I looked and I looked but found nothing Real,
Only emptiness and the burden of life could I feel.
Terror now entered and colored my dark world,
My psyche to endless madness was now hurled.
With reeling brain and heart beating mad,
I clinged to the "truth" with all that I had.
Unrelenting visions of terrifying force,
Breathtaking facts I could not divorce!
Help me! Help me! My inner voice cried,
Please let this "truth" in me now die!
Miracle or madness, but from a
candle at night,
An gentle voice spoke from it's flame burning bright.
"If all "truths" become lies, then "truths" cannot heal,
Seek not the "truth" to find what is Real."
Again from the flame a voice I did hear,
the candle now brighter displacing all fear.
"Seek not the "truth" and trust not what you feel,
Don't confuse "truth" with that which is Real."
I wish to claim wisdom hath brought me here,
But twas necessity, terror and unbridled fear.
The room now engulfed in luminous light,
Spoke these last words as my soul took flight.
A simple axiom all sages have taught,
"That which is Real is not made from thought".
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, December 27, 2007 - 5:12 AM
SNOW MELTING
Snow melting when I left you, and I took
This fragile bone we'd found in melting snow
Before I left, exposed beside a brook
Where raccoons washed their hands. And this, I know,
Is that raccoon we'd watched for every day.
Though at the time her wild human hand
Had gestured inexplicably, I say
Her meaning now is more than I can stand.
We've reasons, we have reasons, so we say,
For giving love, and for withholding it.
I who would love must marvel at the way
I know aloneness when I'm holding it,
Know near and far as words for live and die,
Know distance, as I'm trying to draw near,
Growing immense, and know, but don't know why,
Things seen up close enlarge, then disappear.
Tonight this small room seems too huge to cross.
And my life is that looming kind of place.
Here, left with this alone, and at a loss
I hold an alien and vacant face
Which shrinks away, and yet is magnified—
More so than I seem able to explain.
Tonight the giant galaxies outside
Are tiny, tiny on my windowpane.
~Gjertrud Schnackenberg
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, December 27, 2007 - 4:32 PMSWEET DARKNESS
When your eyes are tired
the world is tired also.
When your vision has gone
no part of the world can find you.
Time to go into the dark
where the night has eyes
to recognize its own.
There you can be sure
you are not beyond love.
The dark will be your womb
tonight.
The night will give you a horizon
further than you can see.
You must learn one thing.
The world was meant to be free in.
Give up all the other worlds
except the one to which you belong.
Sometimes it take darkness and the sweet
confinement of your aloneness
to learn
anything or anyone
that does not bring you alive
is too small for you.
~David Whyte -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, December 27, 2007 - 5:36 PMThank you Leda for these lovely offerings. This poem is for you.
from "The Book of Questions"
********************************
Tell me, is the rose naked
or is that her only dress?
Why do trees conceal
the splendor of their roots?
Who hears the regrets
of the thieving automobile?
Is there anything in the world sadder
than a train standing in the rain?
-Pablo Neruda -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 28, 2007 - 4:57 AMIs there anything in the world sadder
than a train standing in the rain? >>>
(rendered momentarily speechless) -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 28, 2007 - 8:40 AM
DUST
Someone spoke to me last night,
told me the truth. Just a few words,
but I recognized it.
I knew I should make myself get up,
write it down, but it was late,
and I was exhausted from working
all day in the garden, moving rocks.
Now, I remember only the flavor--
not like food, sweet or sharp.
More like a fine powder, like dust.
And I wasn't elated or frightened,
but simply rapt, aware.
That's how it is sometimes--
God comes to your window,
all bright light and black wings,
and you're just too tired to open it.
~Dorianne Laux
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 28, 2007 - 5:50 PMTo be brought alive
to feel the sweetness,
to be overrun by great
grateful sobbings of
love, despair, and
the whooshing in of
nightwinds, bringing dreams
No part of living, opening to all
the pain, the sorrow, the grandeur,
needs justification or embellishment
It is the careful picking of the ripest
fruit, the joy of abject failure, for the
opportunities,
the soulful whining of chugging trains
braving rain or fateful ravaging
to bring us home
Yet, what is home, but another way-station,
another chance at choice or fate
along the twisting turns confronting
peaks and prides and sudden ends,
lifelong friends, and inspirations. -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 28, 2007 - 10:19 PMA flea and a fly in a flue
Were caught, so what could they do?
Said the fly, "Let us flee."
"Let us fly," said the flea.
So they flew through a flaw in the flue. -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, December 28, 2007 - 10:55 PMParadox
two medical docs
were fishing on a pair of docks
when a pair of ducks
flew overhead and quarked,
"check out the paradox below",
quark! quark ! quark ! quark !
quarked the pair of ducks
above the pair of docs
fishing on the pair of docks below
-
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, January 3, 2008 - 5:13 AMDREAM DEFERRED
What happens to a dream deferred?
Does it dry up
like a raisin in the sun?
Or fester like a sore--
And then run?
Does it stink like rotten meat?
Or crust and sugar over--
like a syrupy sweet?
Maybe it just sags
like a heavy load.
Or does it explode?
~Langston Hughes -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, January 12, 2008 - 10:25 PMHydrogen Gas Cloud to Smash Into Milky Way Galaxy
(jingle bell) (jingle bell) (jingle bell) rock
reality tunnel's a wormhole
deep into the soul
you never know
how far
its outshining goes
history, characteristics, future
a-mingle the galaxy
properties of including
probabilities enfolding
co-diddling the fallacies
are you
standard temperature?
jingling feet?
alchemical affinity?
in the know?
onto yourself?
that's the (jingle bell) that's the (jingle bell) that's the (jingle bell)
____ paper scissors
at your service, suh!
--Marpa
en.wikinews.org/wiki/Hydro..._Way_galaxy -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, January 28, 2008 - 11:14 PMWho's got a flaming hot poker
for the Neo Con bloker
Clinton or Obama?
Surley she's been
trying to shove one up
a neo cons ass
..... Oh MAMA!
A "Republican Conspiracy"
She once did proclaim
from the white house!
No one cares
Not even a mouse.
Out of the blue
and from out of nowhere'
Obama came blazing
with astonishing flare
but the timing seems suspect
and I ain'ts no Fool
Me thinks Obama
A flaming Republican tool.
he he! -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Wed, January 30, 2008 - 7:38 AMCAFE ENNUI
Are we the result of some bizarre narration
of the pleasure principle?
Are we versions of desire, but not desire itself?
Do you often find yourself awash in these vague ideas?
Then nip it in a budding grove.
You should be able by now to discern the good from the stupid.
If not, what you really need is vodka. Vodka. Polish vodka,
& the 99 sacred and profane versions of "louie, louie."
As for me, what I don't understand I will loathe,
and what I loathe I will fuck.
~Sharon Mesmer -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, February 4, 2008 - 5:40 AM8 Fragments For Kurt Cobain
by Jim Carroll
1/
Genius is not a generous thing
In return it charges more interest than any amount of royalties can cover
And it resents fame
With bitter vengeance
Pills and powdres only placate it awhile
Then it puts you in a place where the planet's poles reverse
Where the currents of electricity shift
Your Body becomes a magnet and pulls to it despair and rotten teeth,
Cheese whiz and guns
Whose triggers are shaped tenderly into a false lust
In timeless illusion
2/
The guitar claws kept tightening, I guess on your heart stem.
The loops of feedback and distortion, threaded right thru
Lucifer's wisdom teeth, and never stopped their reverbrating
In your mind
And from the stage
All the faces out front seemed so hungry
With an unbearably wholesome misunderstanding
From where they sat, you seemed so far up there
High and live and diving
And instead you were swamp crawling
Down, deeper
Until you tasted the Earth's own blood
And chatted with the Buzzing-eyed insects that heroin breeds
3/
You should have talked more with the monkey
He's always willing to negotiate
I'm still paying him off...
The greater the money and fame
The slower the Pendulum of fortune swings
Your will could have sped it up...
But you left that in a plane
Because it wouldn't pass customs and immigration
4/
Here's synchronicity for you:
Your music's tape was inside my walkman
When my best friend from summer camp
Called with the news about you
I listened them...
It was all there!
Your music kept cutting deeper and deeper valleys of sound
Less and less light
Until you hit solid rock
The drill bit broke
and the valley became
A thin crevice, impassible in time,
As time itself stopped.
And the walls became cages of brilliant notes
Pressing in...
Pressure
That's how diamonds are made
And that's WHERE it sometimes all collapses
Down in on you
5/
Then I translated your muttered lyrics
And the phrases were curious:
Like "incognito libido"
And "Chalk Skin Bending"
The words kept getting smaller and smaller
Until
Separated from their music
Each letter spilled out into a cartridge
Which fit only in the barrel of a gun
6/
And you shoved the barrel in as far as possible
Because that's where the pain came from
That's where the demons were digging
The world outside was blank
Its every cause was just a continuation
Of another unsolved effect
7/
But Kurt...
Didn't the thought that you would never write another song
Another feverish line or riff
Make you think twice?
That's what I don't understand
Because it's kept me alive, above any wounds
8/
If only you hadn't swallowed yourself into a coma in Roma...
You could have gone to Florence
And looked into the eyes of Bellinni or Rafael's Portraits
Perhaps inside them
You could have found a threshold back to beauty's arms
Where it all began...
No matter that you felt betrayed by her
That is always the cost
As Frank said,
Of a young artist's remorseless passion
Which starts out as a kiss
And follows like a curse -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, February 23, 2008 - 12:11 AMrendered
After hope goes,
after bitter tears,
dark, rank with accumulated shit,
after too many days after,
gorillas, elephants, white hopping hares
screaming coarse epithets
gets to be daily fare,
after selling out for a promise
of magic beans that never quite
feed the hunger, never
quiet the ghosts or
the grumbling giants who demand
because they can,
because their tantrums kill.
After the thrill is gone,
no option to die young and pretty,
no romantic suicide pacts,
no hope-driven suicide bombers
going out in a blaze of glory
in the company of hated strangers.
Drudging steps, heavy heartbeats,
clanging memories, busy summer
bees buzzing, buzzing
like cocaine.
The pain is the same, distributed
here and there. No ultimate
achievement leads
to golden skies.
(c) February 23, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, February 23, 2008 - 2:10 AMI ride the train that is aflame
where one man dies
among the cries
from burning flesh I learn
the sweetness of the smell of death -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, March 8, 2008 - 2:23 PM3 am
So stupid, so naive
I wanted to believe
it could be so easy
a happy family
providing my every need
leaving me bleeding memories
psychic cuts deep in my neural frame
spitting out imagery, subliminally
keeping me enslaved
oh, yeah, excuses, self-pity,
a whole damned ocean of tears
uncried, built up inside
like cancer, like insane ravings
of the self-obsessed dispossessed
like the once brave warrior
worn-down, depressed
unfit for service
'cause nobody wants ya
when yer down and out
say it with me
that old hillbilly harmonica refrain
drinking jug wine on a rambling train
to places beyond
to hoped for gold, or rain,
warm loving bodies against
the wild night air
or the effortless pace of despair
sometimes the night
catches me dreaming
I curl up in her wise arms
drifting through sleep
(c) March 6, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, March 10, 2008 - 6:41 AM
SURVIVAL SKILLS
Here is the virtue
in not looking up:
you will be the one
who finds the overhang
out of the sun
and something for a cup.
You will rethink meat;
you will know you have
to eat and will eat.
Despair and hope you keep
remote. You will not
think much about the boat
that sank or other boats.
When you can, you sleep.
You can go on nearly forever.
If you ever are delivered
you are not delivered.
You know now, you were
always a survivor.
~Kay Ryan
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, March 28, 2008 - 2:08 AMMoving Pictures
Ensconced in clouds
escaping uncaring crowds.
My precious pearls left behind
stomped on, buried, by swine
so intent on making faux silk
of their ears
they hear nothing
allowing me the peace
to release these tears
from ocean eyes.
Floating through the sky,
creating images:
elephant on an isthmus, trunk extended
to kiss the snout of a whale
rebounding from the sea.
My noble, cozy cloud, with me
gently whistling along
catching wisps of trailing song
haunting the breeze
waving birds wandering trees
the day gently passes
Forgotten tears, lost pearls,
old fears,
the details distinguishing life
from cinematic bliss.
(c) March 28, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, March 28, 2008 - 4:37 AMand yes the sea was always there
I wandered lonely as a cloud
and fed her waters as I wept -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, April 5, 2008 - 10:59 PMChild's Prayer
Forcibly called from eternal
perfect pastures
Wrenched from beauty sublime
into bound servitude
Yet highly honed
brilliant skills
given no access point,
disallowed, spat upon.
Kept captive, starved,
brutalized, not for crime
nor failing,
not even for the joy of cruelty.
Calling forth a potent spirit
should not be lightly undertaken.
Never having learned to honor
is poor training
for roles of responsibility.
Can I tell you? May I
whisper shrilly into your
inner ear?
Set me free; release my wings.
You have no use for my wisdom.
Let me go home.
(c) April 6, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sun, April 6, 2008 - 1:57 AMrooms
just one
firelit
domicile closet
visions of
a time of love... -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, April 25, 2008 - 8:59 PMJust
by Alan Shapiro
after the downpour, in the early evening,
late sunlight glinting off the raindrops sliding
down the broad backs of the redbud leaves
beside the porch, beyond the railing, each leaf
bending and springing back and bending again
beneath the dripping,
between existences,
ecstatic, the souls grow mischievous, they break ranks,
swerve from the rigid V's of their migration,
their iron destinies, down to the leaves
they flutter in among, rising and settling,
bodiless, but pretending to have bodies,
their weightlessness more weightless for the ruse,
their freedom freer, their as-ifs nearly not,
until the night falls like an order and
they rise on one vast wing that darkens down
the endless flyways into other bodies.
Nothing will make you less afraid. -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, April 28, 2008 - 2:52 PMbiography
It's always others' stories
Adventure, Romance, Mystery
Moments trickling from my past
have no structure
collage snippets
crumpled in dust
Was I born full grown as Athena?
Crying for Father's misfortunes,
Mother's lies?
Let me tell you wondrous dreams
My childhood companions
never live 'til morning
(c) April 27, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: poem de jour
Mon, May 19, 2008 - 3:57 PMScorpio Blue Moon - May 19, 2008
Snakes & stones
& Dr. Bones.
Worlds of lies
within my eyes.
A chance to fake
a drunken wake
for romance forsaken.
Doorways to more ways
to choose
Fool's paradise.
Ritual demands payment
naked supplication
rhymes intoned thrice
for Momma
for Poppa
for babes wandering in the woods
from salvation.
Deep in enchanted mist
touch the veil
along the cortex
dissolving reason.
Points detach from
space-time-memory.
The puzzle reformulates. -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sun, June 22, 2008 - 4:13 PM
DARK ANGEL
It was the sound of darkness, mother said,
But still I heard you calling in the night.
It was our old poinciana, straight from hell,
It's full-moon perfume wafting through the house...
Or fine mosquitos, rising from the river
Just coiling in the dark there, down the road;
It was that sound, of water and the trees,
That somehow found a way into my sleep.
At night, between poinciana and the river,
Something of me walked round and round and round
Near that black water with its snags and snakes
And long low sounds that keep the grass alive,
And you were there as well, a touch away,
Always about to pull the darkness back,
And there were always branches rustling hard
And tall reeds bending. Never any wind.
~Kevin Hart -
-
This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, June 23, 2008 - 5:14 PM
MY NAME
There is a silence words can’t touch.
There is.
And there’s a name inside my name
Though one my mother never said out loud
She never said it, never once, although
She knew there was another name
That sleeps inside my name
'Sleep now, old name,
For no one wants to know of you'
My mother, she is dead these dozen years
And she is grown so small
She sleeps inside my name when it is said
I think she sleeps
Within that other name as well, more deeply, far
More quietly, turning only once or twice
Inside that paradise
'Sleep now, old love,
It is too late to say a word to you'
~Kevin Hart -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, July 18, 2008 - 7:39 PMCapricorn Full Moon reflection
Archetypes
Walking the streets, riding
subways --
subterranean consciousness,
ethereal siamese twin
to the everyday.
Shadow and substance
entwined as before
the invasion.
I long to tell you,
yearn to tell you,
but only if you truly listen.
I cannot say these things twice.
Memories seep through,
acquire form.
Stand straight and true
as soldiers or Marines
giving full allegiance
to any who will take that load.
There are Gods lying in excrement
begging relief in the form
of sacrament
potent and deadly.
There are Angels and
Demons waging war,
dice from a grail
foresaging trial or comfort.
Hungry Ghosts wail.
Vampires and Creatures
of the night
seek shelter before the
travails of daytime
break them.
I saw the Morning Star
wink salaciously.
In my kingdom
all manner of creatures
thrive.
Eagles soar.
Lions roar.
Whales sing.
Humans open a
veiled third eye.
The World rejoices.
(c) July 18, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 19, 2008 - 1:57 AM"Humans open a
veiled third eye."
And Reveal the essence of "Nothingness"
that pervades the tranquil darkness of the ancient Garden.
The play begins!
"Ah!" The crowd moans. "Look!, its infinite in material and influence!"
Chorus:
In its vastness and its forms, lie the very foundation
from which spring its sacred rays of galactic information!
The lens, now clear and open,
Like the night sky it rests its gaze upon,
Commands the Earth to produce its sacred blossom.
This time into the splendor of a night sky.
Amidst a swirling of stars the angles descend upon it,
Like the Monarchs to the Sunflowers.
The audience applauds and
"The World rejoices "
sorry im just high and bored! -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 19, 2008 - 6:47 PMMY LIFE AS A GOAT
Dusk, deserted road, and suddenly
I was a goat. To be truthful, it took
two minutes, though it seemed sudden,
for the horns to pop out of my skull,
for the spine to revolutionise and go
horizontal, for the fingers to glue
together and for the nails to become
important enough to upgrade to hoof.
The road was not deserted any more, but full
of goats, and I liked that, even though I hate
the rush hour on the tube, the press of bodies.
Now I loved snuffling behind his or her ear,
licking a flank or two, licking and snuffling here,
there, wherever I liked. I lived for the push
of goat muscle and goat bone, the smell of goat fur,
goat breath and goat sex. I ended up on the edge
of the crowd where the road met the high
hedgerow with the scent of earth, a thousand
kinds of grass, leaves and twigs, flower-heads
and the intoxicating tang of the odd ring-pull
or rubber to spice the mixture. I wanted
to eat everything. I could have eaten the world
and closed my eyes to nibble at the high
sweet leaves against the sunset. I tasted
that old sun and the few dark clouds
and some tall buildings far away in the next town.
I think I must have swallowed an office block
because this grinding enormous digestion tells me
it’s stuck on an empty corridor which has
at the far end, I know, a tiny human figure.
~Jo Shapcott -
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 19, 2008 - 10:24 PMLittle Lamb, who made thee?
Dost thou know who made thee?
Gave thee life & bid thee feed,
By the stream & o'er the mead;
Gave thee clothing of delight,
Softest clothing, wooly, bright;
Gave thee such a tender voice,
Making all the vales rejoice?
Little Lamb, who made thee?
Dost thou know who made thee?
Little Lamb, I'll tell thee,
Little Lamb, I'll tell thee:
He is called by thy name,
For he calls himself a Lamb.
He is meek & he is mild;
He became a little child.
I a child & thou a lamb.
We are called by his name.
Little Lamb, God bless thee!
Little Lamb, God bless thee! -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 19, 2008 - 11:08 PMT.S. Eliot : The Waste Land
Text:
www.bartleby.com/201/1.html
T.S. Eliot reading the Waste Land
www.youtube.com/watch
open both links in separate windows, and you can read along as he speaks -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, July 19, 2008 - 11:20 PM
-
Re: poem de jour
Thu, August 7, 2008 - 3:32 PMIndie Vision
Chilly scene
Electrical
Unjamming retinal replay
Fleeing through green forest
Leaves
falling, obscuring
Fleet foot dashing not sinking
hyper-saturated dense
carpet leaves and loam
dead and living embraced
water and earth
sun and sky
entangled elements
create stories of
spiral strands,
chance meetings,
grasping for meaning
in old songs and dances
Bodies biologically merge
promises like prayers to wind
cut, rough surgery
moment from moment
A walk along a darkening road
pumpkin wise, scarecrow laughing
Faces shine in the darkness
grotesquely metamorphing
One silken face
encouraging change
grows arms, reaching
grows legs, entwining
grows voice, murmuring
love songs, lullabies,
twisty tunes tying
here to now through
freshly painted yesterdays
A cowering gypsy
cursed with fiery vision
dreams of fleeing through
green, falling forest,
sinking into wet, wet
earth, unbinding,
becoming the imagery,
escaping sight.
(c) August 7, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Thu, August 14, 2008 - 7:35 AM
DELAY
The radiance of the star that leans on me
Was shining years ago. The light that now
Glitters up there my eyes may never see,
And so the time lag teases me with how
Love that loves now may not reach me until
Its first desire is spent. The star's impulse
Must wait for eyes to claim it beautiful
And love arrived may find us somewhere else.
~Elizabeth Jennings -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, August 30, 2008 - 8:08 PM
A SECRET LIFE
Why you need to have one
is not much more mysterious than
why you don't say what you think
at the birth of an ugly baby.
Or, you've just made love
and feel you'd rather have been
in a dark booth where your partner
was nodding, whispering yes, yes,
you're brilliant. The secret life
begins early, is kept alive
by all that's unpopular
in you, all that you know
a Baptist, say, or some other
accountant would object to.
It becomes what you'd most protect
if the government said you can protect
one thing, all else is ours.
When you write late at night
it's like a small fire
in a clearing, it's what
radiates and what can hurt
if you get too close to it.
It's why your silence is a kind of truth.
Even when you speak to your best friend,
the one who'll never betray you,
you always leave out one thing;
a secret life is that important.
~Stephen Dunn
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Sat, August 30, 2008 - 8:56 PMDark and Stormy
Night and storm
Do we dread?
exult?
engage with fantasy?
Blowing into Louisiana
dark gulf legends
hungry ghosts
licking onto shore, howling
Sea reclaims land,
seeping semen into soggy
womb, engenders
Future crises, coming change
Halflings gleaming in
moonlight, peeking through
veiling black cloud formations
Portents scream, drowned
in thunder, raging sirocco
caught up in reverberating wind
(c) August 30, 2008 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, November 10, 2008 - 10:32 AMwhy people be mad at me sometimes
they keep asking me to remember
but they want me to remember
their memories
and i keep remembering mine
~Lucille Clifton
-
-
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sat, January 31, 2009 - 11:35 AM
FABLE
Then I looked down and saw
the world I was entering, that would be my home.
And I turned to my companion, and I said "Where are we?"
And he replied "Nirvana."
And I said again "But the light will give us no peace."
~Louise Gluck -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, February 2, 2009 - 1:56 PM
THE OBLIGATION TO BE HAPPY
It is more onerous
than the rites of beauty
or housework, harder than love.
But you expect it of me casually,
the way you expect the sun
to come up, not in spite of rain
or clouds but because of them.
And so I smile, as if my own fidelity
to sadness were a hidden vice—
that downward tug on my mouth,
my old suspicion that health
and love are brief irrelevancies,
no more than laughter in the warm dark
strangled at dawn.
Happiness. I try to hoist it
on my narrow shoulders again—
a knapsack heavy with gold coins.
I stumble around the house,
bump into things.
Only Midas himself
would understand.
~Linda Pastan -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Mon, February 16, 2009 - 6:07 PMMAYAKOVSKY
1
My heart's aflutter!
I am standing in the bath tub
crying. Mother, mother
who am I? If he
will just come back once
and kiss me on the face
his coarse hair brush
my temple, it's throbbing!
then I can put on my clothes
I guess, and walk the streets.
2
I love you. I love you,
but I'm turning to my verses
and my heart is closing
like a fist.
Words! be
sick as I am sick, swoon,
roll back your eyes, a pool,
and I'll stare down
at my wounded beauty
which at best is only a talent
for poetry.
Cannot please, cannot charm or win
what a poet!
and the clear water is thick
with bloody blows on its head.
I embraced a cloud,
but when I soared
it rained.
3
That's funny! there's blood on my chest
oh yes, I've been carrying bricks
what a funny place to rupture!
and now it is raining on the ailanthus
as I step out onto the window ledge
the tracks below me are smoky and
glistening with a passion for running
I leap into the leaves, green like the sea
4
Now I am quietly waiting for
the catastrophe of my personality
to seem beautiful again,
and interesting, and modern.
The country is grey and
brown and white in trees,
snows and skies of laughter
always diminishing, less funny
not just darker, not just grey.
It may be the coldest day of
the year, what does he think of
that? I mean, what do I? And if I do,
perhaps I am myself again.
~Frank O'Hara -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Tue, March 17, 2009 - 10:27 AM
LYING
awake at 4 A.M.
whatever the space beside you holds
you are yourself alone
and whatever there is of truth
turning in crevices light can't touch
it must be that which wakes you
in a quiet room a woman works
arranging words, a world
where she might live
it changes little day to day
but the mind is changed
as light changes, as the leaves turn
and whatever holds that space inside her
it is so much harder, vaster, colder
than this near mortal, however breathing, however loved.
~Constance Merritt -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, March 20, 2009 - 6:53 PM
KITCHEN LINOLEUM
The cockroach
who is dying
and the woman
who is blind
agree
not to notice
each other's shame.
~Audre Lorde
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Tue, November 11, 2008 - 8:35 PMDream Vortex Conundrum
Dawn is dusk, dusk is dawn. Before the sun
Shines, everything is cold. But in your dreams
those fields of gold shine on shine on like flames
Of so many stories told. We never
Woke up, never got away. We never
quite managed to point fingers though it’s quite
obvious we did. Chasing dreams we never
woke up from, the colours just shifted from
one angle to the next. Running never
Felt like running. Dying never feels
Like dying. The excitement we feel can
be pinned like a long white line across the
backyard. We finally come home, ready
to hang up everything. We never slept
through those wispy nights. When the dreams brought us
To faraway places - we went again
and again. We came to the place we went.
We swam in the pool that drowned us and peeled
off fires that burnt us. Floating and falling
into musical spheres, we unsound your
Words. We uttered nothing, painted nothing
that was not written in your eyes. Our eyes
through your soul. Unheard, unlived and hopeless
but still alive in those ivory mists,
blown across the sands, rolling waves beneath.
-j -
-
Re: poem de jour
Wed, November 12, 2008 - 2:46 PMNeon Elephant's Dream
The bubble bursts
throwing us into wakening
Neon elephant, released,
trumpets: abandon hope,
all ye, all ye
Cast upon cold, raging seas
Melting ice
jagged, threatening
drown or be pierced through
Damn that trumpeting
loud and out of tune
Neon elephant slurps floating
ice cap tasting of
polar bear and cool jazz
Muffled notes of alarm
deny the dream,
long abandoned to
holding out hopeful arms
crying for salvation
Shiny soap bubbles
slippery laughter
treasure and sad, sad lives
slipping under
Neon tons
pierced by hungry ice shards
brief angry red screams
call mindless sharks to frenzy
Top of the food chain to ya.
Sleep -- the world spins out
from under
Awake, crashing through chaos
Neon elephant trumpets,
plays the blues
(c) Laurie Corzett/libramoon 10/20/08 -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Fri, November 14, 2008 - 1:23 AMMotion
The swaying motion on the bank of the river falls,
The chasm at the sternpost,
The swiftness of the hand-rail,
The huge passing of the current
Conduct by unimaginable lights
And chemical newness
Voyagers surrounded by the waterspouts of the valley
And the current.
They are the conquerors of the world
Seeking a personal chemical fortune;
Sports and comfort travel with them;
They take the education
Of races, classes, and animals, on this Boat.
Repose and dizziness
To the torrential light,
To the terrible nights of study.
For from the talk among the apparatus,—blood, flowers, fire, jewels—
From the agitated accounts on this fleeing deck,
—You can see, rolling like a dyke beyond the hydraulic motor road,
Monstrous, illuminated endlessly,—their stock of studies;
Themselves driven into harmonic ecstasy
And the heroism of discovery.
In the most startling atmospheric happenings
A youthful couple withdraws into the archway,
—Is it an ancient coyness that can be forgiven?—
And sings and stands guard.
-Arthur Rimbaud
www.youtube.com/watch -
-
Re: poem de jour
Fri, November 14, 2008 - 4:21 AMLes soeurs de charité
Le jeune homme dont l'oeil est brillant, la peau brune,
Le beau corps de vingt ans qui devrait aller nu,
Et qu'eût, le front cerclé de cuivre, sous la lune
Adoré, dans la Perse, un Génie inconnu,
Impétueux avec des douceurs virginales
Et noires, fier de ses premiers entêtements,
Pareil aux jeunes mers, pleurs de nuits estivales,
Qui se retournent sur des lits de diamants ;
Le jeune homme, devant les laideurs de ce monde,
Tressaille dans son coeur largement irrité,
Et plein de la blessure éternelle et profonde,
Se prend à désirer sa soeur de charité.
Mais, ô Femme, monceau d'entrailles, pitié douce,
Tu n'es jamais la Soeur de charité, jamais,
Ni regard noir, ni ventre où dort une ombre rousse,
Ni doigts légers, ni seins splendidement formés.
Aveugle irréveillée aux immenses prunelles,
Tout notre embrassement n'est qu'une question :
C'est toi qui pends à nous, porteuse de mamelles,
Nous te berçons, charmante et grave Passion.
Tes haines, tes torpeurs fixes, tes défaillances,
Et les brutalités souffertes autrefois,
Tu nous rends tout, ô Nuit pourtant sans malveillances,
Comme un excès de sang épanché tous les mois.
- Quand la femme, portée un instant, l'épouvante,
Amour, appel de vie et chanson d'action,
Viennent la Muse verte et la Justice ardente
Le déchirer de leur auguste obsession.
Ah ! sans cesse altéré des splendeurs et des calmes,
Délaissé des deux Soeurs implacables, geignant
Avec tendresse après la science aux bras almes,
Il porte à la nature en fleur son front saignant.
Mais la noire alchimie et les saintes études
Répugnent au blessé, sombre savant d'orgueil ;
Il sent marcher sur lui d'atroces solitudes.
Alors, et toujours beau, sans dégoût du cercueil,
Qu'il croie aux vastes fins, Rêves ou Promenades
Immenses, à travers les nuits de Vérité,
Et t'appelle en son âme et ses membres malades,
Ô Mort mystérieuse, ô soeur de charité.
-
-
-
-
http://freewillastrology.com/
Tue, December 2, 2008 - 4:14 PMAT THIS PARTY
I don't want to be the only one here
Telling all the secrets --
Filling up all the bowls at this party,
Taking all the laughs.
I would like you
To start putting things on the table
That can also feed the soul
The way I do.
That way
We can invite
A hell of a lot more
Friends. -
-
Re: vile
Thu, December 11, 2008 - 3:16 AMI'm so fucking enlightened
everything I think is like
the most amazing poetry
stupendously magic and tragic
and even almost kinda funny
but I can't get a honey
or all the money
that should follow
so my genius
is kinda hollow
and I kinda wallow
in sad loops
and poops
which sucks
coz it's yucks
and then I'm
kinda frightened
about where I'm at... -
-
Unsu...
Re: vile
Thu, January 22, 2009 - 1:12 PM
EYE MASK
In this dark I rest,
unready for the light which dawns
day after day,
eager to be shared.
Black silk, shelter me.
I need
more of the night before I open
eyes and heart
to illumination. I must still
grow in the dark like a root
not ready, not ready at all.
~Denise Levertov -
-
Re: vile
Thu, January 22, 2009 - 1:43 PMCrossing the river I pluck hibiscus-flowers:
In the orchid-swamps are many fragrant herbs.
I gather them, but who shall I send them to?
My love is living in lands far away.
I turn and look towards my own country:
The long road stretches on for ever.
The same heart, yet a different dwelling :
Always fretting, till we are grown old !
I felt the weight of her silence pressing down upon the depths of my soul. Occasionally she would glance up and over at me and smile, as I would then return the gesture with a subtle grin of my own. I continued with this observation of her fluid of femininity. Though I didn't want to appear too forward...
or shall I say, enraptured. But then thoughts occurred as I found myself asking, ‘how do you look at someone and try not to seem enchanted? How do you stare without seeming infatuated? How do you taste the lure of passion without fully indulging?’
I've pondered such thoughts without ever gauging the scope of loves great mystery. Though after weighing the benefits of joy achieved, I surrendered. Only to suddenly catch glimpse of an age of innocence. An age beyond the aspect of time, as though of feelings displaced within the spirit of life itself. Contained somewhere between the spiritual realm of reason and eternal faith, as though giving stability to a state ever so elusive. But then suddenly, and without any indication, reality comes into question, revealing truths that don't seem normal. Just prior to that once in a lifetime lifeline of inspiration walking out the door. Leaving nothing but pain and a few lost tokens of time as a reminder of what exists no more. -
-
Re: vile
Thu, January 22, 2009 - 1:56 PMby E.E. Cummings (1894-1962)
anyone lived in a pretty how town
anyone lived in a pretty how town
(with up so floating many bells down)
spring summer autumn winter
he sang his didn’t he danced his did
Women and men(both little and small)
cared for anyone not at all
they sowed their isn’t they reaped their same
sun moon stars rain
children guessed(but only a few
and down they forgot as up they grew
autumn winter spring summer)
that noone loved him more by more
when by now and tree by leaf
she laughed his joy she cried his grief
bird by snow and stir by still
anyone’s any was all to her
someones married their everyones
laughed their cryings and did their dance
(sleep wake hope and then)they
said their nevers they slept their dream
stars rain sun moon
(and only the snow can begin to explain
how children are apt to forget to remember
with up so floating many bells down)
one day anyone died i guess
(and noone stooped to kiss his face)
busy folk buried them side by side
little by little and was by was
all by all and deep by deep
and more by more they dream their sleep
noone and anyone earth by april
wish by spirit and if by yes.
Women and men(both dong and ding)
summer autumn winter spring
reaped their sowing and went their came
sun moon stars rain -
-
Re: vile
Thu, January 22, 2009 - 2:06 PMAnti-poem
Obviously, song came before speech
and moans came before song.
Whales sing refrains and antiphons,
compose sonatas.
Darwin thought that certain fish designed their own eyes;
researchers report that the planet's remaining fish not only
like but can also recognise
the less-commercial human music.
[Perhaps a line here ending with 'status'...]
[Perhaps a line here ending with 'God'...]
I both fear and pity people who think they are better than cod
Anthony Weir -
-
Re: vile
Fri, January 23, 2009 - 11:36 AMIn the courtyard there grows a strange tree,
Its green leaves ooze with a fragrant moisture.
Holding the branch I cut a flower from the tree,
Meaning to send it away to the person I love.
Its sweet smell fills my sleeves and lap.
The road is long, how shall I get it there?
Such a thing is not fine enough to send:
But it may remind him of the time that has past since he left.
--Mei Sheng -
-
Tanka
Fri, January 23, 2009 - 11:42 AMSending my soul away
To where the moon has sunk
Behind the mountain,
What shall I do with my body
Left in the darkness?
-- Monk Saigyo -
-
This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.
Re: Tanka
Fri, January 23, 2009 - 1:22 PM -
-
Unsu...
Re: Tanka
Sun, January 25, 2009 - 2:54 PM
don't touch it!
if you touch it, it will melt
if it melts, it will leave a stain
if it leaves a stain, you will always remember it
if you always remember it, it will block the road
if it blocks the road, you will have to climb over it
if you have to climb over it, you will become superstitious
if you become superstitious, you will cover the mirror
if you cover the mirror, you will forget to get dressed
if you forget to get dressed, you will walk around naked in public
if you walk around naked in public, you will get aroused
if you get aroused, you will touch it
-Jeffrey McDaniel -
-
-
midnight gardening
Sat, March 28, 2009 - 6:04 PMSpecificity
Redolent of sensation
Enliven my fantasy!
Private self-reflection
Mirror facing inward
Outer surface opaque
No need to know the competition
only the prize
What is that sparkling prize
upon the pinnacle of perfection?
Fleeting fame? Long-lasting fame?
Attached to fortune?
Certainly not love, nor even affection
That would require submission
The prize is a feeling
of recognition
All roads entwined
All time flowing into and from
this point
Settling into late morning sunshine
burning off fog
Glistening sky and the luxury
of self-companionship
Stop at the light
Look left and right
Just to get gunned down in the end
'Cause Life is never your friend
But predator to your prey
Eating you for dinner at the end of the day
Reciprocity
Adding to my well-being
my wishing well
my inspiration
congratulation
hallucinations
I see the adoring crowds
salivating to devour me
Out on the hot pavement
days from a decent meal
Breathing hard to keep my forward
motion ahead of the slavering predators
unyielding bricks and glass and pavement
perfumed in vomit and shit
that unyielding scent of fear
validated in violence
Why bother? burns the ultimate question
Life, the Universe, Everything,
every scream,
every siren crushing against rocky destiny
suicide, homicide, flood or fire
The shadows that follow along
unlit roadways
intend no harm
I welcome the engulfing shadow
Sad saxophones
honest enveloping tunes
whisper on the fading wind
the last of my breath
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
Re: poem de jour
Sun, March 29, 2009 - 9:36 AMalthough i didn't know katrina, i felt i should post something to give a little condolence to those here who knew her. i'm truly sorry for your loss.
Deaths of Flowers
I would if I could choose
Age and die outwards as a tulip does;
Not as this iris drawing in, in-coiling
Its complex strange taut inflorescence, willing
Itself a bud again - though all achieved is
No more than a clenched sadness,
The tears of gum not flowing.
I would choose the tulips reckless way of going;
Whose petals answer light, altering by fractions
From closed to wide, from one through many perfections,
Til wreched, flamboyant, strayed beyond recall,
Like flakes of fire they piecemeal fall.
Edith Joy Scovell
1907-1999 -
-
Unsu...
Re: poem de jour
Sun, March 29, 2009 - 6:03 PM
NEAR THE WALL OF A HOUSE
Near the wall of a house painted
to look like stone,
I saw visions of God.
A sleepless night that gives others a headache
gave me flowers
opening beautifully inside my brain.
And he who was lost like a dog
will be found like a human being
and brought back home again.
Love is not the last room: there are others
after it, the whole length of the corridor
that has no end.
~Yehuda Amichai -
-
Good Friday
Fri, April 10, 2009 - 2:06 AMThank God, Good Friday
He came back
And we can worship, believe
Not like everyone else
He did not abandon us
Dying in a far off war, leaving
ashen legacy
never enough
starvation for affectionate attention
pummeling harsh walls with
bloody fists
Banging against the icy windowpane
crying salt, oceanic sorrow
"I tried to be good. I hated hearing
your screams of disappointment
muffling shameful despair
because this was not the life
you bargained for in the
promised land beyond
hot desert wanders"
Desert, resurrected sea
where we all began
Sliding along rocky formations
begetting, begatting, belonging
to the Earth, mud creatures
breathing molecules of air,
baking in the Sun
Ready for sacrifice
carrying crosses along a huge column
era to era
Atlas's and Eves
burdens of responsibility
our sacred contract
broken every time you speak of God
"Take not my Name"
for words have consequence
A cross requires two lines meeting
A Crucifixion
requires juxtapositions of history,
people in bondage
to their own ideas
(c) April 10, 2009 Laurie Corzett/libramoon -
-
Re: Poems...
Sun, April 12, 2009 - 10:04 AMpain is not what got me here
but it'll have to do
and springtime when your winter
isn't helping to
change those things you keep inside
those things you didnt choose
the bird is set to fly now see
can't win
but worse
can't loose
many ticks
as many tocks
left alone with nothing to show
snap your fingers wide awake
while burning in the snow -
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Mon, April 20, 2009 - 7:29 PM
CREDO
You say wind is only wind
and carries nothing nervous
in its teeth. I do not believe it.
I have seen leaves desist from moving
although the branches move,
and I believe a cyclone has secrets
the weather is ignorant of. I believe
in the violence of not knowing.
I’ve seen a river lose its course
and join itself again, watched it court
a stream and coax the stream
into its current, and I have seen rivers,
not unlike you, that failed to find
their way back. I believe the rapport
between water and sand, the advent
from mirror to face. I believe in rain
to cover what mourns, in hail that revives
and sleet that erodes, believe
whatever falls is a figure of rain,
and now I believe in torrents that take
everything down with them.
The sky calls it quits, or so I believe,
when air, or earth, or air has had
enough. I believe in disquiet,
the pressure it plies, believe a cloud
to govern the limits of night. I say I,
but little is left to say it, much less
mean it—and yet I do. Let there be
no mistake. I do not believe
things are reborn in fire.
I believe they’re consumed by fire,
and the fire has a life of its own.
~Andrew Zawacki
-
-
Re: Poems...
Sat, May 30, 2009 - 2:15 PMHungry Ghosts/Wounded Planet
Ubiquitous disarray
Angry obfuscation
Deep, wide, incoherent in
its roar
Not what was promised in
the Golden Books of yore
I dreamed a childhood Eden
eating succulent fruit as
Uncle Serpent bade me
Old stories ever renew
Washed clean of sins of
concupiscence
Holy River, heal me!
Drowning in tears of centuries
under an evil hand
Demand what ye will
Demand and be obeyed, oh Goddess
None may resist Your Glory
All the stories are clear on this one point
We who rejoice, who bare our souls,
who dance naked under the Moon,
reflecting upon Your stunning beauty,
rejecting Overlords, unsuitable suitors
for Your hand
We who see through Your modest veil,
sing your praises,
escape into the splendid vestibule
Your grace provides
for all your brides and maids
Feeding the ghosts on Your wedding days
this desolate world -
-
Re: Poems...
Sun, May 31, 2009 - 2:39 PMHow unique am I?
When the product dissatisfies
When the project just up and dies
When the object of my desires
tells me my time has expired
When the last of my stash is nothing but ash
When I've set all my bridges on fire
When I haven't a hand or a plan
When I'm lost in a strange, hostile land
When I no longer believe that I can
understand how to try
How unique am I?
-
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Sun, May 31, 2009 - 5:13 PMMirror
I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions.
Whatever I see I swallow immediately
Just as it is, unmisted by love or dislike.
I am not cruel, only truthful-
The eye of the little god, four cornered.
Most of the time I meditate on the opposite wall.
It is pink, with speckles. I have looked at it so long
I think it is a part of my heart. But it flickers.
Faces and darkness separate us over and over.
Now I am a lake. A woman bends over me,
Searching my reaches for what she really is.
Then she turns to those liars, the candles or the moon.
I see her back, and reflect it faithfully.
She rewards me with tears and an agitation of hands.
I am important to her. She comes and goes.
Each morning it is her face that replaces the darkness.
In me she has drowned a young girl, and in me an old woman
Rises toward her day after day, like a terrible fish.
-SYLVIA PLATH -
-
This is the maximum depth. Additional responses will not be threaded.
Re: Poems...
Mon, June 1, 2009 - 2:14 AMI walk down to the ocean
After waking from a nightmare.
No moon no pale reflection.
Black Mirror, Black Mirror
Shot by a security camera
You can't watch your own image
And also look yourself in the eye.
Black Mirror, Black Mirror, Black Mirror
I know a time is coming
All words will lose their meaning
Please show me something that isn't mine
—But mine is the only kind that I relate to.
Le miroir casse,
The mirror casts mon reflet partout.
Black Mirror, Black Mirror, Black Mirror
The black mirror knows no reflection.
It knows not pride or vanity.
It cares not about your dreams.
It cares not for your pyramid schemes.
Their names are never spoken.
The curse is never broken.
The curse is never broken.
Un! Deux! Trois! Dis: Miroir Noir!
—Black Mirror!
Un! Deux! Trois! Dis: Miroir Noir!
—Black Mirror!
Mirror, mirror on the wall,
Show me where them bombs will fall.
Mirror, mirror on the wall,
Show me where them bombs will fall.
Black Mirror!
Black Mirror!
Black Mirror! -
-
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Mon, June 1, 2009 - 7:14 PMfrom the blue and black bodies
that walk at time through my soul
come voices and signs that someone interprets.
It's dark as the sun
this desire. Mysterious and grave
as an ant dragging away the wing of a butterfly
or as the yes we say when things ask us -- do you want to live?
~Jaime Sabines -
-
Re: Poems...
Mon, June 1, 2009 - 9:47 PMIn This Album
It seems I have misplaced the directions of childhood
(the maps laid across my arms, altered by sick nights)
and ventured conspicuously, consciously
just to make up the difference.
I remember dogs who came to my hand
(they spit to seal the punctures on my forearm)
to replace me back to the condition of man
simply by the grace of their tongues.
Smashed winces of inertia forced up my rage
(soft dissolution echoes from the belay pins inside me)
and canyons which carried it upward,
to the passing birds, closed in their walls.
On a cliff, I paint self-portraits
(with a gush from my own pelt),
the canvas, marked by angry teeth,
is like the skin of seals. So I carry them off
to bury them in the cheap precision of flames.
~yours truly, (c) '97 -
-
Re: Poems...
Tue, June 2, 2009 - 9:10 AMmy chair is a ball
i shall not want
on the road to Shambala
my ball is green
it maketh me clean
in the fall of all the gods
my ball is a tool
its waters so cool
in the halls of Shambala
my ball has a goal
to restoreth my soul
in the thralls of my karma
my ball doesn't baulk
in the valley I walk
in the rains of Shambala
my ball draws its breath
from the shadow of death
to the call of my dharma
my ball is a gift
that thou art with
on the road to Shambala
my ball is a laugh
to thy rod and thy staff
for the squalls of my drama
my ball is the spread
that anointest my head
in the halls of Shambala
my ball is my lover
as my cup runneth over
in the sprawl that follows me, ma
my ball is my life
through the days of my strife
on the road to Shambala
-MM (c) '09 -
-
Re: Poems...
Tue, June 2, 2009 - 2:57 PMParadigm of Death
Cut off within
and without connection
"Why am I so alone, so
desolate? Look at
what I've done,
coloring inside the lines
even when shocking pink
was the style."
Longshoremen, in early dawning
stinking of dead fish
seagulls' wet crying
Desolate, the sea entwined
with sky casting about
into another day.
On city streets
homes hide those inside
but out here
rabid eyes, aching tense
grimy and sore
another and another day
Cutting bright bands that swell,
fester, invert pleasure
sticky stench grinding
Laugh with angry spittle
into God's eye
hoping to be struck on this spot
"No!" defiant "No excuses --
the service is lousy; no tip for
you scuttling scum."
Echoes can shatter through canyons
erupt abruptly seeping through sleep
settling into stones and weary sand.
"I told you! Don't disturb me!"
Working, negotiating plans for
more effective extermination
Organic stink, putrefying
must be extinguished.
June 2, 2009 Laurie Corzett/libramoon
emergingvisions.blogspot.com
-
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Tue, June 2, 2009 - 8:20 PM
KNOWLEDGE
Some things like stones yield
only their opacity,
remain inscrutably themselves.
To the trained eye they offer their age,
some small planetary news.
Which suggests the world
becomes more mysterious, not less,
the more we know.
*God knows* is how we begin a sentence
when we refuse to acknowledge what we know.
*Gravitas* is what Newton must have felt
when gravity became clear to him.
*Presto*, said the clown as he pulled
a quarter from behind my ear
when I was five. The very same ear in fact
that pressed itself to a snail's vacant house
and found an ocean.
The problem is how to look intelligent
with our mouths agape,
how to be delighted, not stupefied
when the caterpillar shrugs
and becomes a butterfly.
It's on a clear surface we can best see
the signs point many ways.
God knows nothing we don't know.
We gave him every word he ever said.
~Stephen Dunn -
-
Re: Poems...
Thu, June 18, 2009 - 3:47 PMWater Brother: Wings of Love
My heart is full of love
It releases me
From minds tricky traps
Water Brother comes
To release me
From the sterile safety
Of my secret room
Come fly
Upon the wings
Of your creativity
Listen the beast
Paces no more
Outside your door
You have grown
Heart grown
Mind grown
Open the door
Come out Come out
Close the door behind you
Ride the wild beast
These wings of love
Will carry you
Bring your whole self
Into this holy place
This holy life
You are Love
and Love surrounds you
Waits for you
Reach out
Bring your unique ingredient
To the alchemical mix
Fly with me
On the wings of Love
Rise
Ride the wild beast
The door on the past
Is closed
My heart is full of Love
I am new in the world
Receptive
Thank you Water Brother
Thank you for rising
On the wings of Love
Where I can see you
Where I can hear you
From the heart
You bring your
Invitation to create
With these waters
Flowing behind closed doors
You call
Come create with me
Bring your separate
Unique self
To the Dance of Life
Triona -
-
Re: Poems...
Mon, June 22, 2009 - 5:45 PMPLEASE CALL ME BY MY TRUE NAMES
Don't say that I will depart tomorrow-
even today I am still arriving.
Look deeply: every second I am arriving
to be a bud on a Spring branch,
to be a tiny bird, with still-fragile wings,
learning to sing in my new nest,
to be a caterpillar in the heart of a flower,
to be a jewel hiding itself in a stone.
I still arrive, in order to laugh and to cry,
to fear and to hope.
The rhythm of my heart is the birth and death
of all that is alive.
I am a mayfly metamorphosing
on the surface of the river.
And I am the bird
that swoops down to swallow the mayfly.
I am a frog swimming happily
in the clear water of a pond.
And I am the grass-snake
that silently feeds itself on the frog.
I am the child in Uganda, all skin and bones,
my legs as thin a bamboo sticks.
And I am the arms merchant,
selling deadly weapons to Uganda.
I am the twelve-year-old girl,
refugee on a small boat,
who throws herself into the ocean
after being raped by a sea pirate.
And I am the pirate,
my heart not yet capable
of seeing and loving.
My joy is like Spring, so warm
it makes flowers bloom all over the Earth.
My pain is like a river of tears,
so vast it fills the four oceans.
Please call me by my true names,
so I can hear all my cries and laughter at once,
so I can see that my joy and pain are one.
Please call me by my true names,
so I can wake up
and the door of my heart
could be left open,
the door of compassion.
~Thich Nhat Hanh -
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Tue, July 28, 2009 - 2:24 PM
SONG
Listen: there was a goat's head hanging by ropes in a tree.
All night it hung there and sang. And those who heard it
Felt a hurt in their hearts and thought they were hearing
The song of a night bird. They sat up in their beds, and then
They lay back down again. In the night wind, the goat's head
Swayed back and forth, and from far off it shone faintly
The way the moonlight shone on the train track miles away
Beside which the goat's headless body lay. Some boys
Had hacked its head off. It was harder work than they had imagined.
The goat cried like a man and struggled hard. But they
Finished the job. They hung the bleeding head by the school
And then ran off into the darkness that seems to hide everything.
The head hung in the tree. The body lay by the tracks.
The head called to the body. The body to the head.
They missed each other. The missing grew large between them,
Until it pulled the heart right out of the body, until
The drawn heart flew toward the head, flew as a bird flies
Back to its cage and the familiar perch from which it trills.
Then the heart sang in the head, softly at first and then louder,
Sang long and low until the morning light came up over
The school and over the tree, and then the singing stopped....
The goat had belonged to a small girl. She named
The goat Broken Thorn Sweet Blackberry, named it after
The night's bush of stars, because the goat's silky hair
Was dark as well water, because it had eyes like wild fruit.
The girl lived near a high railroad track. At night
She heard the trains passing, the sweet sound of the train's horn
Pouring softly over her bed, and each morning she woke
To give the bleating goat his pail of warm milk. She sang
Him songs about girls with ropes and cooks in boats.
She brushed him with a stiff brush. She dreamed daily
That he grew bigger, and he did. She thought her dreaming
Made it so. But one night the girl didn't hear the train's horn,
And the next morning she woke to an empty yard. The goat
Was gone. Everything looked strange. It was as if a storm
Had passed through while she slept, wind and stones, rain
Stripping the branches of fruit. She knew that someone
Had stolen the goat and that he had come to harm. She called
To him. All morning and into the afternoon, she called
And called. She walked and walked. In her chest a bad feeling
Like the feeling of the stones gouging the soft undersides
Of her bare feet. Then somebody found the goat's body
By the high tracks, the flies already filling their soft bottles
At the goat's torn neck. Then somebody found the head
Hanging in a tree by the school. They hurried to take
These things away so that the girl would not see them.
They hurried to raise money to buy the girl another goat.
They hurried to find the boys who had done this, to hear
Them say it was a joke, a joke, it was nothing but a joke....
But listen: here is the point. The boys thought to have
Their fun and be done with it. It was harder work than they
Had imagined, this silly sacrifice, but they finished the job,
Whistling as they washed their large hands in the dark.
What they didn't know was that the goat's head was already
Singing behind them in the tree. What they didn't know
Was that the goat's head would go on singing, just for them,
Long after the ropes were down, and that they would learn to listen,
Pail after pail, stroke after patient stroke. They would
Wake in the night thinking they heard the wind in the trees
Or a night bird, but their hearts beating harder. There
Would be a whistle, a hum, a high murmur, and, at last, a song,
The low song a lost boy sings remembering his mother's call.
Not a cruel song, no, no, not cruel at all. This song
Is sweet. It is sweet. The heart dies of this sweetness.
~Brigit Pegeen Kelly
-
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Thu, July 30, 2009 - 8:37 PMVIBRATING TELEPHONE POLES
The sound of stars' heavy millstones
that scrape slowly around the huge hubs, and
turn their hoarfrosted faces toward each other
and bend them away again behind a million miles,
--everything that moves in outer space
on gigantic ball bearings, transmits faint sounds,
a whining song that dies out in the great distances.
This is what we hear in the hiss from the telephone wires,
they are antennae that capture the signals from space
and cry them out over desolate moors at night
when the poles are murmuring and calling anxiously
as when a person dreams dark dreams
and something bites his heart, agonizing thoughts he
doesn't understand, that force their way through his throat,
but are stopped by the roof of his mouth and become only broken
cries,
that is the sound of the stars,
that's how it always howls in outer space.
~Rolf Jacobsen -
-
Re: Poems...
Fri, July 31, 2009 - 1:11 AMAttention paroles pouvant choquer
Intro
Attends bouges pas j’ai un mail d’Orel j’te rappelle
Ce soir j’suis rentré du taff plus tôt que d’habitude
Je suis passé chez toi pour te faire une surprise
Quand j’suis arrivé t’étais dans ton hall avec l’autre type qui est en cours
avec toi
Et je vous ai vu…
Je vous ai vu vous jeter sur l’autre, il passait les mains sous ton pull
pendant que tu l’embrassais
Putain j’avais envie de vous tuer j’étais choqué j’croyais que tu étais
différente des autres pétasses
J’te déteste j’te hais
J’déteste les petites putes genre Paris Hilton les meufs qui sucent des queues
de la taille de celle de »Lexington »
T’es juste bonne à te faire péter le rectum même si tu disais des trucs
intelligents t’aurais l’air conne
J’te déteste j’veux que tu crèves lentement j’veux que tu tombes enceinte et
que tu perdes l’enfant
Les histoires d’amour ça commence bien ça fini mal
Avant je t’aimais maintenant j’rêve de voir imprimer de mes empreintes
digitales
Tu es juste une putain d’avaleuse de sabre, une sale catin
Un sale tapin tout ces mots doux c’était que du baratin
On s’tenait par la main on s’enlaçait on s’embrassait
On verra comment tu fais la belle avec une jambe cassée
On verra comment tu suces quand j’te déboiterai la mâchoire
T’es juste une truie tu mérites ta place à l’abattoir
T’es juste un démon déguisé en femme j’veux te voir briser en larme
J’veux te voir rendre l’âme j’veux te voir retourner brûler dans les flammes
Refrain x2
Poupée je t’aimais mais tu m’as trompé
Tu m’as trompé tu l’as pompé, tu es juste une sale pute
Une sale pute une sale pute une sale pute une sale pute
J’déteste les sales trainées comme Marjolaine
Les petites chiennes les chichiteuses les filles à problèmes
J’rêve de la pénétrer pour lui déchirer l’abdomen
Je t’emmènerai à l’hôtel je te ferai tourner dans ma villa romaine
Tu suces pour du liquide tu te casses à marrée basse
Pétasse tu mériterais seulement d’attraper le DAS
Le seul liquide que je t’ai donné c’est mon sperme
Si j’te casse un bras, considères qu’on s’est quitté en bons termes
J’t'aime j’ai la haine j’te souhaite tout les malheurs du monde
J’veux que tu sentes la chaleur d’une bombe j’veux plus jamais que tu me
trompes
J’étais trop fidèle (sale pute)
J’ai les nerfs en pelote (sale pute)
J’vais te mettre en cloque (sale pute)
Et t’avorter à l’Opinel
« Oh mais c est de ta faute t’étais jamais là pour moi »
Oh je m’en bas les couilles c’était de la faute à qui
J’te collerai contre un radiateur en te chantant ‘Tostaky’
J’veux que tu pleures tous les soirs quand tu tu t’ endors
Parce que t’es du même acabit que la pute qu’à ouvert la boite de pandore
Refrain x2
J ai la haine j’rêve de te voir souffrir
J ai la haine j’rêve de te voir souffrir baby
J ai la haine j’rêve de te voir souffrir
J ai la haine j’rêve de te voir souffrir baby -
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Thu, August 6, 2009 - 9:03 PMMOMENT
Clear moments are so short.
There is much more darkness. More
ocean than firm land. More
shadow than form.
~Adam Zagajewski
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Thu, August 6, 2009 - 9:26 PMLines Composed A Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey (excerpt)
And I have felt
A presence that disturbs me with the joy
Of elevated thoughts; a sense sublime
Of something far more deeply interfused,
Whose dwelling is the light of setting suns,
And the round ocean and the living air,
And the blue sky, and in the mind of man:
A motion and a spirit, that impels
All thinking things, all objects of all thought,
And rolls through all things.
~William Wordsworth -
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Sun, September 13, 2009 - 6:22 PM
HUNGER FOR SOMETHING
Sometimes I long to be in the woodpile,
cut-apart trees soon to be smoke,
or even the smoke itself,
sinewy ghost of ash and air, going
wherever I want to, at least for a while.
Neither inside nor out,
neither lost nor home, no longer
a shape or a name, I’d pass through
all the broken windows of the world.
It’s not a wish for consciousness to end.
It’s not the appetite an army has
for its own emptying heart,
but a hunger to stand now and then
alone on the death-grounds,
where the dogs of the self are feeding.
~Chase Twichell -
-
Re: Poems...
Wed, October 21, 2009 - 5:04 PMhungry zeitgeist (revised)
slivers, splinters, failing meaning
catch it, spinning out into the stars
bleeding rags fine red droplets
shredded hands, hopes, hearts
I can't hold on, hold out, hold a good thought
agonized neurons,
shattered mirrors
unable to
hold suction,
bind the wound
embrace me
tight and tenderly
as blood drips through your fingers
touching raw eroding senses
with gentle rain, dripping,
obscuring the view
I would curl up into destiny,
locking my lacerations
in dreams of false skins,
tightening, holding fast to the edges.
I would fall immortally into space,
dripping inward.
I would lock my dreams in pasteboard boxes,
too tight for mortal breath.
the words whirl around, whirl around, whirl
like scattered bits of paper tears
I would hide in the deepest hold and
keep to life slowly seeping through.
but the hunger calls
it growls and jumps in fits to battle
(c) October 20, 2006 Laurie Corzett/libramoon
(rev. October 21, 2009) -
-
Re: Poems...
Wed, October 28, 2009 - 7:33 PM(Hollow) Theme Party
Bleeding across the page
Not pretty
Naked self-pity
a turn off
better passed by
Rather, let us speak of
solitude, the advantages
of wealth
kept to oneself
No beasts to lessen my load
No supplicants begging to share
Luxuriously wrapped in my lair
laughing and dancing on gold
acutely aware of thin cold urchins
out on a distant plain
They are no kin to me;
out there for atmosphere
I am Deity within this domain
blood you see splattered
on this page
fell from other veins
some poor unfortunate
released from her pain
How pretty! Let's party!
A gala affair, enraptured
alone in my lair
October 27, 2009
-
-
Re: Poems...
Mon, November 30, 2009 - 3:43 PMScrying on the Moon
By light of sibylline tones
appear images I recognize,
creviced captures of my life.
I know her judgment to be my own.
"Nourished by Moon rivers
mythical cavern blooms
unseen by sunlight
glow green." Thus she sets the scene;
becomes the prophecy.
"Purest white simplicity
curved to suggest fragility
scapegoat maiden ready for
plucking,
given in bondange to womanly woes,
hard rows to hoe
for that little bit of hug through
crying of night.
Fate of Trojan soldiers, sacrificed to lust.
Unbended, beg for the boon of drama
high adventure
sneaking into sad hotels
for a fix or a tumble.
Laughs,
deadly play,
danger, a real chance.
Barefoot in the snow
icy roads
winds so strong
I could not make you hear.
I thought you were my destiny.
These thoughts are far from clear;
but I believed
song lyrics from somber deities
would not lie, leave me
dying, fading into winter's grey
drifting clouds,
endless sorrow endured for naught.
Lost on this careless corner,
dreaming of oblivion, intent on visions
like rain
tapping against eternity's
vast windowpane.
Scenic serenity.
Nature's gradations of green
soothes tired eyes
trembling nerves and veins.
Slivers of moonlight reflected
in withered refrains, unearthing secrets
embedded in song
effervescing through cool pure air
cleansing the uprising nestling
set aflame
resurrected
tempered mettle,
pure, wise, tested
engorged with the will
to rise" -
-
Re: Poems...
Fri, December 25, 2009 - 1:08 PM'tis the season
As we strive through painful cold, treacherous dark,
dodging danger, palpitating heart,
anxiety our stark true friend
Dream of this season's end in joyful meeting,
reunion, reward.
Dream loving happy family, aglow
in warming fire, festive lighted tree.
Pocket snapshot from a gentler age,
we ache to reclaim.
Raise high the revelry of feast
and frolic, space for sacred play,
miraculous day to carry like inspiring song,
a beacon through the storms
yet to rage.
Live this vision
embracing grace.
Essence
Essence, scent memory
cinnamon, pine, family
wafting incense
fragrant air
redolent of antiquity's winds.
Trailing magick's mountain meadow
Hard, sharp, cragged, creviced
Exquisitely strong, enduring, scarred,
mending, calloused, engaging
Fingertips, skin, caress manifest existence.
Rippling bells, liquid voices drip
replenishing wine. Listen.
Reverberate back to the tribal pool.
Dancing drum beats, symphonic raining rivers.
Rise and quaff the choir's song.
In ritual visualize the distant dawn.
Hearths to unseen worlds fade before Sol's majesty.
Incandescent homunculus eyes opening to flame,
krinkling sparks, glowing.
Powerful torches burn through dark imagery.
Revel in flavor, mythic piquancy.
Peppery heat, sour sorrows, exotic ebullient stew.
Wisps of buttery dreams, savory bliss,
divine delicacies,
bittersweet ecstasy.
peace, love, fulfillment
December 2009 -
-
Unsu...
Re: Poems...
Sat, December 26, 2009 - 7:36 PM
ROUGH GUIDE
Impossible to look directly into
another's eyes. Impossible to look
into your own. You read the dense book
of being like a document you flick through.
Eyes, even an inch apart, are blurs,
clouds, like the concept of yesterday
which has an entity you sometimes stray
into beyond the limits of his and hers,
The unknown: the roughest of the rough guides,
and all it says is: you're here, you'd better make
the best of it. You entered by mistake
and so you'll leave. It's what the route map hides
and languages obscure, the magnetic pull
of all you ever see of the beautiful.
But I have seen the beautiful. I know
its contours and the rough guide it provides
is blissfully specific: the hand that rides
the ridge of the collarbone or moves along the brow,
the perfect form of momentary light
in this line or another. It's what Blake
saw at the top of the stair, the terrible earthquake
at the root of the flesh we think of as delight.
It's what you see when you shut your eyes and see,
the angel with the whip or a flaming sword
that burns your eyes down to the spinal cord,
the shit, blood, semen smell of mortality
you get used to because it follows you
everywhere and is both beautiful and true.
- George Szirtes
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
