Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Apr 12 - 06:33 PM The Important Thing |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Apr 12 - 06:44 PM A Number of BellsIs there a bell for every sailor cold on black water, And dull, middle-aged paper twat ashore in sports shoes? For every heart in the fog, a single Far-fetching bouy-note For finding some sort of shore? One bell for each Innermost ear? Tell me that. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Apr 12 - 06:53 PM Your attention may stop at the wall, At any small object, At a space too far, or at anything you name. It may be arrested by evasion, a lie, Or the hunger of not-knowing. A lizard decides for himself When to flee and how To avoid the roots of roses And dodge the broccoli. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Apr 12 - 07:02 PM Stopped by the mere word, Hand on the door And insanity knocking, He understood, just then, Why men build things slowly. So he turned and picked up the Things she had thrownÑ The ashtray, the sturdy shot-glass And the childÕs bearÑ And apologized. He told her she Had always been right. Took nothing back, But started everything forward. A.H. Jessup |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Micca Date: 19 Apr 12 - 07:23 AM Posted this on another thread but thought it might belong here too Every day in my head I hear Music, Folk and Blues Classical, Like a sub-text, The Soundtrack Of my life, So that I put On the radio To streamline it into one tone or style, otherwise it is a mix of Gaughan, Mozart, Judy Collins Azanavour, Haydn Django and Handel Walton, Trenet, Ives, Ketty and Copland But sometimes When the dark Creeps up to the window And the Peace descends I'd settle for endless repeats Of Four thirty three of John Cage ©Micca Patterson |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Apr 12 - 02:33 PM Made me curious about John Cage's 433, micca |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Apr 12 - 03:12 PM Micca, I hadn't realized I have been subconsciously performing this piece in my sleep for years. 4'33" |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 21 Apr 12 - 03:33 PM Not results, only. We will count as well Heart beats; Cycles of hoping wildly; Imagination in majestic flares; And every swift, dark silence, As also one. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 21 Apr 12 - 03:40 PM Who fired up the Black Ball Line? Who Bought the canvas by miles, Called for the timber cut and the pitch and brass? Who told men to report for sea in the smell Of new planks and tar? Who named the ports, drew up The frightening courses, worried The storm-cloud horizon? Ten thousand names are gone, Fallen along with his own, Out where the wild cascades tumble off The map, at the edge of the world. But all the sailors remember The kind of man he was. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 21 Apr 12 - 05:44 PM YES! We did know him, A! Well done. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 23 Apr 12 - 07:34 PM In dreamscapes the motion is better than even the moviesâ€" sensory, surrounding, scented, haptic and felt to the quick. It’s breathy, with all the chemicals. Continuity, though, is poor. Now becomes then, twice. In the part of the dream you hadn’t Dreamed yet you Are in a field of teacups Asking where the pumpkins came from. Someone who could answer does not And you remember this with frustration That is somehow familiar. We must talk to the script writer. But the motion, in dreams Is wonderful. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 23 Apr 12 - 07:35 PM Long trucks carry cars All shiny to their New places. Once set free, Cars carry warm bodies To and fro Hither and also thither. The cars go in and the cars go out And go away and sometimes The cars stop. The bodies they carry climb In and the bodies climb out. They go off and sometimes the bodies stop. Bodies carry being and The beings too go in, go out, They fade off, return, appear anew without stopping. Carried by beings, thoughts Run on, run out, dry up and spring up. And sometimes the thoughts stop. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 01 May 12 - 06:23 PM I should not be such a friend to adjectives, as though Listening to a bad poet all day. They fooled me back when into cutting up time And the world Believing the pieces were salvation. But I had once learned that nouns were the enemy, All lies, and secretly hostile. So the adjectives found me Easy prey. Dancing with verbs, delightfully Distancing myself from the solids Would be a wilder way To God things up, shake, Rip and rock the loitering moments. Rocketing laughs more than Strolling with nouns, Knocking the tocks off their pins, Salvus sum. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 18 May 12 - 05:18 PM Three poems from a "cycle" I'm currently working on; I expect the finished cycle to have five pieces, akin to acts in a play. These are the three I've written so far: The Monster Challenges I. THE MAP-MAKER You stand there, with my file in your hand: A long white coat beneath fluorescent light. Your voice is measured, your expression, bland To thinly veil the arrogance of Might. With scientific words, you speak your part; Your glance betrays a superstitious heart. As though I were not even in the room (And near enough to catch stale coffee breath), You lay out (for my mother) all the doom Of raising such a daughter so bereft. For I will never walk as humans can: Upon two legs, and tall, across the Earth. With crutch tips as my hooves, I'll cross each span In trotting gait, because of star-crossed birth. With practiced stroke and swiftly moving pen (Just as you've done with other children's lives), You mark me down as something less than "Man." To fit me to a list that you've contrived. You circumscribe my life in dark blue ink. My flesh and mind are mapped (or so you think). II. THE ORDER OF THINGS The day is warm, the playful breeze is light; The sun (just like a lover at the gate) Has called the flowers out -- and you, as well -- So even mundane tasks are pleasant things. And then, you see the shadow in the crowd: A monster in the corner of your eye. An insult made of flesh and bone -- obscene! Far worse than any word or gesture, this: Audacity in daring to exist Denying everything you've learned is true. And you are Good. You've learned what elders taught. About what makes a Man, and makes a Beast, And how to tell an Adult from a Child, And how to keep your own place in the world. The monster in the crowd is gone, although The shadow that it cast? It lingers, still -- It's lodged there, in the corner of your thoughts: A seed that's far too dangerous to sprout. But you are Good, accept this as a Test, Enclose what's wrong in pity, and move on. III. ANXIETY Protected from the mainstream's quickened pace, We're gathered here like flotsom in the weeds United just by coming to this place: "The Campus Registry for Special Needs" As different from each other as from those Who tell us where to sign, and where to go. We know that we are lucky to be here, And neither locked away, nor even dead. And yet, in spite of Love, we still have Fear: The knowledge: "I'm a monster" in our heads. We're set apart, like coins in some machine -- Been counted, sorted, "valued," all our lives. We've felt the stares of pity: cold and keen, And yet, the pity rises in our eyes. For we, as well, have learned what elders taught On how to know an Adult from a Child, So our identities are fragile -- caught Between what's in our dreams and what's been filed. We wait together in this quiet hall; We glance. But do we see the Truth... at all? --- I'm also making a series of videos of me reading them aloud (with text-on-screen). Here's Map-Maker and The Order of Things. ...I've yet to decide on an illustrative image for the third piece... a hallway just seems too vague. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST Date: 18 May 12 - 06:21 PM Capri Uni, your body may need crutches, but your creative mind soars up there somewhere. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 18 May 12 - 06:53 PM Capri...all I can say is WOW. Nicely done! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 18 May 12 - 07:03 PM Last Guest was me; thought I was logged in Dean |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 18 May 12 - 09:32 PM Dean -- I thought maybe it was someone who had dropped their cookie (as long as you follow the five-second rule, though, it's all good!). Um... "Your body may need crutches, but your imagination..." Are you sure you didn't mean to type 'and' instead of 'but'? ;-) EJ -- Thanks! These poems were actually inspired by four section-titles in a student's Masters thesis on Medieval literature that a friend of mine found online*: The Monster Challenges Boundaries Monster Questions Man-Made Classifications of Order The Monster Creates Anxiety The Monster's Role in Identity Formations So the next one up is "Identity." And the one after that will be a wild-card, simply because something tells me this sequence need five for symmetry's sake (maybe to get to the quintessence?). *The entire thesis is titled: When a Knight meets a Dragon Maiden: Human Identity and the Monstrous Animal Other; and it's in that paper I learned that there's an entire literary school of thought called "monster theory," which intrigues me... but not enough to go back to school... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 29 May 12 - 12:53 AM The Monster Challenges IV: IDENTITY Just as a rowboat scrapes the pebbled beach I drift back from my sleep to feel the bed. Receding like the tide, just out of reach, The dream slips, half-remembered, from my head. A nightly riddle posed, always the same: It asks me who I am, beyond my name. The question's asked again out in the crowd Reflected in a stranger's troubled glance, As though I were an insult spat out loud, Or warning 'gainst the fickle whims of Chance. Philosophers in centuries long past Wrote cunning answers all about God's plan: Which creatures He made first, and made the last, The proper rank and order meant for Man. But creatures like myself did not belong {We were the curly brackets of their set}. To illustrate, by living, all that's Wrong, So people learn God's Truth, and not forget. A doctrine set in stone (or so it seems); It cracks, a little, nightly, in my dreams. --- Also, I've got a video for each poem, now. They're all in a playlist on YouTube, here: The Monster Challenges: A poem cycle Ideas are starting to coalesce around #5... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Guest Charles Macfarlane Harrison Date: 29 May 12 - 10:11 AM As I have published my poetry already on my own website, rather than regurgitating it here, perhaps I may be forgiven for linking to it instead: Charles Macfarlane's and others' poetry |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 30 May 12 - 09:02 PM Some very strong talent in there,Charles! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 30 May 12 - 09:06 PM The Naming of All ThingsThe naming of all things Is the law that Has no name -- Required for the right To own a mind, And to be seen as sane. Otherwise the cold night Can make you blind On the nameless raw light Consume you like Huge blues dining on brine, Deep in a sleepless sea. Then there are the times Without names, The heartÕs fall, star-crossed; The moment when harm is denied; The radium archetypes That make the species mad. The moment of being almost known, The knowing of hawks In the brave brain of a lizard. Things That deserve a name do not Always earn one, And the art is lost, and Some songs are never sung. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 01 Jun 12 - 04:29 PM
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Jun 12 - 07:44 PM Oh, if I were a better Liar, I would be rich, And weak as a slug In sunlight. Never mind that--I Would spin you tales and you Would come under my spell. I would at least conquer The world before I melted In my puddle of fictions. Could I fool everyone? Even myself? You bet!! I'd yell out My magic. I'd dance the liar's boogaloo And create flurries of power Until I melted. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 08 Jun 12 - 05:07 PM CityMay Christ, from his battered and forgotten yew Look down (or over, up, across, or through) Upon these harried, hurried shells Who strive, with overcrowded minds, to make themselves Some modicum of honor, peace, or truer time. Or, and he can not do, may some other mind Able to master such a point of view (Surely not me. And probably, not you.) Offer them only a moment to confess That they, being so much more than this, Agreed, step by small step, on so much less. A.H. Jessup San Diego 6/8/2012 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jun 12 - 10:16 AM
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jun 12 - 01:02 PM
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 Jun 12 - 04:15 PM
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Doug Chadwick Date: 28 Jun 12 - 03:43 AM Write no epitaph for me Warm words carved on cold stone In a local cemetery Slowly getting overgrown If in, say, one hundred years People read the lines you'd leave The words would fall upon deaf ears For no-one would be left to grieve If things I've done improve the lot Of people I will never see Then it matters not a jot That they are unaware of me My legacy is in my deeds, The ones that help the world along, The only epitaph I need Is that other sing my songs © Doug Chadwick, April 2012 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 28 Jun 12 - 06:13 PM I like the steadfast, understated rhythm of those lines, DC. Frostian. :D A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 29 Jun 12 - 12:15 AM The Monster Challenges CHALLENGE V: THE VOICE OF REASON There are no monsters underneath the bed (Or so they say). They say there never were. And when a baby's born with half an arm, No chanting priest foretells the death of kings. Today, we know the scientifc truth And we've outgrown those silly, antique tales (Or so they say). And yet, we're all afraid. There's something churning underneath our feet. This modern world is bursting at the seams, And All agree that Order must be Kept. We've turned to science, and learned ten thousand ways To know just who is normal and who is not. We raise our funds, we look for cures, invent, And teach the child to wear a plastic hand. And though we know it's fiction, we still cheer The knight's triumphent ride, returning home; At last, the dragon's dead, and now hear heart Is safely bundled in his handkerchief. The monsters must not ever win the fight. We only let them try, to prove who's right. CHALLENGE V1: THE SEARCH FOR MEANING In looking down upon my naked self: My lap, my scars, my hands, and crooked feet, My posture's slant, my elbow's inner bend, I sometimes wonder what it means to see. This "looking at myself from where I am" Is not at all like looking at a stone. The words that echo through my memory From all the languages I've heard -- or seen, Like forest leaves that shift in every wind, Their shadows hide -- disguise -- the things I see. It's through this tangled forest I must go To find my truth, and know just what I am. There is one word-- it catches like a thorn. And though it stings, I trace its twisted growth. I find a path, and there I find the root: That "monster," once, meant "Creature Born Deformed," (Something like me?), "a Warning From the Gods--" One shadow pierced. This light can answer fear. And here's the fruit: it's heavy -- rich with seed. I'll plant one for myself, and start anew. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Jun 12 - 09:25 AM Thank you, Capri!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 29 Jun 12 - 11:23 AM You're welcome, A! I think my "Challenge #6" and your "Naming of all things" play well together. :-) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: ranger1 Date: 29 Jun 12 - 12:00 PM On hard benches within grey walls The women sit like broken dolls And I wonder in this dingy room At the the fates spun from this loom If I catch their eyes, they look away Their dreams were stolen yesterday There is so much sorrow here The price they've paid is oh-so-dear Their dreams and hopes gone from their eyes Nothing left but moonless skies And if I catch their eyes, they look away Their hopes all stolen yesterday For all that fear, he's just a man And I'm not afraid to take a stand We're all given grace at birth It's time to remember your forgotten worth Catch my eye, don't look away I'll return your dreams someday Tami Bill November 2007 I wrote this at the Getaway, after sitting with my mother at the courthouse with a lot of other women all waiting on a judge to sign their protection orders. They needed a voice, I needed to give them one. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Jun 12 - 01:33 PM Tami: What a rough row to hoe!! I like your defiant song. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 08 Jul 12 - 08:19 PM To cheer myself up in today's heat: A Fable (of sorts) A Tortoise once said to a Hare: "I challenge you, Friend, to a dare. Let's run a foot race And see who claims first place (I believe 'twill be me)," he declared. Now, the Hare thought this was a great joke, For, in running, he never once choked. The race day was set, And the animals met, And the bettors, they all went for broke. In a vineyard just over the hill, A Fox wanted grapes, for his fill. But, try as he might, Could not reach their height, So decided they're nasty as pills. Just that moment, the hare sauntered by (A confident gleam in his eye) "Ah! Now there goes my lunch (Not some sour grape bunch)!" And so after the Hare, he did fly. Two entered the race on that day; Two finished. And here's how it played: The Hare won the deal, With the Fox at his heels. And the Tortoise? He met with delay. And that is where this story ends. I'm afraid there's no moral, My Friend. But if you insist -- It's as simple as this: "Carrots are straight, and Bananas have bends." |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 08 Jul 12 - 10:41 PM Doug, Capri, and Tami: Wonderful stuff, all. Two by Capri that cut right to the core, and that last that is just so much fun. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 08 Jul 12 - 10:53 PM LOL...thanks for that, CU, made me laugh. The others are your usual uncompromising honesty which is one reason I love reading your stuff...not that there is anything usual about them anyway. Tami, beautiful voice. Good for you. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 09 Jul 12 - 12:09 AM Tami -- I've read your piece a couple times through, and what strikes me most is the bitter irony of it all: That the women who've been hurt by placing their trust in someone who claimed authority over their lives must rely on the authority of a stranger to save them. How resilient their spirits must be! Kat and Frogprince -- Thanks! After the three months of writing All Serious Sonnet(-like) poems, I needed to Let Loose with some Limerick Lunacy! ;-) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: MGM·Lion Date: 09 Jul 12 - 04:24 AM A bit of poetic art crticism {Here is a link to the painting concerned http://www.wallraf.museum/index.php?id=226&L=1 Thoughts inspired by François Boucher's Mademoiselle Louise O'Murphy c 1750 Now some are heterosexual And others they are gay And some just need thoughts Of amorous sports To get their rocks away But can there be a man of any sort In all male humankind Who wouldn't long to land A walloping hand On that sublime behind? Michael Grosvenor Myer 11 June 2008 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 25 Jul 12 - 04:03 AM I'm not posting mine anymore...at least not in written form. This is a recent one of mine. The Paradise Rose |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,amergin Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:18 AM Annie's In Astoria, Oregon |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 25 Jul 12 - 11:45 AM Amergin -- Ooh, I like that! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 26 Jul 12 - 05:47 AM Thank you! I took a class, and learned some valuable tips. In fact, it fired my ambitions...look for something in the future. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,amergin Date: 15 Aug 12 - 01:12 PM Here is another one of mine: An Ordinary Woman |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Peter Stockport Date: 15 Aug 12 - 07:17 PM This came to me in a garden.... I recited it at the Midway last week in a Pam Ayres voice..# hope you like it I wooed an Australian slut, An plied her with beer and tequila, I asked her for sex in a hut, I wanted a shed shag Sheila. Don't we all. Peter |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Aug 12 - 12:30 PM Where, your own intuition? Is the knowing of the known The container. or contained? Dragonflies insist the questions Are meaningless. The carp persist in quiet Singing among the lilies. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 17 Sep 12 - 01:50 PM Brightest light? How deep can you see, before your heart Begins pounding too hard? How far can you reach when your hands Are always tied back? How softly can you sing to cut Through the sound? And can your voice Bring down tall walls Alone? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 17 Sep 12 - 02:27 PM
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Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 17 Sep 12 - 02:41 PM The boson of mass is Everywhere and has no place. It kindles the best and worst of times, and spaces. Offers congealment, contraction, to the mind And drags weary souls through muddy time. Finding an enemy in normal places Is sufficiently hard; Following into the far caverns where the bosons tunnel Is far worse. Thus, when the Devil walks into your yard You will not recognize his book and verse. Use the azaleas as a shield, or know something smart. But his mass will carry the field, and draw down the brightest heart. |
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