Subject: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:07 AM I would like to offer you all a place to put your poetry, whether it is rigorously structured, , freeform, shmaltzy rhyme, haiku, irreverent doggerel, earth-moving Yeatsian profundity or cummingsoid rockets. Mostly I invite you to add something to the beauty in the world. here. If time permits, I may get together with our Gaelic Goddess and start us an online book of it along the lines of the Mudcat Song Book of which she is the honored Keeper... Please do not include epics. Paeans to television shows are discouraged. Guests are welcome to contribute -- being members of the honorable community of Anons who have added so much to our rich poetic legacy. Write well, write often, and add some beauty. Regards, A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:23 AM Rainer Maria Rilke offered this to a young aspiring poet who was asking for his approval: You ask whether your verses are an y good. You ask me. You have asked others before this. You send them to magazines. You compare them with other poems, and you are upset when certain editors reject your work. Now (since you have said you want my advice) I beg you to stop doing that sort of thing. You are looking outside, and that is what you should most avoid right now. No one can advise or help you - no one. There is only one thing you should do. Go into yourself. Find out the reason that commands you to write; see whether it has spread its roots into the very depths of your heart; confess to yourself whether you would have to die if you were forbidden to write. This most of all: ask yourself in the most silent hour of your night: must I write? Dig into yourself for a deep answer. And if this answer rings out in assent, if you meet this solemn question with a strong, simple "I must," then build your life in accordance with this necessity; your while life, even into its humblest and most indifferent hour, must become a sign and witness to this impulse. I include it here for encouragement. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:27 AM Let me add that rules are simple: good efforts are invited and encouraged; no criticism of a destructive sort is permitted, veiled or not; anyone may include anything within the general guidelines. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Mark Clark Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:30 AM I know this isn't a musical thread And I'm adding nothing to what others have said But Rilke's advice to the insecure poet Is true, too, of music... if you din't know it. - Mark |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: *daylia* Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:40 AM Amos this is a wonderful idea! Thank you! Inspired by such brave 'Catters as Thomas the Rhymer, I've had a lot of fun over the last few weeks posting some of my thoughts in rhyme. I really love doing it! I'm now duly inspired to create a poem that will stand by itself, without the context of a thread to have it 'make sense' (if that made any sense!) So now yer all duly warned ... it just might appear here! Creative Mudcatters RULE!!! daylia |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Chip2447 Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:43 AM One composed for my Niece O'Malley at the request of my sister in law... Wishes Chip Martin (C) 2002 H.A. Martin Jr. Birthday candles and countless stars Twinkling in the night. Pennies in the well And coins in the fountain. Dandelion seeds drifting with your breath, Shooting stars and secrets Told only to your diary and A few trusted stuffed friends. My wish for you, Is that all your wishes come true And you can say, I Believe. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,dark and cold Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:47 AM its dark and cold outside but its darker and colder inside my mind |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: harpgirl Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:50 AM Don't Leave your Ropes out in the Rain! The high rise window washer sways Amidst the birds, on sunny days! A speed break locks around his cable And this keeps vittles on his table I watch him Sqeegeeing the fixtures with vinegar and ammonia mixtures Hanging, seemingly suspended, by fragile ropes and lines untended! I marvel at thee window washer! Within my office, low and posher! Perhaps I'd offer reassurance, If I didn't sell insurance! inspired by a window washer friend in Arkansas who plays fiddle....hg |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Micca Date: 12 Feb 03 - 11:55 AM SHIPS THAT PASS In the night that has lasted years the ships we are pass The ripples you make shift and change my life create adjustments corrections of course and having rocked the boat they pass At dawn on the empty sea I watch the sun rise. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 12 Feb 03 - 12:33 PM A DIGGER OF ROOTS They are hidden In vaults, real, And, those within the minds And memories of folks: Tattered scraps. If I am lucky, Whole clothes, Direct lineage To my ancestors. Making me a skilled Observer, interviewer, A digger of roots. © K.LaFrance |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 01:17 PM WOW!! Dang, you guys, I am shivered!! This is terrific! Thanks! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 12 Feb 03 - 01:25 PM Monsters My monsters hide In the closet And crouch under my bed Mostly they thrive in my cranium And crawl around my head They come dancing out at night When there is no light They feel so right Scurrying and prancing In front of me And only I can see them And Only I can see... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 02:21 PM Interesting range of perspectives herein, I'll say that! :>) A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Foe Date: 12 Feb 03 - 03:02 PM Hey! There's a stick And a puddle mix Of mud and water I know I ought'a Keep on my way To work today They tell me I'm Too old to play But who can pass The chance to see The look of mud balls Droppin' from that maple tree I could climb up high And wait for Suzy Mae To come on by And then I'd show her How I really love her By droppin' down these mud balls From the sky high up above her But no, I must get to work Suzy Mae's a long past memory And they would say I play the simple jerk A grown man with a suit and tie Sitting high with mud balls In a childhood maple tree ******* copyright 1999 by Forrest Meader |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 04:06 PM Aw, Forrest, I love it! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 05:09 PM Only the pleasures you can freely have will arrive; Those you despise will drive Harsh injustice into your heart and mind, And make it logical. Then, shun life and retire, Or court it for sure madness, Until your own kind turn from you, despairing that You have forgotten all healing. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Bardford Date: 12 Feb 03 - 05:23 PM Excellent thread! But then there's this,er,doggerel,written when I was 8 or 9, but remembered for just this opportunity for critical international recognition: We have a cat called Nugget My mom won't let you bug it. Peace, Bardford |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 07:17 PM Within and Without Fire is in the universe, And all the bodies dance it love. Each spark has understood, each tendril of flame, The universe is its combustion wholly! This is why fires sings "Wow!" all day long. Here by the morning camp, Coffee-smoke twines higher The still pining branches stay polite, But the breakfast fire laughs to the sun, Saying "One! We are one!" Fire sings all the day, Knowing the instant is the answer, Since fire Is. Fire is the Universe. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 12 Feb 03 - 07:27 PM Forrest! I love that; excellent for reading aloud! Thanks for sharing. Great thread and talents, folks! kat |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 12 Feb 03 - 07:28 PM Mindful Where does one's mind go... Where does it wander, I wonder... Does it go on vacation? Change its location? Does ir abort and abondon? Does it take a hike? Go cross country by bike? How about an exotic cruise. I have to be careful Not to lose My mind. I may not remember where I put it. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 10:50 PM Montreal in Autumn To flames, the ashes weigh nothing. When you are among them, they do not matter. That they were old timbers, spoke to owls, Is only a dream to tell to water. To ice. the summer water is faint memory. Once you have surrendered and formed up, The picture is lost of what you knew. Freedom is the cruelest dream, Of ashes or of ice. Rhythm comes easy to the wild . It is their answer in time To ashes and frozen spaces. Under maple leaves where their wild dreams are playing They can show you dreams in Time's own frosted face. Days are a matter of Time and fire Hours of summer waters yield to old ice Leaves to ashes turn for prediction Freedom is the completion of All desire, And it is in the very air. Freedom is in the very air, The completion of all desire. Montreal, October 2000 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 11:08 PM Engineers They know, they know. They know because Confusion pains the heart and dulls seeing Not to know is heresy and being Outcast in their own home universe of laws, Immeasurably sinful Therefore they need, and find A way to know; and undo pain. This brings reward, this brings catastrophe. The catastrophe is avoidable But not the reward. This makes things More difficult. How they need, would die to have A better way of knowing. San Diego August 16, 1994 Ok, enough already!! Your turn!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 12 Feb 03 - 11:36 PM Hot Vents Surging Oily vapors, Belch from twisted stacks And Tolkienian cracks of doom, black smokers spew Into the relentless, cold, bathyal void. A shimmering mirage of sulphurous waves, Teeming with luminescent bodies Darting to an alien rhythm of life, Hidden from the Nature that we Fathom. Copyright©1999 S. Grieve |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 11:41 PM Wow, Metchosin. Just wow, is all. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Feb 03 - 11:42 PM Two Haiku One Adds grace, no Matter where. Wise gardner! * Some stars Give more light, some More beauty. Am I responsible? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 12 Feb 03 - 11:48 PM I feel I'm in distinguished company, there is some really, really good stuff on this thread. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Peg Date: 13 Feb 03 - 12:01 AM nice idea for a thread Amos! and lots of very good work in here so far! This poem won the Morris Cup (best poem in English about a Cornish subject) in the Gorseth Kernow in Cornwall this past year... Boscawen-Un, 30 October, Midnight This black hood , pierced by stars, hangs about our heads, a warm drapery, pressing down like stones Upon the breasts of unrepentant witches. The hallowed dew darkens our clothes, torn as we plundered the gorse hedgerow, branches tittering, alive with nightbirds, (it blooms gold, but is russet red now, humbled in its descent to winter). We flung ourselves upon this windblown heath, attracted by dolmens, by demons, by the mad epiphanies of a drunken dowser, into this court of kings and ghosts and dancing maidens, outlaws of heaven, time-keepers of earth. Our hearts are become stone, throbbing, laughing, older than books, wordless, hewn by barley sheaves, Blessed, kissed, by cusp-born acolytes. In daylight, we would be as bluebottles crushed upon a rough sundial, consumed in powdered heat, then lapped up by some lumpen, hairy, splitfoot throwback. but now, we are time itself, we gaze into deathless depths, and see the pointed horns of bulls, the gleaming eyes of archers, the stag and the serpent, blood of the warrior, wine of the mother, the dust of stars that swirls down paths of ancestor glory, cosmic ley lines linking planets to moons, summer to autumn, heart joined to heart, and lip to lip, confounding childhood lessons of the sky. copyright 2002 by Peg Aloi |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Rustic Rebel Date: 13 Feb 03 - 12:13 AM I just posted this yesterday on Jed's thread but I will put it here also, Looking Out I sit holed up in this little cabin in the woods. I watch the snow come down, and the sun reflect it's shine Looks so divine. Fairies glitter spread atop of the world. I watch through the window at the little chick-a-dees Scampering off erratically The blue-jays squawk and do their dancing in the trees Holding their heads high and gracefully The wolves cry is the lonely cry of winter The wind seems to sigh at the wolves capture For the deer fall silently as the snow. I don't know if it's the wind that tells the owl Or the owl to the wind Of all the wise and wonders of the land Occasionally a pair of leaves, captured by a breeze, Dance along spirited and playfull - Yet restless for their journeys end Back to where they came. A fox chase rabbit game is also played out- To the foxes delight he wins the game A high squeal emits from the rabbit Could it be a squeal of delight also? For it no longer has to play the game. And with the long winter will come an occasional thaw The icicles repeat themselves, throughout this time The sun will do a dance through them With reflections of spring to come. I watch intently the life of winter And wait patiently for the sun to dance Through the final icicle. Peace.Rustic(1986) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 13 Feb 03 - 12:37 AM GROUND ZERO Just outside of my window is raging The confusion and chaos of war. The legs and the corpses are piling The abdomens drained of their gore. The bodies are sere and discarded The lives of a hundred or more Legs tattered and matted and shattered No sign of their life from before. And up in the corner I see her The cause of this plunder and gloom From out of the shadows she ventures The spider is tending her loom. Copyright©1999 S. Grieve |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 13 Feb 03 - 12:47 AM And from my dear husband with a headcold and fond memories of chilhood..... I think that I shall never see ....snort A poem as lovely as a tree ....fort |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Rustic Rebel Date: 13 Feb 03 - 12:50 AM This is what I adore about Mudcat. There is so much talent and inspiration here. Thank-you Amos. Amos, Mark, Chip, Dark and Cold,Harpgirl, Micca, Katlaughing, SandyCreek, Foe, Bardford(gotta love those short ones!),Metchosin and Peg(Congradulations Peg!) I say Bravo to you all! I will add another... Nov.14, 2002 Drum I 've built myself a drum today using all the finest of materials. Fine wood and leather, feathers adorn it, dangles and beads surround the base. What a drum to beat on. I beat on it now with all full self. Mingle with abandon the steady rhythms that I pound. Forces un-beknown to me, heed my call as I drum. I am within bounderies of infinite wisdom. I fear the calling of the angels. I fear the calling of the gods. I fear the whispers of the wind as they blow through my brain, and I drum. With the child-like extremes I endure, I drum With the child like extremes I endure, I drum. Visions of the past are abound and I call for assurance of my existance. I rapidly ascend through the outer reaches of my grasp. I falter only for a moment upon reaching the destination I have achieved. That is the drumming. That is the drumming of my soul as I soar. That is the drumming of my soul as I soar. I built this drum with passion and inspiration and hope. Adorned with majestic aspiration and evolving dreams of love and peace. Futuristic passions of things I have not forgotten from past existances. With drumming I am free to unlimitless desire With drumming I am free to unlimitless desire. With drumming I am free , my drum does not limit me . Peace. Rustic |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST Date: 13 Feb 03 - 01:02 AM Dance of the Hearts Ah, my dear, I turn the lights out The candles reach for the overhead Shadows dance across the room Flickering upon the walls Your hand is tender and soft As I caress it with my lips So hold me close to your breast Let your heart beat against mine As I place my mouth upon your lips Let them dance together in time The stereo is gently crooning An old Scottish song of love You hair gently drifts down your face I wipe it back from your soft brown eyes My lips press against your throat And the dance of hearts begins So hold me close to your breast Let your heart beat against mine As I place my mouth upon your lips Let them dance together in time nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: hacksawbob Date: 13 Feb 03 - 05:33 AM The little Haiku Opens window to the soul Freeing mind |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 13 Feb 03 - 07:18 AM Great stuff folks...here is a great site to "store" your writings and ramblings AND to share your thoughts with lots of other folks. Amos, are you familiar with this website?... angelfire.com/co4/carlmill7 Visionary Does the darkness ever lift or does it forever shift from my left to my right it makes for a very long night there is never enough light to see sometimes I am very much afraid of me |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 13 Feb 03 - 08:31 AM Storage He cupped her memories in withered hands this old man of clay alone in an old house of gray shuttered darkness and the sad starkness of one faded blue dress fraught with yellowed flowers hanging in a closet with no door and Sunday's shoes resting on the floor. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 13 Feb 03 - 09:14 AM Wow!! This is amazing!! All so beautiful!! I love thast drum of yours, RR!! Sandy, I hadn't seen that site before. I'll have to go explore it tonight. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Foe Date: 13 Feb 03 - 09:22 AM Haiku 1. Bluebird puffs himself Against a new found rival Window reflection 2. I plant the pea seed In a row with his brothers Miracle appears 3. A tiny whirlwind Twists on the blacktop driveway Dead leave come alive |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 13 Feb 03 - 09:56 AM By and By Children By and by children don't you know forever you can't cry? That someday you must grow by and by into lives of paint that smooth their lines with aged strokes. The sun will hide the starless night and the stars sleep all the time. By and by children don't you know? You'll grow up to die. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: MMario Date: 13 Feb 03 - 10:08 AM Not mine - but my nephews: (I want to adapt this and put it to music someday) Small Gods and Moon The day wanes, and the Sun creeps ever lower in the sky, his light fading. Shadows fall across the wood-land, echoes of the dark soon to come. They await a reply from the sinking globe above them, but none will come, for his time on this Earth is now over, and his sister's reign begins. She, the queen of night, slowly ascends to her rightful place, watching her brother plummet beneath the horizon. His is a graceful descent, majestic. None can deny that the realm of day is his. But it is a band of twinkling stars and the pallid Moon that must now supply light in the darkness. She is a gem in the heavens; a pearl within the great oyster mother that is the night. Her shining is sure to delight the denizens of the woods and fields and streams below her, for she is gentler than the Sun. Now, she beckons her courtly attendants to her side, and sends them off, sliding on Moon-beams down to the Earth below. Once there, they gather together and utter the summoning. From deep inside the woods the answer comes. Small gods, fuzzy gods and furry gods, all scampering and scurrying to answer the call of their great white mistress, rushing to pay homage to her they all kneel, and bow down. The pale lady looks down at them as a tender lover looks upon the object of her affection. Slight breezes blow through the crowd. All they hear is a soft murmur as the Moon's blessing is given. The creatures below, care-takers of the wood and water, immortal and eternal ones, small gods, join paws and wings to celebrate all things good about the night and about the lady Moon. The small gods go to collect nuts and berries for the feast to come. Small gods with wings search for twigs and sticks to build a fire with. They all return with what they sought after and the dance begins. Whirling and twirling each other about, the animals of the forest are alive as they had never dreamed they could possibly be. Lovely wild prancing continues until it seems that they must collapse into a deep slumber. And so they do. They sleep, and nocturnal nature cannot manage to keep their eyes open, or cure the strange drowsiness that possesses them, body and soul. They lie in the clearing where the fire still smolders, their whole divinity spent on the dance. The darkness is seeped in silence. The Moon laughs, and reaches out to stroke the heads of her fur covered subjects. They shiver at her touch, as light as it is, though their sleep is heavy, they start to stir. There is one last thing to be done. When the night is over, it is understood that gifts are given to the Moon by barons, small gods that are greater than the rest. The lady should receive them, and in return, she grants a boon to the giver of the best gift. The gods move forward, and one of them is chosen. She grants him his heart's desire, a glimpse of her face. The small gods return to the woods, return to their charges, now that the celebration is over. Night is finished. The day will come. Now it is her turn to fall to Earth. Now she must defer to her brother, the Sun, as he comes into sight. He shines with a powerful glow, brighter than she, so high, so mighty, the entire world is his to command. Birds sing. They are small gods no more. Animals are now just animals, not powers of the night. The darkness brings fancy and the Sun brings comfort. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Peg Date: 13 Feb 03 - 11:16 AM wow MMario that is fantastic! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: MMario Date: 13 Feb 03 - 11:32 AM *beaming w/ Uncle-ish pride* yeah - I know. He insist that the line breaks are part of the poetry. Myself, I'm not so sure. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 13 Feb 03 - 11:46 AM Oustanding, MMario! WOW! And, Peg, congrats!! I am waiting for a tune for this one; even had a publisher tell me it sounded like a ballad: Waves of Sorrow Oh, doest thou know then, Of my heart, O weary man of sea? It bends and breaks unto the ground My love belongs to thee. For I, a simple woman be, Yet, the sea she is your bride. In sorrow now I wander Midst the bracken and the ruin. Lost thou I have, alas, now then The sea take me to my doom. Then gather'd he, at midnight's rest, Saw her ghostly pale divide Twixt mournful sea and shore When he came in on the weary tide. With despair, his heart..he lost it Out on the brine that night, And knew not another, ever more; No mortal woman's delight. His maiden, bride, and mistress, La Mer, called him out sad, but brave, And there he dwelt on the Waves of Sorrow, 'Til he joined True Love in her grave. © K. LaFrance |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 13 Feb 03 - 12:14 PM I can post this now that I know my dad is home and okay. He had a health crisis two nights back and we weren't sure he was going to make it. As I sat waiting for news, this came to me: Do you lie Dying in your bed? Or, are you better, Living, awake, and well? Am I an orphan yet? Don't hasten that Moment, please. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Rustic Rebel Date: 13 Feb 03 - 01:34 PM Howl At the Moon The night was upon us, We had nothing to do but wait for the rising moon. We knew it was to be full and bright on this night, we were going to howl at the moon. Found the spot, we all agreed, would be perfect for our quest. Layed out the blankets in the grass, for which to lay upon and rest. Our bottle full of moonshine, for which to help us all along. The howling would commence, after drinking, dance and song. It all was getting clearer, as the evening did go by, the moon would do a number on us, for there was not a cloud in the sky. Suddenly the moon began to rise above the trees, The moonshine in our stomachs, already had us on our knees! "Let the howling begin!" I heard someone yell. Our low, guttural howls, soon did swell. The moon rose higher and so did we, as our dance began at first subdued. The higher the moon rose, our dance became lewd. Clothes flew through the evening light.Shadowed visions of delight. We danced in a circle, holding hands so tight, howling at the moon with all our might. Every emotion inside, did come forth that eve. We became the moon, that night, I believe. Between the moonshine and the moonshine, my soul did fly, as we howled at the moon, way up in the sky. Before we knew it, the dawn was between the moon and the ground. We were alright with that, because our voices couldn't be found! We sent them away with the passing loon. That night we did, howl at the moon. Peace. Rustic (2000) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 13 Feb 03 - 11:59 PM Man, what a wild wide range of beuaty there is to behold here! I am really impressed, no kidding. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 14 Feb 03 - 01:25 AM WoodworkLove brings out the fine grain In the rough carpenter?s gentlest print. Really, this is so ? The ancient arts are signs Of a deep-sea heart greening. Thus, The fisherman endows the sea in a green love And the builder, home his craft to discover Finds no friend but a lover in green seas calling. No hand who will not find the fine grain in his heart, should we allow To bring any harm to trees; for fear He will live dried days, Of the green heart bereft. Here, Hand on plane, the fine carpenter River-tongues among cold stone, And fires indifference to the core of gold Sparking lights in mirrors. Grain And the sea?s love calling Bring him forward over the boundless bitter candle Of time, to home. Regards, A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 14 Feb 03 - 01:38 AM BALLET Autumn's prelude Arrives with the subtle change of afternoon light Embracing an erratic dance Of delicate wings. From decaying logs beneath the duff, Amber termites scramble To begin their tremulous flight. First one, Then three, Then finally a bustling host, Wings newly flexed and fragile, fluttering into light. Carelessly They flit To have their frail wings rent Like Isadora scarves On the spun wheels Of awaiting fat chocolate spiders With cream banded legs. Or crash land, Hurriedly discarding their wings, as if ashamed They are not innately Creatures of the air, Then scurry, By twos For hidden places Where a novice troupe will make an aerial debut Next summer's end. Copyright©2000 S. Grieve |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 14 Feb 03 - 01:42 AM I love this thread.....an incredible range of perspectives. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Chip2447 Date: 14 Feb 03 - 03:16 AM I composed this haiku, one afternoon when I watched a Monarch butterfly fly down and land on the picnic table I was sitting at. The butterfly's final flight, for it worked its wings once or twice and then died.
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 14 Feb 03 - 09:07 AM Lemmings We seem hellbent on dying rushing headlong to death as if our last breath will truly be our last. We drag our ragged past into the future marching steadfast and sure. We quickstep in time with no rhythm or rhyme and delight in this decsent into our abysmal abyss. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 14 Feb 03 - 09:44 AM Beautiful, Sandy!! Beautiful, Chip! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Foe Date: 14 Feb 03 - 10:59 AM Once a composer named Bach Said he'd heard some wonderous tach In the future I'm told There'll be music that rolls And also sometimes will rach All those who would mess with the Sioux Should find someting better to dioux Or like George and his friends You'll soon meet a sad end Toodle-dioux, Toodle-dioux, toodle-dioux (to the tune of Taps) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: *daylia* Date: 14 Feb 03 - 11:42 AM WAR War is for neanderthals who brandish bloody clubs; and roaring insane battle calls smash kinder hearts to pulp. War's roots lie deep in avarice in hatred and in lies and suck the bile of ignorance that their deathly fruit survive. O hither come the blokes of war See how they foam and rage! They're howling just outside my door "Join the tyrants of this age!" And though the wisest of the wise teach war is obsolete; Still we march toward that vile dawn on shameless, guilty feet. daylia PS - sorry about the negativism folks. :-( This was inspired by reading a couple of the Mudcat war threads (too early in the morning?) today. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: *daylia* Date: 14 Feb 03 - 01:38 PM "And though the wisest of the wise teach war is obsolete; Still we march toward that vile dawn on shameless, |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Wuzzle Date: 14 Feb 03 - 01:51 PM Autumn mist is love enfolding golden rays of wonderlight leaves are kisses gently falling fading into night winters cold a rugged beauty blood red berries mistletoe ice cold tears of love unfailing falling into snow springs fresh day brings hope and freedom daffodils and tulips gay rejoice today sweet life has risen turning night to day summer life with love indwelling far above the clouds of time smile the gentle smile of peace upon our lives come shine |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: *daylia* Date: 14 Feb 03 - 01:57 PM Oops, hit the wrong clicky ... just needed to brighten up that last line a little ... Cuz it's Valentine's Day, and |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Rustic Rebel Date: 14 Feb 03 - 02:08 PM Blue Generation It all just popped into my head everything I've said and done. My existence doesn't revolve around yours. Yours is from a planet of somewhere unknown to most. My belly crawls Flesh creeps Eyes weep. Blue generation General feelings of anticipation New creation Mother wails, in comparison Compassion left. Walls abound My eyes well with tears Body shivers with fears Look into all the mirrors Reflection disappears With the blink of an eye you appear once again and we start over. Peace. Rustic (2000) ps. Great works from everyone! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: limejuice Date: 14 Feb 03 - 03:19 PM It was so cold that night but there was no wind and it felt like the air would never move again the porch light forgot to turn on as I creaked open the door and padded across the grey carpet when I finally reached the bathroom the light was too brittle and it smashed against the faucet as it fell but it kept on falling I didn't feel the water on my hands and I'd swear it never touched my face although I saw my cheeks were wet in the wavering mirror I wanted to see the stars but I thought if I opened the window for sure I'd fall out so I stood there and clutched the curtains tightly closed just in case |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: limejuice Date: 14 Feb 03 - 03:28 PM *laughing* And a little ditty inspired by the charms of our BC ferries... O, the grimy blue carpet crunches under your feet and the ceiling-beams rattle to an unsteady beat the cheap vinyl chairs peel off of your back as you struggle for comfort (of which there's a lack) The lights up above are a skull piercing glare so you vacate your seat 'cause your nerves are rubbed bare the scent from the head just adds to your mood as you stumble down hallways a' looking for food The galley is crowded with tables galore and ketchup packs squished all over the floor The quality vittles availible here would make the most hardened of men shed a tear I'm sure some more verses will come to me the next time I have occasion to ride that majestic craft we call a ferryboat! Cheers, ~lime |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Deda Date: 14 Feb 03 - 04:11 PM Wow, these are all great, and such a rich feast. Amos, way to go. You have always had it and you always will. I haven't written much lately so I'm going to post an old one. It is not from my kindest or most enlightened time, but for some reason I have always considered it my favorite poem-child. Bonnie's Solution If my clothes were real silk, bright, and new, and rich, Then I'd be well. If I re-did my kitchen, muted, modern, subtle, Then I'd be well. If I tidied my room, hung black and white photographs -- Tastefully chosen, artistically framed -- Then I'd be fine, I'd really be fine. If I lined up brand-name bottles in the bathroom And folded fat, clean towels in neat rows, Scrubbed everything, fixed the screens, Then I could stride out and take command. If I got expensive haircuts and sexy little shoes, Then all the world would love me And I'd love me, too. Then my heart would stop leaking out of my gluey ribs. Then my slithery bones would re-gel into immobility (Icy toughness, like hers) And no one could hurt me anymore. I'd be as crimson and as memorable as a staple through your thumb. I'd be smarter than a speeding bullet. (But not by very much.) -Rebecca Jessup (c) 1995 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 14 Feb 03 - 06:17 PM Aw, Deda, that's a puredee winner. I love it. :>) Bro. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Micca Date: 14 Feb 03 - 07:03 PM TRAP Snap! The non-existent trap closes on the non-victim, makes solid bars and walls, dungeons in the air, from fears. We talk, explain, defuse the bomb, and show the hinges where the trap door once hung. But now you watch, waiting,testing, searching my eyes for the inevitable lie, poised for flight. And I, closing the doors, draw in, slowing actions spontaneous no more, pause listening, for the beat of your wings. Copyright Micca |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 14 Feb 03 - 09:49 PM Loverly work, Micc!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 14 Feb 03 - 09:59 PM The Long Problem I. The long problem, the old problem, Is not seen in the streets of day. They have buried, buried, buried it Put it down, under long hours of passion and of clay. They have suppressed it, they have nullified The old problem, the old problem, So that the wheel may turn and the names be called They have hidden the old problem away. Money streets are walled with suits And the hot sweets calling That drip syrup on the fingers of men Twined in the crisp leaf-fall?s scream And the long problem echoes when it is allowed In the hour of the dream. Balls And the cold-climaxed dance deny while flying Through the long problem?s halls. Burials fade, and the long problem returns A deal of well-suited clay cries in it And the old wheel?s fire burns to its tune And the crisped leaf crying. II. Answers are in communication: The faces will flow And the plenum reveal And the denial be known And the far northern call be heard And the leaves transform, each To its own kind of bird As the wheel runs back And the burial is undone And the unspoken, known, Advises the becoming. All streets will as rivers Advance to the delta call ?Auroroa! Aurora! Aurora!? tells All there is, while the suits are falling. All balls are cancelled by the flux, The plenum explains, and the warm river-climax Echoes the answers when the long problem falls. Now is the beginning. Tell Edna. She, too, will answer. Answers are in communication, And the long problem falling |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 14 Feb 03 - 10:34 PM The following was written for and performed for the June, 2001 Art Garden held at the Depot Theater in Garrison, New York. The Art Garden is a night of theater organized like a literary magazine, where writers independantly create pieces on a particular theme, and then perform them before a live audience. The theme for this particular "issue" was Beaches. THE TIDES WITHIN We came from the sea before our days were numbered. And before our eyes knew light from dark, when time was kept with the heartbeats of our mothers, we took our breath through gills. We hold the sea within us, like a pebble under the tongue -- a secret charm of protection. Our passions: blood and tears, are as briny as the sea. The ebb and flow of tides within follow the gravity of the heart. And at the bone-cold shore, where dream and duty meet, the coastline is never smooth, but, echoing the curl of each crashing wave, twists upon itself toward fractal infinity. After we have forgotten the numbering of our days, after the longshore drift of memory has swept away our care, these crashing waves will turn our bones to sand for a cuttlefish to hide in. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 14 Feb 03 - 11:32 PM Made me grin, ya did, CU!! Thanks!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Neighmond Date: 14 Feb 03 - 11:37 PM I love to hear the multitudes the people speak and sing Oh! To hear ten thousand toungues And hear the voices ring. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: harpgirl Date: 15 Feb 03 - 01:52 AM and some more of hg's doggerel... Hephastus Hephastus, so the story goes Once found himself a wry cuckhold And to avenge his wife's wild passion Tricked her love in a clever fashion. While he was tending the smithy fire, Mars was fanning his wife's desire. As they lay entwined on the smithy's bed They failed to see the net o'erhead. It was rigged to fall as the story goes when the flames of passion curled their toes! Hephastus saved his reputation And, passion is indeed a conflagration! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: darkriver Date: 15 Feb 03 - 04:06 AM Ukiah haikU One hundred degrees by noon already: too damn hot to write. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 15 Feb 03 - 08:05 AM Night Flight '67 The dreams come back when the stars take flight. Old friends in old places come around at night and we ride our dark horses through the Valley of the Loon laying waste to Eden and darking the moon. Again we are dauntless, heroes to a man. We are the last few living, the last ones to stand. As the morning hides from darkness and the images slip from sight, I lose sight of their faces as the dawning brings the light. We are saddened and wizened as around and again it goes. We are just old men wearing young men's clothes. Dark horses refer to helicopter gunships. The area is near Khe Sanh, Republic of South Vietnam. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Feb 03 - 08:52 AM Sandy: Right between the eyeballs, man. Well crafted, too. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Deda Date: 15 Feb 03 - 01:36 PM (Written in the late 1980s.) Autumn The only divinity I can sense or find Comes when I regain my mind After losing it completely. Human help has failed. Gently, discreetly, God sends some hopeful message with the wind. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Deda Date: 15 Feb 03 - 02:15 PM In this poem I took some liberties with the legends about Merlin, whose end came because he fell in love with a powerful sorceress, in some versions the Lady of the Lake, and in order to escape his attentions she locked him, or tricked him into locking himself, in either a tower or a menhir, one of the mysterious standing stones that are found all around the coast of Brittany. Long before, Merlin had trained Morgana le Fay, a protegee/student magician(ess?) who "goes bad" and becomes King Arthur's magic foe. (Also, Merlin's experience of time was reported in some myths to be "backwards" -- i.e., the future was his past.) (Dear God, is anyone going to really bother reading all this??? Oh well, here goes) I. Merlin Considers Mad Morgana His magic hands could heal her, they both knew it. But the magic was withheld. She was too mad, mad with need, Too sick for his taste. He hadn't meant to trigger So deep and wild a need; A transfiguring need, that stripped all loveliness, Muddied all beauty, like some obscene graffitti of the soul. He took aim with his eyes, coolly so that no light Might blur his view of that fevered, foaming soul, That madness which his hands could heal. But even his hands cannot touch without feeling, And who could know what that madwoman's skin Might unleash in him? Mad though she was, she understood The wizard's loneliness, his isolation, The problems of living backwards, and among men. Once in some other time he had spoken to her often Of these and many other things, and they had laughed. He was so fond of her then! She had shown promise and wit, And her dark eyes were deep to her heart, spilling the heart and hope's Gratitude, merriment, all at his feet, all in his trust. But now -- she was writhing mad, and there were risks. Risks to these primitive men, and his especial ward. And his own risk. Was she the foretold foe? That other time was packed away now and he Must hold his power all alone, must bear The icy seclusion of vicarious rule Among this childlike tribe. She was of his race, perhaps. Perhaps some kin. But she had bad blood, or bad stars. He clasped his magic hands behind. He shook his bearded head. II. Afterword "Was Merlin ever slain? And did he die?" No. Somewhere stands a rock with a quick eye. He loved to desperation, Merlin did. The lady had no choice, no way to rid Herself of his obsequious attention But to lock him into magical detention. He's alive and buried by his own spell In some stone in Brittany. Who can tell? So many rocks stand sentry on that rock-infested coast. Any silent one might be his crypt, his silent host. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Feb 03 - 11:17 PM (((((appplause)))))) Bravo, sis! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Micca Date: 16 Feb 03 - 07:52 PM This kinda grew outa trying to make sense out of this click here The quiet descends The flowers start to wither In red brick furnace The ashes slowly cool The hymn is sung The eulogy delivered mourners head home while Tired children mewl Pile into cars Lifts offered and accepted Then rush hour roads To go and Wake the dead Then time to go And scatter back to places To far and near With all that's left unsaid Hugs and handshakes After a drink together bright hollow smiles As people leave at last It don't seem much To tuck away a brother And close the book on fifty years of past copyright Micca |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Feb 03 - 09:48 PM Bravely done, Micca. Thanks. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Feb 03 - 09:55 PM This is a piece that grew out of a number of converging forces. It is not autobiographical, certainly, but it reflects part of collective persona, culturally, if briefly:
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Peg Date: 17 Feb 03 - 04:25 PM Deda: cool poem about Merlin and Morgana! Very incisive. I include here a long triptych first published in Obsidian Magazine and then on gothic.net, and this same myth makes an appearance herein... peg Avalloch and The Tree Fairy: a triptych Part One (The Fairy Ailinn) I romp towards Broceliande a slippery undine shrieking silent paeans of wood lust my face smeared with pitch thighs shining with vetiver, tacky with blood Where are you? Cloaked in mist, I huddle beneath pine boughs breakfasting on fallen acorns. I wait, and sing. I have lost you to the dawn running backwards to daylight to your city to timepieces and rough weather to loved ones and gold coin and sour beer. How could you have become lost among trees? You, the huntsman who's plundered every acre of Bretagne? How came you to the faery realm? How, if not trapped by magic? You ran me through Herne to my Sadhbh antlers singed in the spitting fire hot meat juices dripping from your beard to stain my breast the colour of venison. You semen swirls in my belly. My teeth are imprinted on your spine. I wait. You won't be leaving. I could have been a mermaid could have dragged you over rocks knotted your fingers in my silver hair offered you to any or all of my sisters their combs in hand, cold hips floating. I could have filled your lungs with salt and pearls stopped your legs kept you with me. But I am alone in this. I love you. I want you here. An ageless and nubile forest nymph I tempt you with peaty scotch and promises luring you with apples and high sweet music into the green and breathing temple of myself. LATER: In Celidon Wood nine dryads play at calixte twigs, the old game dividing the contents of a buckskin pouch squealing with delight as each receives a bauble in turn: chunks of flint, silver coins, golden needles, stubs of tallow candles, black feathers, oat biscuits, a flask half-filled with honey mead, a scarlet silk ribbon, a tine of stag horn carved with Ogham, a knife blade sticky with sap. Part Two (The Huntsman Avalloch) Bitch. No you never twisted my arm. I wanted to stay with you. Twenty years I gave, petrified in the screaming orchard, choked with ivy and mushrooms. Twenty years recalling the taste of your mouth, while you seduced a dozen lovers and I watched. The fisherman, called to your side from his bleak rock village, The selkie trapper, his silver eyelashes frozen to your lips, The woodsman, his hatchets rusted in your juices, Even the idiot farmer, with his gifts of barley and turnips. I saw it all, enslaved as I was among apple trees their clumsy caresses bludgeoning my stopped eyes, even as they bruised your greenfairy skin. But you are not as fragile as you look. For they, too, have been imprisoned in the oaks, in the hazels, the hawthorns, put away, endless forest denizens rooted in the soil of Broceliande, soil trod by Merlin, another hapless fool, frozen in transfigured time by a conniving fey doxy was that your work, too? LATER (Ailinn Speaks): What do you mean, you're sorry? Oh my love, I had such hopes for you, for us. But in the end, you disappointed-- too angry, too possessive, too too too monogamous. It's better this way, don't you see? Patience, Avalloch: our flesh may yet be one. Think not on the others, they will wither in six seasons' time. You are the one I loved enough to stay the flow of your blood. Your body is yet warm as milk, sturdy as horn. For now, remain in the grove, be my shelter and my food, and remember those nights we loved, your antlered crown tangled in my hair, while a thousand colours woke and danced about us and we named them all forest green. Part Three (Merlin Speaks) It is all one. Frozen I have been, but powerless, no. Magic has flowered in me, a thorned, odorous canopy of roses, balm, and rubine foxgloves. I could crush you like beetles, like dried petals, and scatter you from the cliffs of Orkney. I could send you to the heinous bogs of Lindow, there to drown forever in her peaty stench, embracing my kinsman there, a late harvest offering, the stuck-up golden boy, an ungrateful druid if ever there was one. Perhaps his withered lips might rouse in you some occult passion, stir your breast to sugared musings, or move you to pretty tears, such as I could never wrest from you. For I do long to see you wed, my dear, as, in my dotage, I drive roots deep and deep into river-wet rock beds. I am become stone, my robes a melted, igneous drapery, my eyes mere chunks of amber. I have been in the unhewn dolmen, and I have been in stag horns, and sea salt, and my hard, gnarled roots have plumbed soils richer and moister far than yours, my darling. Stuck? Petrified? Mudlogged? I am in my element, you might say. A tree in the earth, a stick in a hole, my arms forever raised, my head forever bent, in benediction. I forgive you. Your time is almost done, you know. And when at last red fire rents the air and all save the Eternal Ones must die, your blood and sinew and snot and bones will all be dust, greying in the black wind. But I will rise from this Last Burning, a golden and phantasmagoric birdling, something between a merlin and an ibis, unfettered, unfrozen, undead And I will remember you. Wait for me. LATER: (The Goddess Speaks) Alas, my mountains, laid waste, are sloppy with glistering guano. My waters, poisoned, lie thick, unmoving, stinking. The forests, the grasses, all picked clean of berries and milk. Tittering, chirping, screeching, the very air is an insult to me. Who would have thought, in my autumn years, I'd have been ousted, raped, undone, not by men, but by a myth? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Deda Date: 17 Feb 03 - 04:51 PM Wow, again to Amos, and Wow to Peg -- what an opus! Fascinating - very rich. Thanks for posting it. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,vorblesnak@yahoo.com Date: 17 Feb 03 - 08:08 PM Ha! Such talent. Warms my heart to see the rythms of the mudcats in the muddy waters of this day. Here be one from the nib. Little bits of whimsy, Worlds beyond my eye, Twisted thoughts, In twisted words, That haunt me till I die. Long remembered moments, Splinters of my life, They flee the vault, Of never say, My fingers weave the strife. I never meant to poet, Condense myself to verse, Expose my soul, To sharp critique, A most perplexing curse. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 17 Feb 03 - 09:48 PM Peg..thanks for the wonderful piece on King Authur...Sam |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 17 Feb 03 - 10:17 PM Peg, ditto! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 18 Feb 03 - 11:53 AM Amos, thanks for this great online poetry magazine. Preflight Sometimes I wish that I could be the hawk that sits high up in the tree Sometimes I wish that I could glimpse the world outside my town Is it flat or is it round How far does it go Will I ever know if the Earth sits still or is it slung all around and will I be flung to the ground or perhaps whirled free to fly real high so that I can see the world outside my town without sitting high up in the tree |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 18 Feb 03 - 01:07 PM and where would we be without paying homage to Robert Service, of course, there are those who do not consider him a poet either...... with apologies to Robert Service....... THE SONG OF THE WEST COAST TRAIL There are those fools who decide, To test mettle and their pride And hike the temperate rainforests western rim, Where pouring rain and muck, Is the measure of your pluck And the backpack, of your vigor and your vim. Over hill, through mired bog, Over greased and slippery log, Over tangled roots that trip you on your way, Just when the slogging's getting tough And you think you've had enough, The map reveals there's still another K. In the campfires smoky heat When you're too damned tired to eat And you wonder why you started on this quest, Just then Pacific breakers roll And a sunset stirs your soul, You know by God, today you've earned your rest. In the realm of breaching whale, Where muting fog or blowing gale Cloaks the Sitka spruce and cedars somber edge, The kelp beds heave and fall To the gull and ravens call And the breakers thunder on a rocky ledge. As you eat nut and raison lunch And do the periwinkle crunch You make up time on shelves of hardened sand. Then there's the giant's cobblestone, A misplaced foot could snap a bone, Slowly pick your way and wish, for trails inland. On the Cullites bolted rungs, As the breath rips through your lungs, Humbly recall, shipwrecks, in days of yore, Where a tar, sans boot and gaiter, From surf wracked and broken freighter, Unaided, scaled this treacherous height before. You'll meet a hiker who'll report Someone's run this trail as sport, Racers time in hours and minutes, not by day. But the runner that's hell bent Isn't packing your food or tent And he missed the otter family hard at play. For the hidden gold you seek, As you wade the icy swollen creek Is right there, in each footstep that you take, It's not just the getting through, That's the mother lode for you It's every living, breathing, moment wide-awake. Salal bush wind clipp'd and bent By the western wind is rent Into bonsai gardens of the rain and storm. Sparkling silver sea and mist Has constant, held and kissed This wild topiary landscapes sculpted form. At the Nitinat's tidal stand Meet the tenders of this land, Caretakers of split cedar boarded trail. For ten thousand years or more They have worked this windswept shore For the bounty of the salmon and the whale. Just when you think this part's a lark, A Sunday stroll out in the park, Don't dismiss those paw prints in the sand, For the "cougar warning" on a sign Will send a tingle down your spine For you know who really rules this primal land. And when the journey's through Pachena Bay comes into view, Remember in the elation of the day, Sometimes success is not all luck, Nor because of stamina and pluck, But the spirits there, beside you, on the way. Copyright © S.Grieve 1999 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 18 Feb 03 - 01:30 PM Paid in Full I won me a chest full of medals for killing ole' Charlie Cong. Hell, it wasn't wrong. Couldn't have been. I was paid every month and then once I met a General who slapped me on the back and we laughed at the crack he made about body count. "Son, it's not the fact, it's the amount. We kill one, we write down three and between you and me thats the way to win wars." Government pimps... Military whores... Who could possible know more than they do. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 18 Feb 03 - 02:05 PM Mets! No need to apologise to Service! Ya done him proud, IMO. Absolutely beautiful; I was there in the reading of your eloquent imagery. Thanks, kat |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 18 Feb 03 - 02:30 PM CORRECTION Paid in Full last two lines should read----- Who could possibly know more than they do. Sorry 'bout that. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 18 Feb 03 - 02:48 PM thank you, kat. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Feb 03 - 03:40 PM Sandy: I should thank you! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Dexter Date: 18 Feb 03 - 09:53 PM Ode to a Bluebird Good morning, little bluebird Upon my windowsill. I saw you in my dreams, And now, I see you still Dancing to and fro Upon my window ledge, Fresh from last night's rest Of nesting in a hedge; And, as I see your beauty Against the morning fog, I hit you with the waste can, And feed you to my dog. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Feb 03 - 10:49 PM Very droll, Dexter. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Dexter Date: 19 Feb 03 - 10:50 AM yes. thank you. dex |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 20 Feb 03 - 07:50 AM Where was I when yesterday came when the stars of last night stayed out of sight hidden behind the only cloud in the sky I missed the sound when day broke striking back from the dark. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: posterchild Date: 20 Feb 03 - 02:46 PM Sandy Creek, your war poems are very strong. Do you have more? If you do please post them or email them to me. Thank you, Aronelle |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,stone Date: 21 Feb 03 - 08:55 AM sniper when we did our killing we slid from sight we left no shadow we hid our faces ten paces from the light |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 21 Feb 03 - 12:51 PM We are the thought mongers. We make hard noise. Guts rumble with unquenchable smoke – the furnace only roars. Heads rattle with machinery, attitudes built into plastic parts, The rattle of fast translations, too hard to love, that love destroys. Peering through windows where we build no doors, Fanning minds not joined to human hearts. We have left no-one on watch in the furnace-room below. No fires call -- the basement is adrift in blowing snow. We are churning the chimes of the weird bazaar As all our kind do, and have since young. Smoke throated, voices aflame Tongues waving at the hopeless stars Hopes in mean messages, meanly flung And the hard calling of names. And, floating up from the furnace room below, Coals scream, surrendering to snow. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Promises like pie crust by C Rossetti sound Date: 21 Feb 03 - 12:57 PM The reclusive mystical genius Christina Rossetti expressed so many of her thoughts and frustrations through her poetry this delightful lyrical poem gives us perhaps some insight into the mind of this deeply religious Victorian lady who shunned close friendship prefering to live within her close-knit family unit away from the attentions of outsiders who perhaps she never entirely trusted....Heres the link to the page with the sound file.. Promises like pie crust by Christina Rossetti 1830 - 1894 (sound poem set to mus Regards. Jim Clark PS..Dont forget you can if you prefer listen to my sound poems at my Yahoo "sound poetry" web group (look in "files") heres that link http://groups.yahoo.com/group/bloozman_uk/ All rights are reserved on this sound recording/copyright/patent Jim Clark 2003 Promises like pie crust Promise me no promises, So will I not promise you: Keep we both our liberties, Never false and never true: Let us hold the die uncast, Free to come as free to go: For I cannot know your past, And of mine what can you know? You, so warm, may once have been Warmer towards another one: I, so cold, may once have seen Sunlight, once have felt the sun: Who shall show us if it was Thus indeed in time of old? Fades the image from the glass, And the fortune is not told. If you promised, you might grieve For lost liberty again: If I promised, I believe I should fret to break the chain. Let us be the friends we were, Nothing more but nothing less: Many thrive on frugal fare Who would perish of excess. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Rustic Rebel Date: 21 Feb 03 - 01:43 PM Vodka makes me turn pretty red Tequila makes me forget what I said, Whiskey makes me wish you were dead, I think I should smoke pot, instead! Peace. Rustic, getting deep! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Schantieman Date: 21 Feb 03 - 01:54 PM I wrote this addition to William Blake's Jerusalem many years ago. It always seemed to me (singing it) that it needed another verse, and the sentiments are a bit old-fashioned. This brings it up to date a bit. And shall the joy be thus confined, Cease at the bounds of England's shore? Shall minds be closed and hearts unmoved While mute starvation pleads for more? This must not be, we shall fight on - Our love extend, our greed destroy. Then truly shall Jerusalem The whole world o'er shout out her joy! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,stone Date: 21 Feb 03 - 02:38 PM On Losing Your Friend There is no song for a broken heart and no place to start when no stone is left to turn and no lesson is left to learn. The spirit is dark when there is no gift for giving. We are not yet dead. We have just quit living. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: EJ Date: 21 Feb 03 - 06:47 PM Does anyone have any poetry written to honor the events of 911? I have read some great works in this thread. EJ |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 22 Feb 03 - 12:30 PM Dances in SilenceYou are the dance that has no words and rises In the spring's own flood to the wind and rain That sweeps the silence into the noise-worn bone And raises the teeth of hearts again. Only there do none dance alone. The hard breath and wild limbs' sway tell All the story, and the soul's devises Rising with the time of far and endless bells. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sandy Creek Date: 22 Feb 03 - 01:08 PM I'll start this one. Where were you standing when the towers fell. What were you doing when the Earth hung suspended between heaven and hell. If you care to, jump in and add it to or change it or do whatever you like, then pass it on. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Micca Date: 22 Feb 03 - 07:47 PM Everyone knows exactly where They were, it's sad alas Like older folks in a different time First heard the news from Dallas World events leave lasting marks On us or so it seems And how and when we heard the news Is etched into our dreams |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Apr 03 - 04:59 PM Plain Beauty, Too The plain side has its own time and bend-- Not so bright, but long, long -- Which must be known to comprehend The rainbow song. Bright colors, alas, can be too easy; shrill In seeming, rich in fear, When even fire can be fooled, and Will Will not stand near. With effort plain, sharing the ground, Even a dirge will show an honest face To anyone whose name is bound And earned in common space. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 15 Apr 03 - 06:32 PM I saw a two-line joke in the Saturday Evening Post 50-some years ago. Thus a poem of sorts, and then a song. The poem is as follows: Come all you young maidens and listen And gain some instruction from me. Be modest, demure, and retiring, And chase not the bachelor so free. Oh, do not act bold, free, and brazen; Be modest, retiring and shy. Men flee from the woman who chases And the brazen young lady pass by. But the modest girl does not chase bachelors As doubtless you have been aware, For the modest girl does not chase bachelors As the bear-trap does not chase the bear! Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Uncle_DaveO Date: 15 Apr 03 - 06:35 PM The fourth-last line should be, of course: But the modest girl does not chase bachelors (plural) Dave Oesterreich |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Celtaddict Date: 15 Apr 03 - 10:56 PM Glad to find haiku amongst folkies. Swirl-black Spanish lace, Backed by wool of oyster white: Winter tree and sky. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Apr 03 - 10:16 AM To us, who travel time, All stories have been heard before; Head full of folk-songs. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: beardedbruce Date: 16 Apr 03 - 02:04 PM Sonnet 07/05/02 Banshee DCLXXXVIII It was an odd noise that I heard, this night: Not quite a scream, but far more than a gasp, From moonless darkness, with no stars in sight. What is this coldness, that my insides clasp? Why do I weaken, hearing sound so far Only the echo reaches ear, yet mind Is twisted from intent? How can I bar Gate of imagination to wyrd bind? I fall, boneless with fright, and sweat breaks out; Bowels turn to water with despair. I weep, To lose all. I moan, but cannot give shout To more than whimper, nor my reason keep. She passes, and I live! Yet dare not rise For fear of seeing Death within her eyes. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Mudlark Date: 17 Apr 03 - 01:38 AM Thanks for all submissions...not surprising that Mudcatters are good poets. Here's one of mine OLD MOON The moon, squashed and misshapen Rises above a jumble of pickup sticks-- Crossed contrails in the night sky. No slim crescent this, its void a Future contract, its open circle So suggestive of possibilities, fulfillment. Neither has it the lush ripeness Of the full moon, clearly at the top Of her game, all promises granted. No, gravity has had it's way with This moon, blowsy now and bulging, Firm contours gone, symmetry erased. How could it come to this, the moon Asks, gazing sadly into some puddle or Sylvan pond, in just four short days? Like some earthly body she is shocked At the disparity between mirror and Inner eye, an unwilling shape-shifter. She wraps herself in veils of cloud And climbs high into the sky, knowing The kindness of distance, and waits for day. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 12 Jun 03 - 05:29 PM I found this in my saved drafts in one of my email addresses....its a couple of years old... Standing On the Dyke I stand on the dyke... Watching the river gurgle across the sunburnt stones... I stand on the dyke... Listening to the bees buzz in my ear... The wind blows through my hair... Whistling as he clambers through the trees... The wind blows through my hair... Dancing with the grass tickling my knees... Swimmers dive beneath the river... Cool water slides passed their faces... Swimmers dive beneath the river... Rushing downwards to meet with wet embraces... Lovers stand on the shoreline... Their laughter marching lightly up the bank... Lovers stand on the shoreline... Whispers of love spoken in their eyes... I turn back to an empty house... Ghosts gently peaking through the curtains... I turn back to an empty house... Slowly, I step through a darkened doorway, alone... nathan tompkins 2001 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 13 Jun 03 - 12:01 AM Very evocative, Amergindarlin'.... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 04 Sep 03 - 02:48 PM Chez La Lune Yes, she had beauty, sure and clear Reaching deep in the eye, and calmly still That sort of beauty which invites the see'r To think of dying or retiring, all fulfilled. Perhaps too beautiful to care, Like some confection, bringing hard remorse Seeming more appetite than truth Like guileful fire, painted on a screen of force, Or musical deception, luring hearts away With the tones and rhythms of imagined hours, Lying delightfully about the end of winter Until the silence came, killing the flowers. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: kendall Date: 04 Sep 03 - 07:24 PM HAZARDS TO NAVIGATION by kendall morse Did I ever tell you people, about a time long years ago, When Jackson and I left No Man's, in a fog that hung heavy and low? From No Man's into Camden, is almost 30 miles, no radar in those days, dead reckoning all the while. Coming across Penobscot Bay in a fog that was dungeon thick, I knew we could be run down, by tanker or a cargo ship. We could hear the horns and whistles of those monsters all around, One could ram us in that soup and never hear a sound. Jack was standing on the bow to get a better view, "We're surrounded Cap'n" he yelled back "What are we gonna do"? "Throw some of them Maine potatoes, like snowballs, hard as you can, and, if one of them don't splash, I'll know it's time to turn." We left the channel far behind, but, I couldn't find The Graves, Our time was up, and it wasn't there, and, the Mate began to rave. His girl was waiting on the shore, all the time we were at sea, And the last thing in the world he wanted to do, was spend another hour with me. He'd had enough of the sea that day, but, I just let him steam, I killed the engine and listened hard, for that buoy off our beam. We didn't know which way to head, 'cause we didn't know where we were, The buoy I wanted wasn't there was all I knew for sure. Then all at once, it came to me, the smell of new mown hay, And, a real odd sound come with it from somewhere across the bay. In that soup we didn't know we were so close to the shore, But, a boy was out there mowing his lawn, we could hear his engine roar! "We're lost in the fog," I hollered, "After a week at sea, how do you get to Camden"? He said, "My Dad takes me." There was no help there, so,we came about to get her well off shore, then, the fog gave up, and there was The Graves, 'twas only a mile or more. We tied her up in Camden, after a long hard jog, and we promised ourselves that never again would we sail in that kind of fog. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: kendall Date: 04 Sep 03 - 07:26 PM That was based on a true incident, but I did stretch the truth a bit. If I can figure out how to do it, I'll submit one that was written by my 14 year old grand daughter. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: kendall Date: 04 Sep 03 - 07:30 PM Here is a poem from my 14 year old grand daughter. Her father is a misogynist rat bastard who abused her. I didn't know it until he was long gone. The world is too close in us Late and early Caressing and dying we lay waste our powers Little we see in grief that is ours We have given our love away, A bleeding death. This demise that lays vulnerable to the lies This hound that wails into the night, And, is collected now, like bleeding flowers, For this, for everything, we are discomforted, It does not touch us, But, still, we ask, "How could you do this to me"? I'd rather be a child, wrapped in a torn shirt So that I, running on this broken land, Could have glimpses to make me less forlorn And, see myself rising from the sea And hear the Gods blare comfort from a horn. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 04 Sep 03 - 10:20 PM Heavy stuff for a 14 yr old, Kendall, you've a right to be proud of her. I LOVE your Hazards...love to read those kinds of poems out loud...one can be so dramatic! Thanks! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 04 Sep 03 - 10:40 PM Skipper: Your granddaughter has the real poet's genius in her -- let it be fostered!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST Date: 04 Sep 03 - 10:54 PM No doggerelists need apply (Inspired by the currently ongoing scouring of the shires of New Hampshire for a poet laureate) The poets of the Granite State From top gun down to not-so-great Are clucking like a brood of hens, They seek a Poet Laureate. Let's hope those folks will take up pens Who write verse no one comprehends, (For clarity is worse than rhyme) And nominate themselves - or friends. For those who grasp the paradigm, And are in versifying prime, Who know enigma wins the day, This is indeed a heady time. You'll sense those poets by their ways, They've not quite shaken all clichés, With sandals, flowery dress or beard, Or strutting round in French berets. Soon one will be e'en more revered, Raised aloft, with fame veneered With ancient Greek-style laurels crowned, In shopping malls and classrooms cheered. Will our next Laureate be found Like Dalai Lama, unrenowned, In humble, rural trailer park, And academia confound? Or will it be a hierarch, Who has already left a mark Within the corridors of fame, With rhymeless verse, obscure and stark? New Hampshire poets seek a name, It matters not if Knight or Dame, A hayseed or a city dwellah, To fill the vacant throne's the aim. Please help them find their Cinderella That poetess or poet fellah Think – who could be the Laureate? Now mail that choice to Pat Frisella*. *Pat Frisella is the President of New Hampshire Poetry Society. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: The Barden of England Date: 05 Sep 03 - 03:48 AM I had a tune going round in my head, and these words sort of 'popped' out. I think they work as a poem too, which isn't always so with words from songs. WHY? © John Barden 1999 Why worry 'bout tomorrow, when tomorrow never comes? Why fill yourself with sorrow, when joy within you runs? Softly, slowly, listen hard you'll find. Deep down, in there, an inner peace of mind. So don't be blind Why talk of all this fighting, when it always leads to war? So many wrongs need righting, tell me what they do that for? Can't they, just see, it's all a waste of life. Each one precious to a mother, father, wife. And child of strife. Why fill our air with gasses, when it's none that we can breathe? Why impoverish the masses, when they're just the ones we need? Give of yourself, compassion is a start. Soon you'll notice, the world of which you're a part. Cross my heart. Why is our planet dying, when it's all been done for greed? Why are politicians lying, when the simply is no need? Just once, maybe, they'll think of you and me. No self interest, just let the people be. Well - wait and see. Why worry 'bout tomorrow, when tomorrow never comes? Why fill yourself with sorrow, when joy within you runs? Softly, slowly, listen hard you'll find. Deep down, in there, an inner peace of mind. So don't be blind |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Sep 03 - 09:48 AM Well! those are both mighty fine verses. Guest, your tale on New Hampshire is especially funny and well-built. John. I really like the song. Love to hear it. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jack Lewin Date: 05 Sep 03 - 11:54 AM Ode to Pete and Jack On every farm not long ago You had to have a team To turn the sod, to haul the hay To realize your dreams Pete and Jack, you did just that! That and so much more You hauled the wood that fed the fires You worked hard every day If you didn't do what you did so well We wouldn't be here today With power and grace and steady of pace The future rested on your backs' So raise your glases and offer a toast To the memory of Pete and Jack! Cheers jl |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: The Barden of England Date: 10 Sep 03 - 02:33 AM Amos You can hear the first part of 'Why?' at the following URL:- http://www.folknet.co.uk/johnbarden/sounds.htm . There are 1 minute samples from some of my other songs there too. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 10 Sep 03 - 11:05 AM ObSongs: I wrote this in 1953; it was published in my high school's magazine. The tune that inspired it was that of "Golden Vanity". An Argument About That Which is Holy But a ghost begets love And love begets curiosity And curiosity begets light And light kills ghosts. "Once you learn a song, it is dead: A song out of the darkness attracts you; It is soft and beautiful: It is an angel or a ghost Floating free. But you love it And catch it somewhere else, Get a good look, Write it down, Learn it, sing it, Chain it to a piece of paper and a brain, Enslave it, make it do your bidding, And it seems to pine away and die in chains." "But this is all wrong! Not red-blooded -- Ghosts are killed by their descendants; they are cannibal; Not fit; they'll die out: Facts and fun live on, and that is good; That is the way to look at it: Dying men leave ghosts, but dying ghosts Leave better things behind: Sing your song loudly -- give the spirits blood!" |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 23 Dec 03 - 02:26 PM Choosing green colors, braver souls Forswear the blues, Discard the grays, Pursue fire in the form, and Demand life or nothing. These are the hearts -- bright blooms on the screen of the soul, detected like nuclear tests, The signature, unmistakeable, of souls unwilling to die and Choosing greens for all nows... Fired in the bone, brightened in eye These are the ones who see and Who have learned the name of freedom Is saying what you have seen, just Part of the package, one Well worth defending. If hearts can go out, these Always do, and mine As part of this amazing light-webbed world Goes, so, to you. This is the web that births song -- The one the birds in morning fly to -- How is it, when I approach its center, I see you,smiling? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Peg Date: 23 Dec 03 - 02:40 PM ooh! Amos, nice one! I a very curious as to what it's about... I will share one I wrote about a month ago... Transplendent We It's deceptive, this light at Hallows. A mask of wind and water, spinning, sparkling, like silver spokes, or falling leaves, or candy floss, or false conviviality, too-fast friends. As the river curves to meet us, we shamble along, soaked with mist, parched for ale, like troubadours, or troubled ghosts, on our way to a midnight market, there to choose cakes and berries from the goblin stalls, in the shadow of forbidden castles and glowing maples, the walkways bright as coins beneath our feet. Here where the sloping banks converge, the trees lean in, as if to kiss, thorned and black on the right, airy and golden on the left, Bacchus, Hecate, Apollo, Aphrodite, nuzzling, glancing approval as we invent words to mark this season of harvest. No yellow moon, no sheaves of wheat, no bawdy lyric, but ploughshares swinging, hoofed beasts clocking over wet grey streets to sleep in tranquil barns. The red blush creeping up your throat surprises us all, like brazen hollyhocks that suddenly realize they've reached the second floor. Dizzy with drink and drunk on autumn's ether, we find the otherworld we've sought all evening. Its hollow hills ring, empty as dessicated bulbs, yet bright with color, flowing with nectar, its great halls lit with rustic lanterns, candles set in carved-out turnips, meant to keep spirits at bay, and yet soon the very air is keening. The sky is slowly tinted green. Our tongues are slippery with juice. The clock strikes three, three times, and we are younger than we were. I started to like you, your small hands like Proustian sweets. I started to like you, you and your words like dark abundant rain, poppyseeds poured out on cobblestones. Simple folk we, laughing long songs like books of fruited verse. There where the cats consider the canal, the moon at last emerges, and we become more and more unfashionable by the minute. I conjure a forest from a single tree: like ardent sloths, we hold fast to its mutant trunk, hard, rough, pulsing with faint heat. It multiplies into a fairy-tale wood, varied as Paradise, thick with English bluebells and rhetorical mushrooms; it smells of sex and stagnant water, hashish, leafmold, bile and burnt sugar, rotting velvet, and tobacco that ought to be Turkish. We could be anywhere: a Holland of the Mind, or drowned Ys, forgotten Brittany, a temple of jewels in Morocco, a chalk hillside hewn by pagan muralists, a green field in America, a Danish bog stuffed with dead druids, Constantinople, Brigadoon, or a fragrant churchyard that beckons in dreams, like mementos from a love lost in war-time, coal-dust in your hair, violets in your pocket. The veil between the worlds is thin, they say, tonight. And if we walk now to the marketplace (we fancy it built of fog and fireflies) the goblins will smile, cry hail and welcome! They nod their heads, stroke our hair, grasp our fingers, whisper, yes, the veil grows thin, grows thin. They hand us three lengths of shimmering cloth, dyed the colour of winter plums, smelling of old roses. We give them all the gold we have. We wrap ourselves in purple. We wake, and seven days have passed, or seven years. Our fingers are torn, stained red with fruit. Our lips are bruised, and taste of truth. I touch your mouth, and it is the sun. Leiden, Samhain, 2003 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Raedwulf Date: 24 Dec 03 - 05:08 PM 90% perspiration, 10% inspiration? More like 1% inspiration, 99% blind panic! My medieval society holds a Gorsedd (song, poetry or story) every Autumn. I made the mistake of winning it in 2001 (with a story). This granted me the dubious privilege of opening the Gorsedd in 2002. I rarely poet, being (like Kipling, a writer I much admire) a storyteller & wordsmith, rather than a genuine po! ;) Nevertheless, for a cause that will never be adequately explained, I just had to write a poem... I sat under an Avebury stone (I wish I could claim some poetic inspiration from this, but no, I have the sensitivity of a brick...) on Friday afternoon desperately scribbling that which would be performed the following evening, trying to capture the essence of the competition that would follow my Intro piece... It seemed to work... :) I AMI am the laughter in the voice The sparkle in the eyes The sorrow in the heart I am the darkness at the core I am the words that stir your soul And the melody that lifts your heart I am the ache of empty loneliness And the strength that carries to the end I am a candle, a bowl, a mysterious stranger The cry of gulls, a stout companion, I am a silken thread I am the raven, the lion, the broken word The tattered rags, a forest's gloom, and the warming welcoming fire I am the silent footfall that pursues The unexpected cracking twig The eyes that glitter in the night The howling carried on the wind… I am the shining sun, the driving rain The boundless joy, the endless pain I am the snowy blanket, the wind in the hair I am the chill of death, & the life that dares… I am madness and reason, both in one The axe that severs bone from bone I am the cunning and guile that steals as it please I am the love that cleaves close, and the love that frees Can you guess my name? This I doubt For I am every thing, I am no thing I am the song, I am the story I am the Gorsedd I am begun… |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Dec 03 - 06:20 PM Pretty work, Raedwolf!! Peg -- breathtaking images and overtones. Love it!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joybell Date: 24 Dec 03 - 08:06 PM Paddy was a little boy who was a Changling - (in modern terms a brain-damaged human child) He loved old fashioned stories and songs. "Undies" was the funniest word he knew, but it wouldn't fit into this poem. One day he wandered into the Australian bush and was never found. PADDY'S SONG Come away with me my Faerie-child Away from the tears and pain Come away my Changling, Faerie-child Back to your home again. You shall wear, on your golden curls A shining, jewelled crown Your shirt shall be of the finest silk Your cloak of the feather-down. A sleek grey hound I'll give to you And a hawk with a sad, sweet cry And you shall ride a Faerie steed Into the sunset sky. Silver-shod his hoofs shall be And gaily you shall ride A saddle hung with silver bells A sword hung by your side. By day we'll sleep 'neath the mossy bank On a bed of the Wildwood flowers And you must not heed the mortal ones Who call through the sunshine hours. And we shall rise in the green twilight With a warm wind in our hair And ride away to the Rainbow bridge And cross in the evening air. So come away my Faerie-child Away from your Earth-bound pain Come away my Faerie Changling child Back to your home again. Paddy's friend Joy |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 24 Dec 03 - 10:52 PM Joy and Raedwolf, well done! I really like the way those read aloud. The imagery in all recent postings is just wonderful. Thanks to all for sharing! kat |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: beardedbruce Date: 25 Dec 03 - 11:55 AM Sonnet 24/12/03 DCCCLXIX Shall I light candles, thinking of my muse, And the bright warmth that her smile gives to dawn? Or should I incense burn, to let smoke choose The future path to which my heart is drawn? Shall I in solemn ceremony chant A listing of desires, to offer wine To wash away my fears? My efforts can't Give absolution for dream she'd be mine. Shall I in isolation inward turn, To look upon forever, and abyss? Is faith the answer, that my heart will learn If I might find true heaven in her kiss? I offer prayer to muse, that she might send Enough of heart's desire to my soul mend. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,sandy creek Date: 26 Dec 03 - 10:20 AM dancing in the dark (growing up) the boys hold up the wall shuffling feet in heat afraid they will fall if they step away... the girls are all chatter and clatter of bangles and beads and full of needs of young women coming of age... post mortem(vietnam) we felt much better when the bad people died we laughed when the old women cried it felt real good when i killed him i shot him in the head i held him by his hair and shook him as he bled and laid on his bed and sang death chants with his children |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Bearheart Date: 28 Dec 03 - 02:45 PM Thanks all, I haven't even been able to read all of it, so many good words. Little here has left me untouched-- but thanks especially to Peg and Deda for their contributions... and to Amos for the idea. I'll be back for more. Bekki |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 28 Dec 03 - 07:38 PM Through the years, we've grown used to the truth-telling boor, so rejoice in the yeast and its white lies on beer -- in the bubble-borne boost to the bedlam where you're a contented old beast in a Happy New Year. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Tang the Orangutan Date: 29 Jan 04 - 01:05 AM Ode To Lice White and brown Crawling on many legs In the reddish brown jungle Of my body hair Communing with the fleas Creating itches everywhere Food for my empty belly You crawl around me Hiding amongst the mats Of my soft long hair Sucking my blood Feeding your young As I hunt for you To eat you A vicious circle. TTO |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Teresa Date: 29 Jan 04 - 01:41 AM Thank you, Amos! How inspiring all you 'catters are; beautiful poems here! The Ocean Here is a water droplet Aware of an ocean; So near, so near ... Where is it? It can be heard; It can be felt; But as soon as it's grasped, It can't be held. It pours; It seeps; It is everywhere. The drop of water Is at first afraid Not to know where it ends And the ocean begins ... "Where is the ocean?" it wants to know. The ocean carries the droplet The ocean is made up of this And many others. The drop of water Forgets itself And suddenly There is only the ocean Made up of everything the drop of water is And much, much, much more! (12-31-01 [And now, for something completely different ... ] There once was a man of our time Who tried his best to rhyme. He thought and he thought, His brain in a knot, But all he could do was write nonsequiturs. (11-05-03) [sorry, couldn't resist; running away fast now ;) ] Teresa |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Jan 04 - 04:55 AM LOL! You're welcome/! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Cuilionn Date: 29 Jan 04 - 09:22 AM Och, ye're aye a glorious bunch o wairdsmiths! But yir wee lassie's back tae test yir Scots-readin skills, sae Ah'm postin a "warm up exercise" (on mair than ane level) for ye tae peruse... Ah postit this ane elsewhaur, twa days back, but Ah've tweakit the wairds a bit syne. Tis basit on the auld Celtic kythin that Winter cam when the Crone hardenit the yirth wi her sillar (silver) hammer, an Spring cam when the Maiden (aiblins Bridgit) cam thro, wavin her white wand tae saften the yirth aince mair. IMBOLCTIDE When yon Auld Grannie gyres an gimps an unco dance on cranreuch groond an gies her sillar curls a crimp, Ye ken that Imbolc's comin roond. When sillar hammers, blaw for blaw fa habber-haird in hinmaist hone then haud ye fast, for soon the thaw will prize awa cauld winter's loan. Nae lang she'll lanesame bide, nor sup Wi'oot the dochter she lo'es best; Nae grannie redds the kailyaird up But for the thocht o some comin guest! Nae mair the lanesame anvil-drum Will mark the pace o Grannie's dance-- The Lass o the Lintin Wand shall come An lowpin lambies hae their chaunce-- For Grannie Cailleach's time grows short An wee snaw-drappies rowthie ring for Bridgit cams, blithe hope tae sport An after Bridgit cams-- the Spring! Glossary: unco=strange, cranreuch=frosty, ken=know, Imbolc=Celtic Feast/source of Groundhog's Day, blaw=blow, fa=fall, habber=stutter, hinmaist=last, haud=hold, prize=pry, awa=away, wi'oot=without, dochter=daughter, redds the kailyaird up=cleans the place, thocht=thought, comin=coming, Lintin Wand=glinting wand of Bridgit, lowpin=leaping, chaunce=chance, Cailleach=crone/Celtic Earth-Goddess, snaw-drappies=snowdrops, rowthie=abundantly, cams=comes, blithe=joyous --Yir vairsifyin lass, Cuilionn |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: johnfitz.com Date: 29 Jan 04 - 12:06 PM Coming home from a job in an orchard in New Salem MA I go tmy car stuck next to one of those innumerous family graveyards scattered throughout New England Joshua Sawyer I doubt I'd ever have taken this road had I known how fallen it really was to disrepair: driving comically, skirting ruts and high boulders, grimacing at every bang on the oil pan. I tell you it's the old road to Wendell — that they don't make them like this anymore. We're bound by curious obligations, and so stop by an old family plot walled in by piles of jumbled fieldstone, cornered to the edge of what once was field. The picket gateway still stands intact, somebody propped up leaning on a stick, an anonymous gesture of reverence. Only nature disrespects: toppling stone, bursting with suckers and wild raggedness. A gravestone, schist of worn slate, leans weathered: Joshua Sawyer Died Here 1860 Another stone, cracked, has fallen over. I reset the stone, and scrape the caked earth as if studying some split tortoise shell, and have keyed in to a distant birth — His wife Ruth died young; so I picture him stern with his only daughter, only child — speaking for a faith which could defy her. There'd be no passing onto when she died — twenty-two, more words beside her mother. Still these stones and fields you kept in order, long days spent forcing sharp turns on nature, accepting the loose stone and thin topsoil. A Wendell neighbor must have buried you whispering a eulogy which is as lost as your daughter, your wife, and this farm: 'Joshua Sawyer I've never been down this road before I would like to speak with you of faith. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,mudcat haikuist Date: 29 Jan 04 - 01:23 PM I fart, cheeks vibrate people gag, choke, retch and puke. My shit doesn't stink. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: johnfitz.com Date: 29 Jan 04 - 03:36 PM Coming home from a job in an orchard in New Salem MA I go tmy car stuck next to one of those innumerous family graveyards scattered throughout New England Joshua Sawyer I doubt I'd ever have taken this road had I known how fallen it really was to disrepair: driving comically, skirting ruts and high boulders, grimacing at every bang on the oil pan. I tell you it's the old road to Wendell — that they don't make them like this anymore. We're bound by curious obligations, and so stop by an old family plot walled in by piles of jumbled fieldstone, cornered to the edge of what once was field. The picket gateway still stands intact, somebody propped up leaning on a stick, an anonymous gesture of reverence. Only nature disrespects: toppling stone, bursting with suckers and wild raggedness. A gravestone, schist of worn slate, leans weathered: Joshua Sawyer Died Here 1860 Another stone, cracked, has fallen over. I reset the stone, and scrape the caked earth as if studying some split tortoise shell, and have keyed in to a distant birth — His wife Ruth died young; so I picture him stern with his only daughter, only child — speaking for a faith which could defy her. There'd be no passing onto when she died — twenty-two, more words beside her mother. Still these stones and fields you kept in order, long days spent forcing sharp turns on nature, accepting the loose stone and thin topsoil. A Wendell neighbor must have buried you whispering a eulogy which is as lost as your daughter, your wife, and this farm: 'Joshua Sawyer I've never been down this road before I would like to speak with you of faith. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Megan L Date: 30 Jan 04 - 03:26 PM Farewell My Son I waved to you my son My chef's whites gleaming as proudly as my smile I nudged my apprentice "That's my boy" And as we watched you across the water My heart was filled with joy. At ships rail and on shore we did wave We weren't to know that sunny day That within the cycle of the sun Our war would start and end And one of us would have a sailor's grave. The great liner sailed on On shore the mighty shipyards thundered 453 growing daily with honest toil Rivets flying, hammers ringing, little knowing For one of us the war would soon be done. And on the liner, ladies danced sequinned gowned Men black as hell fed hungry fires Diamonds of sweat their only adornment A gong calling passengers to dinner Soon all would be drowned. Death stalked round Eire's shore Silent streak towards the mighty hull Ripping into her side, tearing at her life Explosive sound, screams of trapped and dying Stench of burning flesh. She is no more. Still the shipyards thunder on 453 a silent shadow now waiting in the wings The unborn ghost of Liners yet to come Waiting till men may safely sail round Erie's shore She will not go where I have gone Farewell my son ...... .... .... My father and his apprentice stood at the edge of the Clyde and waved farewell to his apprentices father who was a cook on the Athena (think I've remembered the name) that was the last time the boy ever saw his father. Megan L |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Megan L Date: 30 Jan 04 - 03:41 PM Wasn't sure I got the name right so checked his writing, she was the Athenia. found this report of her sinking. Athenia was the first British ship sunk by a German U-boat in World War II. Germany had invaded Poland on September 1 and Britain declared war on Germany at 1115 on September 3, shortly after Athenia sailed from Glasgow en route to Montreal with 1,100 passengers embarked, more than 300 of whom were American citizens. That afternoon she was spotted by U-30 about 250 miles northwest of Inishtrahull, Northern Ireland. Although German U-boats were supposed to be operating under prize regulations that obliged them to stop and search any potential targets, Lieutenant Fritz-Julius Lemp decided Athenia was an armed merchant cruiser and fired two torpedoes without warning. The ship sank with the loss of 112 passengers and crew, but despite the fact that among these were 28 Americans, within hours, President Franklin D. Roosevelt had announced that his government was preparing "a declaration of American neutrality." |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: John Hardly Date: 01 Feb 04 - 09:18 PM Tonight...I'll sing you to sleep for the first time knowing We'll be sharing this space for a while. I'll sing and play and you'll do the growing. Hey, can you feel it when I smile? And I'll hold you against my rosewood guitar While I sing from my newly blessed soul And you'll have the best seat in the house by far. My heart, my life, this sound---so full. So I'll sing the high notes (a nice way to start) This guitar will fill in the low, Between you, and me, and this guitar, Tonight...I'll sing to you this lulla-hello I just had a funny thought. If some day you should learn to play the guitar like me, And you press your ear against its top as you play, like all guitar players do… Will you suddenly remember this time together? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jeri Date: 01 Feb 04 - 10:08 PM There is some REALLY good stuff in this thread! Inspired by watching videos of some of those 'good time boys' with a good friend, and a long conversation I'd once had with a man who'd occasionally played with Bob Wills. This may turn out to be a song... I dunno. He sat there in the corner Staring miles beyond the stage A sepia tinted image In this electric neon age I bought us a round and said "Friend, There's a story in your eyes." He said "I used to play up there, But how the time it flies, All the good-time boys are gone away One by one they disappeared Like some old photograph Much handled and dog-eared I guess there was too much light And it caused the world to fade And I lived in the shadows So I'm the one who stayed I don't recall the details Of days now past and gone But I remember lighter laughter I remember louder song Maybe I felt safer To travel on my own But now the landscape's foriegn And this world is not my home When I laugh now, my eyes feel cold I laugh because I should I see shadows in the spotlights Where once, giants stood Some of them were strangers Some of them were friends Who set out upon the road that starts Where the horizon ends Sometimes I hear an echo In this empty place Of a song they used to sing Or I recall a face Sometimes memory gets lost In rude insistant noise But oh, how I miss Those good-time boys" |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 01 Feb 04 - 10:22 PM Jeri, that's gotta turn into a song! Well done, womon! Cuillion, I've been getting rusty in my reading, thansk for the practise! Johnfitz, I've been to so many graveyards in New England, much as you describe. Quite beautiful, thanks for sharing! Megan, that is fascinating and really poignant. Thanks! kat |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: The Barden of England Date: 02 Feb 04 - 04:14 AM NAIVIGATOR Copyright John Barden 2001 Imagine youself a jellyfish, pumping away in clear blue forever oceans Never knowing where you're coming from, nor where you're going to, But navigate you do, Vasco da Gama in living goo. Spanning oceans glittering wide, the vast organic great divide, Spinning, casting tentacles, of paralysing manacles. Going nowhere with no great purpose, returning with even less, A larger, stronger gelatinous mess. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Dave Bryant Date: 02 Feb 04 - 09:35 AM Simon (Harlowpoet) seems to be conspicuous by his absence. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: harlowpoet Date: 15 Feb 04 - 05:23 AM OK Dave. I'm here now Last night With Mary How did it go Last night with Mary? And so, I told them Hoary and hairy Finding and fumbling Tossing and tumbling Panting and puffing Writhing and roughing Tying and trying Sobbing and sighing Seeking and shrieking Perking and peaking Fawning and facing Calling and chasing Hiding and hoping Going and groping Crawling and clashing Sweating and smashing Squashing and squealing Rockin'and reeling And feeling regrets That's how it gets Catching the cat To take to the vets! (c)SimonVogel |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Feb 04 - 09:30 AM N ice piece o'work, Simon!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jack Lewin Date: 24 Feb 04 - 01:13 PM To See What Those Eyes Have Seen I took a walk down the the park in our town To watch the parade go by With their medals and barets, this was our day To honor them and those who have died. The flags were waving, the pipes were playing And as they made their way past me I Stood there and stared and wondered what it was like To have seen what those eyes have seen. Did those eyes see a friend die in his arms His body twisting and writhing in pain. Did those eyes see things that he'd pray to god He will never have to see again. Every day there was a constant struggle To follow orders and try to survive And after all that they still think they're lucky Because they came home alive. Did those eyes have the eyes of another man In his sights as a battle began Knowing full well it's him or it's me as he squeezed off the trigger again. After all of these years he can still see his face He can still hear the shot and his cries. Innocence lost in a fight to the death That will haunt him til the day he dies. So as the crowd gathered around and they laid the wreaths down The band played songs in the rain And then for a moment the brohters in arms Were reporting for duty again. The the band grew quiet and we all bowed our heads And the last post was all you could hear Then I thought why don't we honor our heroes More than one day a year!! Cheers Jack Lewin |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Blackcatter Date: 24 May 04 - 12:29 PM Refresh |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 24 May 04 - 01:28 PM The Banks of the Far Missouri While you grappled with budgets balancing numbers, battling bureaucratic banality Thumbing through ledgers in a stifling room Did you look out to the river placid, seemingly endless But not to you... You had traced the path of the water to its rocky root stood astride and drank of it Those days of pain, fear, awe, mystery, transcendence Marked the crest of your life's wave Boon companions, grace of savage tribes Rustle of abalone shells, shrill of eagle whistle Meat roasted like a sacrifice in the sacred circle All this lay across the shining mountains and years away The long path twisted back on itself at last leaving your body wounded in the dust of Tennessee freeing your soul at last to haunt the banks of the far Missouri |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 24 May 04 - 01:38 PM The Witness. How delicately each flake of snow falls, Silently landing on it's own carpet. Swelling the ground relentlessly, With drifts that ever cover walls. How carefully the man next door treads, As he de-ices and prepares his car. He could use his legs to get to work, It's not far. Steadily he reverses from his drive, Out onto the big main road. On the ice a lorry skids to avoid him, And spills its load. The man next door is just oblivious, To the carnage he's caused today. He puts his car in forward gear. And drives away. Georgiansilver (2002) Be Blessed. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 May 04 - 01:39 PM Aw, sweet fucking Jesus. LEJ, you put us all to shyme!! Effin' byootiful, man. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Old Doc Date: 25 May 04 - 04:16 AM I recently heard a very charming song on the radio and can not seem to find out the title or artist. It is done by a male quartet with a female lead with an intrumental break. Some of the lyrics are: "You don't have to play my request, but I hope that you'll do your best. I've been listening to your show on the radio and you seem like a friend to me." Hope someone out there recognises this gem. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: beardedbruce Date: 26 May 04 - 03:34 PM refresh |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: s&r Date: 27 May 04 - 06:17 AM Some folk would say I live by rote Most of my day a golden nugget here and there along the way Along the way A stranger's smile as if to say A friendly 'Hi' A little care can make my day Can make my day Become a song a tune to play a major seventh soft and clear No price to pay No price to pay the smile was free It made my day it wasn't much they didn't care Some folk might say |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: maisienan Date: 27 May 04 - 08:15 AM Here's one about my tangled love-life - I'm a taurus woman married to an aquarian - never an easy option - and this poem is for a lovely leo guy I met on Mayday |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: maisienan Date: 27 May 04 - 08:36 AM Woodsmoke I am the earth He is the sky Ever distant and aloof No matter how high my mountain It will never be part of him No matter how bright his stars They will ever look down Coldly glinting Too long I longed for his love No longer But you You are the fire and I am the forest Be careful For the smell of woodsmoke so enchants me If I feed you my debris, my deadwood We may enhance each other Gypsies dancing in the clearing But cling to me and you consume me Possess me and you destroy me The morning shows blackened stumps Grey ashes Somewhere, somewhere There is a man of water A lake at the mountain's foot A river through the forest flowing A sea around my shore And when the rain falls He will surely come |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Micca Date: 27 May 04 - 10:54 AM Senses The senses feed us information ephemeral and brief enters for a short time Then exits like a thief a rose with dewdrops A hovering kestrel A kitten playing Your lover asleep fresh baked bread Spring flowers Crushed Basil A loved body velvet Skin A climbing rope A cold beer garlic Chilled Chablis sea on the wind Fresh pesto cats footsteps baby sleeping owl hoot lovers groan of pleasure the senses, like poems feed us in bursts each glimpse bite or sniff complete in itself but part of a whole picture |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 May 04 - 11:11 AM That is a rich piece, Micca! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Macha Date: 27 May 04 - 05:42 PM My life is a thin thread I spin the thread around my fingers Winding, winding Snap - me |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Jul 04 - 06:19 PM I am constantly being surprised at the insights and skills and art that appears on this thread. Many thanks. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Deda Date: 24 Jul 04 - 05:28 PM I was in a car accident on June 13, forced off the road by an SUV that didn't see me, didn't slow down. Here's a poem. Missing my forehead Car having struck cement embankment, Head having struck steering wheel, Pushing myself back to sitting up: Rear-view mirror reflects, just above my eyebrows, A streak of white skull, and bright red borders. Faces of strangers show ÒOh God! Oh my God!Ó But they say, ÒHold still. How old are you? What is your name? This your nurse.Ó ÒWhat is your name?Ó I ask them all, each face. Each face too strong, too polite, too willed, too busy To say, ÒOh my God.Ó ********************* Now my forehead shows a well-stitched line, Defined, of a certain shape, unexpected, Hard to gaze upon Ð Hard to see reflected In the gazes I see. I remember my brow as nothing, a blank space. Not now. I close my eyes to see it. From here it seems A buzzing, red line of itch and burn. It is new. It will fade, soften. It will not vanish. This is my face now. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 24 Jul 04 - 06:13 PM Summer When home the truck comes high with hay, And divers splash and sunlight dapples, And loud black clouds relieve the day, And chickens peck at sour apples, And fans drown out the drowsy word, Then nightly sings the mockingbird In every mode at disk and dawn, While sweaty Gabriel mows the lawn. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jul 04 - 06:17 PM Beautiful job, Deda!! Wow!! Stunning -- in every sense of the word. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jul 04 - 06:39 PM Great imagery, Joe_F! Reminds me of Kendall singing Dave Mallett's tune on haying, "Make Hay While the Sun Shines". |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jul 04 - 09:28 PM Liquid OrigamiWe believe we know, each seeing Who folded these deep seams and lines In the very fabric we are. The rivers of our times flow through The spaces so folded; minds And heart's panic scorch the seams To feel the hands on the axis Bringing the deep existnece in To the lines adored and forming Believing, we know Where the folds are made. To become the river-driver Answers the fury Of the plain sheet of beginnings. Riding the river steals your days; Reading the folding leads Beyond the eternal belief--so we know. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jul 04 - 09:36 PM Heart's Places(For Red Warren) I. The man said it all well. As young sunlight and old granite, he was there, Telling stories of the world. You could feel The worlds unfolding, taste the weather and strain, the laughing, the passions, see the long hard marches in his words. He would lean to the children's call, and answer their wishes with worlds in the giving. As the early sun and the ripe granite do, he gave and gave. Tell me. II. Great spirits make great faces, colored and living. They are the far reachers. They make world spaces, Founded in fires and in clay, sung in high tempests Where the hot light flashes, iced where the need for ice is, So great spirits form the world. More than the season's passing Marks their time. Imagine... III. Red drums over long rivers, black drumming cities White singing praises, red blood on old sabers Deep hearts full, iced lakes and hot harvesting The long highways and the gentle furrows made. Here is the red man's answer, there are hawks calling. Here is the black man's sigh, there the hard cut of steel. Here is hot horse muscle and hoofs on the dirt hills, There the town of the dull, the wicked, the cross tongued. The tire's scream, and the deep cave's silent wait, all in one land. IV. Dry pages, running tears and deep frozen glens -- these things Are one in the heart. Sad dogs and laughing glory, wines and the open seas, one. Worlds in the giving, Children can hear him answering: wishes answered with color, living men, strong faces, bright laughing reason. A far reaching hand shows them: the heart is more than its seasons. Here is a great spirit making great spaces, and there he is still, Only ask again, and he will start. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 24 Jul 04 - 11:17 PM WhoooHooo! I been Published for the first time!!!! QUOTE Hallo Robin, This is to let you know that your poem "Gather Ye Pigeons While Ye May" has been published on the Albion Magazine Online website in the Diversions section of the Summer 2004 edition. Many thanks for your contribution; I really appreciate it. Cheers, Isabel UNQUOTE Robin |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jul 04 - 01:03 AM Congratulations, Robin Goodfellow! Let me add that the PLURAL of do (3rd person) is "do". "Doth" is singular only. I would fix that were I you. Best regards, A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Rasener Date: 25 Jul 04 - 05:21 AM Got up this morning and decided to put my thoughts into verse about the events related to changing venue at Market Rasen Folk Club. Never done this before so please excuse me if it not very good. The Market Rasen Folk Club Blues One day I had a dream To start a folk club I did beam I went along to the social club Who said luvely jubbly, just the job So we got started back in March With much hard work and the occasional fart The singers got quickly to their task Much more from them I couldn't ask It became apparent very soon These artists sang a lovely tune People came from near and far As the club pulled in the money over the bar Everybody seemed very happy Until this little chappy Who rose up from the committee And said hang on here we want a bigger fee Now the organiser said get stuffed The committee they were not chuffed They gave our Les a red card Which he thought was rather hard These little scheming money makers With brains no bigger than a shred of paper Would not back down on the price And thought our Les was in a vice But with sleeves rolled up and a big determination Our Les set about finding a new location This proved very difficult and hard to find It was becoming such a bind Then all of a sudden when out of the blue He found a village hall that would do The people there are very nice They have a bar with drinks at an affordable price This place is called Walesby Village Hall Where a big welcome will be there for all So come on down you have a choice To come and sing with good cheer and voice So here's a warning to all those money makers Who want to screw the folk club scene shakers If you can't see the business sense and get smart Stick your business up your arse Cheers Les |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jul 04 - 12:28 PM Dances in Silence(for Nancy) You are the dance that has no words and rises In the spring's own flood to the wind and rain That sweeps the silence into the noise-worn bone And raises the laughing of hearts again. Only there do none dance alone. The hard breath and wild limbs' sway tells All the story, and the soul's devises Rising with the time of far and endless bells. San Diego February 21, 2003 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Deda Date: 28 Jul 04 - 09:42 PM Amos, I thought I had posted an answer to this a few days ago, but it didn't arrive. Thanks for your kind words about the forehead poem. I have always loved your poem about Red, which seems quite different here than I remember it -- has it been revised? And I love the very idea of "liquid origami", which evokes the movement of water, like the currents in a river, folding into, over and below one another. "Nancy" is also lovely! Congrats to Foolestroupe on getting into print! Bravo. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 28 Jul 04 - 09:59 PM There's a different one called "Jack's People" which you may have in mind, Deda. Thanks for the kind words -- people like you keep the spark alive, for better or for worse!!! Next time you come to town you can meet Nancy. Love, Bro |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 06 Oct 04 - 01:29 PM I am sure there is more and better stuff out there, fellow folkies! I dunno about better but here's one of the more germane to the singers: ScrapsA song well writ, each tone in place, An' harmony's approval marked upon The temple's face. Rancor was gone, And envy. Desperation too Had been dispelled by grace, Found in the heart's deeper numbers right, Dug out dark ciphered clay, unleashing light, Replacing what was lost with what was true. A song well writ, the singer and the sung-to, You. # # # |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Bonnie Buck Bonbuck@cheqnet.net Date: 25 Oct 04 - 09:17 AM Dear Mudcat I am sure i know you from another program. We are friends did you ever publish your cookbook? I would truly be honored to have some of my poetry viewed on your site. Please notify me via email if that is okay with you Thanks Bonnie Buck |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Oct 04 - 12:34 PM I emailed Miss Buck and suggested she join and post freely. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Chris Green Date: 25 Oct 04 - 12:37 PM A haiku my father wrote: Happiness Is waking up on Monday To find that it's Saturday. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Wilfried Schaum Date: 26 Oct 04 - 09:00 AM MESSAGE to Kurt Vonnegut, Jr Infantryman, Scout, POW in Germany Listen So it goes An on and on Imagine that! Peace |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: UncleToad Date: 26 Oct 04 - 09:38 AM Snow Men I wonder where they live these men of darkness with nothing to give save a smile and a wave. Flying their rags like ceremonial flags. Where do they go when the snows fly thin rolling and blowing with the harshness of the harsh winter wind. I wonder if they die and are replaced by other men when springtime rushes in... Or do they simply bend and fold themselves into the blackening night and wait in stoned silence for the coming of the light... ...please help homeless veterans. Thanks to all...UncleToad |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 26 Oct 04 - 10:37 AM Wow!! Again awed by your words. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,H.B. Carlisle Date: 26 Oct 04 - 09:14 PM Hey there, you, walkin' all alone, It's me talking to ya, me, the stone! Why don't you haul off an' give me a boot? I've spent 10 years beside this root. I come into town on a gravel truck, They unloaded me here and here I'm stuck. The guy on my right is old Gravel Gus, He got stuck in the tread of a Greyhound Bus, Spent 15 years out on the road! Woulda' been there yet, but the bus got towed, An' he flew out and he landed here, Now all his travel tales I gotta hear. Guy on my left is Old Man Slate, Kid skimmed him across the lake, He made 15 skips far and wide, And fell in the grass on the other side--- Say, you look sorta drunk the way you walk, And you know durn well us stones can't talk! H.B. Carlisle |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Eddie O'Hara Date: 28 Oct 04 - 05:19 PM A poem I wrote for fun! Stan McCann's Dinner Stan McCann A thinking young man Thought, "Hot sardines are better!" So, off he ran And bought a can Of sardines for his dinner Stan, heated the can In a frying pan Full of water and let it simmer Then, taking the can From the frying pan He opened it up for dinner On a chair sat Stan With fork and can Sprinkling his salt and pepper But, as he began To eat from the can He said, "Cold sardines are better!" Moral: What may seem best, is not always best, and sometimes it's hard to know what's better. Eddie O'Hara(c)2004 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: UncleToad Date: 28 Oct 04 - 07:39 PM Three pieces to ponder... I have long tried to go home but the doors are closed the windows will not open but still I keep on hoping that someday someone will let me in *************************** I was half way to the moon and I thought this is too damned cold my ship and my bones are too damned old I was half way to the sun and I thought this is too damned hot and like it as not the heat shield won't hold (goes back to "too damned old") *********************************** It seems as though we slipped along the way night after night day after day we colored within the lines kept our blinds half up and half down afraid we would drown if we wandered to close to the edge of the world such a lonely death separated from the rest of us we came for you but you had gone hope your new home is what you want it to be... Thankee kindly, UncleToad |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 29 Oct 04 - 01:19 AM The recent additions are great! Keep them coming, folks, and thanks for sharing! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: chris nightbird childs Date: 29 Oct 04 - 01:24 AM Welly, well... as long as we're doing this: No Revolution - All my loves lost & gained in the past couldn't make a bit of difference With their sayings and saviors, & etchings on the backs of a thousand notebooks Now it's all down to me Me, me, me, me No revolution No evolution It won't be reinstated like an American Dream What that might be to millions of unsuspecting people might not be that to you… You can have your white-picket fence, But how you get there is up to you & no one else. Although people are willing to live through you, will they be willing to die for you too? --------------------------------------- Wistful Time The Mayfair gathering outside Blossoming rose rises in the air Growing out of the cool ground Of the garden The cat's squirrel won't be caught today Too busy chasing its tail 'round the sitting room floor – I venture out for a quick smoke, And notice the glow of lights Witness the question of 'what?' A sickness? An end? It's strange how my life's just begun So young, so old I hope, I wonder, I wish them well… I flick the end into the air, And it rests on the cool ground It bounces away its last life – Walking back inside I whistle away a wistful time For senior citizens and squirrels thanks Cats... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 04 Nov 04 - 05:45 PM Last at Bat Handful of spit and dirt Cleats sunk in the crumbling earth He huffed a frosty breath of October air. The sinews still rippled in forearms As they did nineteen years past Knuckles white on the handle as the bat swung slowly in anticipation Uniform stretched tight across a spreading belly, and black hair frosted with gray pinch-hitter for a blasted hurler in the last inning of the last game of the year. Crowd applauds A few, remembering, stand in salute and the young pitcher wipes an upper lip wide-eyed shakes off the call nods to the sinker kicks and delivers The ball a specter in the batter's eyes, he swings and misses fastball knife in the shoulder muscle wincing hard as the catcher's mitt pops Stepping back Spits in the dust yanks shirt-front square He steps into the box again flexes aching shoulder as the bat repeats its slow threat Pitcher's arm drops the curve hangs then dodges his bat. On third base Schneider takes a lead The pitcher stares him down and the batter sees in split second the knuckleball grip before the glove conceals it He waits and it is thrown center-shot and numbers-high no spin the stitching motionless as it drops like a round stone in a dark quiet pool His shoulder screams at the contact the hickory electric in his hands which carry the handle through as the shattered wooden barrel skips down the third base line shortstop vaults in vain as the ball falls behind him like a dove shot from the sky He flings away the broken shaft halfway to first sees the baseman strain toward the expected throw shortstop scrambling lump of the bag beneath left toe snap of the baseman's mitt and the umpire calls safe As he turns back to first base he hears the sound of the crowd and feels the sweat cooling in his collar he draws deep breath and holds it in as if the very air were sweet with magic and he longed to keep it inside him for ever |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Jan 05 - 06:32 PM Queen of Dreams |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 23 Jan 05 - 09:33 PM From 1993, but still untarnished: The Monster That Cures the World The monster that cures the world Has no middle name and does not know His family tree past Grandmother, nor Does he care to. He cannot spell With high certainty and flounders In voicing his heart grammatically. Some say he is a traitor to the race Because he has only his lifetime to spend And turned away from history to face his dirty fellows Hearing and replying, hot and rough. Condemned by poets to repeat his past He does not mind, for any grade will serve As long as there are people in it And an occasional recess. The world that cured the monster Taught him that all faces Stand for hearts, and names Have something to them beyond the wind He had thought was breaking on rot Inside the many hard menhirs of the world — Useless except for mumblings and Sexless derivation. Between them they may discover The monster's middle name And the menhir's conscience. Then will A moonlit dance ensue WIldly accelerating where the stones Meet the heart and the heart makes Love to form. Such a dance will Trumpet endlessly across the moors and oceans Of our time. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Leadfingers Date: 23 Jan 05 - 10:59 PM On BBC Radio 4 - The Shortest poem in The English language ! 'FLEAS' Adam Had 'em Short and sweet like a roasted maggot !! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,blushing catter Date: 24 Jan 05 - 11:03 AM Held, safe and warm in your arms Protected from the world outside Took a long time for me to trust But you in your wisedom, were patient and waited And together we healed And together we cried And together we laughed And together we loved |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 28 Mar 05 - 09:54 AM SuperstitionA well -fed man farts. A crow leaps from a high tree, And flies over the neighborhood. All this must mean something! A. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 31 Mar 05 - 10:09 AM The wide plastered wall supports one spidered form A long-legs, venturing out on long-leg business. He startles the powers of the place, and does not much care. That is not his concern, but to step ahead boldly. One inch is life, centered on white yards of cold stone, And in that irreverent scuttle lies the gypsy secret. San Diego March 31, 2005 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Frankham Date: 31 Mar 05 - 11:52 AM Yeah, Sandy Creek. The Old Man! Fine stuff. Frank |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 31 Mar 05 - 01:14 PM Goody; I was just trying to figure out how to get at this thread to bring it back. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Leadfingers Date: 31 Mar 05 - 07:26 PM I think that I will never see a Billboard lovely as a tree And seldom can I ever Boast that I have the two hundredth Post |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 31 Mar 05 - 07:42 PM Saturday Night in Everett, Washington (from a slightly more innocent time, in July 1967, when they were called go go dancers, and they wore complete bikinis) Sharon's shaking that shapely frame again, Making goosebumps pop up on the skin, Making male minds meditate on sin, Quivering, shivering, stretching your mind thin, To the unintellectual, sensual, sexual din, Trembling, twitching, twisting you within, A graceful animal, molded in skin, Sharon's go - go - go dancing again. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Megan L Date: 04 Sep 05 - 02:32 PM GROWING Here I am again My hopes my dreams are shattered On my knees again Won't you help me now. And then the sun shines I turn my back I walk away from you. Here I am again My hopes my dreams are shattered On my knees again Won't you Please help me now. Won't I ever learn? You want me, to grow up To put away the toys of my life You want me, to grow up To come and be your bride Here I am again I've fallen, knees all bleeding I'm holding out again Please love me now Won't I ever learn You want me, to grow up To know you always love me You want me, to grow up To walk forever by your side. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Sep 05 - 05:20 PM Prayer for the Hummingbird |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Pistachio Date: 06 Sep 05 - 02:50 PM I've been amazed by the beautiful words enclosed on this thread and offer two little verses that 'came into my head' when I heard the sad news,and I've just realised Michael would have been 13 today :( For Michael - September 6th 1993 - November 20th 1994 There's one more star in the sky tonight Way up high shining so bright Shining down on his old home Telling his Mum he's not alone Telling his Dad, his brothers too 'Don't ever forget the life we knew Sharing laughter, joy and tears Don't forget me over the years' x x x x March 1996 It could have been the children in my son's class today Thankfully, tomorrow - they will all go out to play Sadly your tomorrows will never be the same Our hearts are breaking with yours We pray for you Dunblane. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Firecat Date: 06 Sep 05 - 03:44 PM I wrote this after hearing about yet more bombing in Iraq. Sorry if it's a bit depressing. The Silent One I am no one At night I walk through your world unseen Observing the fear and sadness you live in I am alone I am no one I hear the cries, the screams of the dying I look and pass on, I cannot assist I am helpless I am no one I see the death and destruction you face The blown apart walls and blood splattered floors I am afraid I am no one I have left your world unseen The news reports tell of my departure I am dead. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 06 Sep 05 - 11:37 PM The Kingfish The Kingfish is the only thing Lives in water black as this where the Dead lie still and the vapors kill like a spectre bridegroom's kiss Between the houses, laid like graves with their broken window eyes reflected Moon bends into lines as the Kingfish fin slides by Prowling bands of thieves give way to the feral dogs and cats where even serpents twist and die to feed the feasting rats Roaring flame erupting into a blistered sky drops hissing cinders in the inland sea beneath the Full Moon's bloodshot eye When the voices of the Slaughtered trump the voices of the Saved and the fingers point the Guilty out in the Home of the Free and the Slave When babies mouth on breasts of stone and die in their Mother's sweat and old ones turn their eyes within as politicians voice regret Beware the shape beneath the flood where the Kingfish sucks a breath Poison is his lifeblood as he feeds on Fear and Death And the Breaking of the Levy is the Tolling of the Bell that draws the Kingfish back to Earth from his Kingdom down in Hell |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 06 Sep 05 - 11:49 PM LEJ, Welcome back, man. We have surely missed you. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 06 Sep 05 - 11:54 PM Sorry I had to re-appear with that dark little rhyme, but it's been lurking in my brain since the Hurricane did its work. Thanks for giving me a place to take it, A. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jeri Date: 07 Sep 05 - 09:32 AM LEJ, I seem to remember something about you writing a book. When it's puublished, I hope you tell us. I'd like to read it very much. Between Breaths The world breathes in and grows full. Ripe with life and love and inspiration, it dances and shimmers and sings. It dreams of great things, And it holds its breath because it doesn't want to go back to the way it was But it does because it must -- Nothing can remain that full forever The world breathes out The stretched out skin of a once greater thing goes slack It now knows emptiness and regret Death rides the exhaled breath It ravages those left behind It takes and will never give back The answer to the question "what's next" doesn't matter to those who remain "What's next" for them is another day in a world without love or inspiration A world with an empty, used up skin and memories of fullness And memories of breathing in and trying to hold onto that rich air, and losing it. Those left behind want that one breath back, And so the world, for them, does not breathe, But waits... Not to take another breath, but to want to. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 23 Sep 05 - 11:10 PM On The Birth of Poet He stares down at the empty white spaces Bordered with light blue lines Armed with the weapon of his choice Black gel pen held in his writing hand, Ready to strike. He contemplates the laws of his kind. The laws of rhyme, metre, and verse, But he is a wild sort, Ready to blatantly disregard such edicts, The mandates set down by his forebears Centuries before. His hand darts forward, striking the blank page Packing the barren arena With tightly curved letters and words Each meticulously placed in its designated abode Sometimes exploring outside the boundaries Into the unexplored vastness of Of the writer's vacant white egotism, And then his hunger is sated For a few sweet jerks of the clock's hands As he stares at the result of his labour The phrases melt into cadence and he smiles He smiles at the adulations he will receive His transformation into utter arrogance is complete. He is now a translator of emotion and truth A writer for all the people to hold high Revered by the teachers, detested by students He is now a poet. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 09 Jul 06 - 12:57 PM Too long, too long, this thread so fallow lay, So I shall share a verse I wrote today: In Praise of Verse, and Iambs, Grouped by Five Quite oft, I've heard the Philistines complain: "Iambic verse is diffecult to learn-- Its fancy language taxes my poor brain! Prosaic speach is best, when it's your turn." Their puzzlement is hard to understand. Iambic rhythm pulses through the heart, And if they'd count the fingers on one hand, They'd feel the language clicking, part by part. It's prose that is a random, clutterd, mess. How many words to choose from? What's the count? (Reminds me of this office, I confess)-- A shifting heap that's harder to surmount. I'll versify my speeches all the time (Though if for business, I will skip the rhyme). |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 09 Jul 06 - 03:06 PM Well crafted, Capriu! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 09 Jul 06 - 08:16 PM To Kathryn Ann I had seen one Junked out before; The name already discarded, The trim and upholstery ripped away, The essential mechanisms dissassembled on the bench - For practice - The parts too worn to be reused; Herein is wisdom: To know for Truth, No longer fact alone, That each of us is mortal, Drawing to an end. A year passed by, And I was given this gift: To be present In a beginning, With God, And Kathryn Ann; When hope became frail thread, Stretched taut in human hands, And then cried out with being Someone Who would have need of a name, And of being taught it's meaning. This too is wisdom: There is cause for joy. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 09 Jul 06 - 10:35 PM That is lovely, frogprince. Thank you for sharing it. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Jul 06 - 01:15 AM Leave me the joys of the wheel to have, Holding the colored lights and watered winds In mind, the touch of some caring Friend, and the dappling air. A bowl of well-done rice and meat; Hearing another girl speak sweetly, Or a fellow sing with gusto to the boys, And other of the wheels' perplexing joys; A sort of evening peace, From the turning sky; just these, Knowing they are something I may have earned; And we may leave the wheel alone To turn, and turn. Given, it is a dangerous frame of mind, Making the ordinary into ordinary rhymes; I have seen it tried, and done, before By innocents ignorant of a coming war, Who never dreamed how hot the world could burn And in a sleepy richness, slowly turned Until they were caught by bottomless surprise To see the wheel betray them in such wise. But such a sleep, and such a burning, Is in the moment and inertia of the turning. Early or late, a burn's a burn Easier to let the wheel alone, To turn, and turn.
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Peace Date: 15 Jul 06 - 01:20 AM Beautiful, Amos. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Jul 06 - 12:18 PM Thank you, good Sir! Poems are writ by fools like I; but only Gawd can make a sky, A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 18 Jul 06 - 03:31 AM One Concert Moment Tiocfaidh ar la! She screams Clenched fist raised towards the wooden panels of the overhead Tiocfaidh ar la! She howls again Angry voice straining to be heard Over the heavy beating of raging drums The metallic squeals of the dancing steel stringed guitar The steady droning of electric pipes And the lyrical growling of the pissed off bard Tiocfaidh ar la! She shrieks a third time Black Guinness in her hand Tan foam slopping from her drunken glass Onto a once incandescent hardwood floor I observe as the dim ballroom lights Trace the ebony boundaries Of the intricate Celtic cross Permanently sketched into the back Of her pale freckled shoulder Her long red hair a stormy blood soaked sea While it rippled in the air As she bounced her head in badly kept time Again she cries Tiocfaidh ar la! "Our day will come" The tongue of a green speckled section of dirt That has not borne the weight of her ancestors In almost two hundred years Again the darkened fingers of the skyward lights Caress the twists and curves of her tattoo She jumps in a curve right arm towards the crowd And the illumination reveals the hypocrisy Painted on her left shoulder By a needle bearing skin graffiti artist And the light bends around the crimson dyed skin Forming an encircled five pointed star. Unexpectedly, she catapults her half empty Plastic cup of slate coloured stout Towards the electrified stage And surges forward into the crowd Elbows flying in a bloody ritualistic dance And disappears from my alcohol hazed vision nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Joe_F Date: 18 Jul 06 - 09:00 PM CRESCENT EARTH I kept an eye open Where night and day are places, But could not see myself, Because I was asleep Down in the dark of the cradle. --- Joe Fineman joe_f@verizon.net ||: A bank will lend you money if you can prove you don't need it. :|| |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lil' Kiwi Date: 18 Jul 06 - 10:33 PM I'm reading all these poems (while I'm meant to be working) and it's fantastic! Thanks everyone for your sharing :-) I used to write lots when I was in high-school - in lieu of schoolwork of course. And recently I've rediscovered my poems and writing nature. So without further ranting here's one I wrote a few years back. It's one of my favorites. -=Two lovers Lie=- The gazing eyes dance across the faces like a game of cat and mouse Both at last imprint the other into the heart The shapes that are him she will never forget The curves that are her he will forever adore Two bare bodies pale in the moonlight pure in the passion perfect in the union as they lie close and calm They lie melting, him into her and she into him The messy hair from a thousand caresses The flushed faces from a thousand pleasures they lie tied to each other Beating hearts thumping in the silent night a night of such sweet surrender Surrender of love surrender of trust two souls presented into final completeness never to end as these two lovers lie. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Firecat Date: 28 Jul 06 - 06:09 PM This just came to mind as I was gallowing in Mudchat, and thinking about all the war reports. If anyone can think of a title, please tell me! Let me take you on a journey To a world that never was Where all the nations lived in peace And nothing was ever lost No warplanes roared through the air No people screamed and died No destruction was there to be seen And no tears were cried No hatred sentenced men to death No terror could be found And the only thing that could be seen Were flowers on the ground Now you may wonder where this is I'm afraid I do not know But believe me, if I did I'd be the first to go. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 30 Jul 06 - 02:26 PM Civilization: The Angles Along the road they spill – crystals and squares, Arrogant in blocky rows. Their brazen angles state, "This space is owned by the Others, who are not you; Take your Being elsewhere, and other-how." Attention deflects, ricochets like wind, denied understanding Of all they contain , defend, and hide. Trees are otherwise, and some other wisdom theirs;. With the wind, they have come to know Only learning to dance is great, And for this step, any being will do. "Dances go step by step", the trees allow; Down a longer road, in a different time, demanding Less thought to who is in, and who outside. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST Date: 01 Aug 06 - 03:13 PM Subject: RE: BS: Which member could you live without ! From: Amos Date: 31 Jul 06 - 05:52 PM Oh, it was a vile and contentious post, And a thread it started had no merit From a wicked Guest with no guts or conscience, May the wrath of Max his soul inherit. Sure the thread grew long, then grew longer still, But 'twas nothing made it well worth reading Just a bunch of tripe, foolish and air-headed May the wrath of Max their souls inherit. Ach, these nameless trolls, may they rot in hell, With no courage their own names to be sharing, They are snipers all, with no wit or balls, May the wrath of Max their souls inherit. Kirk Glengood, Junior Souls of the Shameless and Forgotten Merriwether and Trollop, London, 1923 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Aug 06 - 05:30 PM KeysMine weigh, now, almost a pound; In time, I guess, the first to go Will be the connecting rings, That link the house, the cars, the offices and doors Of places I was known; then The intimate teeth will lose their edge, Forgetting what it was they were to unlock. Finally the handles and the numbers , too, will yield to slow shocks, And only a place in time will haunt the rust Where once so many places came together. But let it be, as if there were a choice—dust Does not much care for wills and codes; To resist the passing of keys makes little sense. No more than the dying of locks. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 20 Aug 06 - 11:01 PM From William Faulkner‚s Nobel acceptance: I decline to accept the end of man. It is easy enough to say that man is immortal because he will endure: that when the last ding-dong of doom has clanged and faded from the last worthless rock hanging tideless in the last red and dying evening, that even then there will still be one more sound: that of his puny inexhaustible voice, still talking. I refuse to accept this. I believe that man will not merely endure: he will prevail. He is immortal, not because he alone among creatures has an inexhaustible voice, but because he has a soul, a spirit capable of compassion and sacrifice and endurance. The poet's, the writer's, duty is to write about these things. It is his privilege to help man endure by lifting his heart, by reminding him of the courage and honor and hope and pride and compassion and pity and sacrifice which have been the glory of his past. The poet's voice need not merely be the record of man, it can be one of the props, the pillars to help him endure and prevail. Regards, A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 21 Aug 06 - 08:30 PM Well penned, Troubador |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Joe_F Date: 21 Aug 06 - 08:45 PM INSECTS No, not with you or any of my kind, But with a pair of coupling dragonflies, Spindles gun-blue with wings of filmy black, Will I embalm the last shreds of my mind. Let chrevroned grasshoppers in full green dress Parade in chaos where my body lies To show me off, and I'll salute them back While overflights of butterflies impress The spies among the reeds. Oh, let me take My leave of water striders as they row To keep their station, court in ripples, make Quick, bright-ringed shadows on the rock below, And fireflies, dancing on the edge of night, Flashing their itch against the fading light. --- Joe Fineman joe_f@verizon.net ||: I wish I had never been born -- but who has such luck? Not one in ten thousand. :|| |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 22 Aug 06 - 06:13 PM The Rattled Eye The rattled eye does not agree With things that normal vision sees But breaks the frame. The rattled eye, and fever-brain, Dismiss the normal form of things To ask why every flower sings, And every color smells of home, And every stone presents some broken poem. The rattled eye informs you That no one object can be true Unless heard through the sea Painted in heart-linked greens-- Yours, another's, it does not care Knowing just that links are there. And cataract and spalpeen, or what you will, Are useless, as the rattled eye sees further still. Woebegone soul, ruined by loss and pain Is nothing to the fever-brain that cries Back to the ruthless rattled eye That does not care, except for asking why. San Diego 22 August 2006 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 23 Aug 06 - 12:01 AM Joe: That is a very well made poem indeed; I love it. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Oct 06 - 01:25 PM
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Cordwangler Date: 08 Oct 06 - 08:27 AM Trees Trees are such wonderful things; they grow up to the sky, They always seem quite friendly, And wave when I go by. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Oct 06 - 01:18 AM The Joy of Breaking When the telephone rang, she forgot the ceramic bowl that held the strained carrots in an instant, small fingers grasped the rim held it high momentarily then flung it Pop! like a pistol shot instant of scattered shards and spattered orange paste with shock-pried stare, mouth agape he waits her reaction Shit! The word is spat against the phone Then his sudden gleeful laughter Fingers that grasp for something else to break That a child should take such joy in breaking would seem to bode ill for the man that child will be Except that Hands are sculpted by Time Brain is tempered and tuned and Fingers are given to making The clay at last turned deliberately, fired an Act of Slow Deliberation An act of Change which more slowly opens the Heart and at last reveals the Love of Making (should one transcend the Joy of Breaking) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 09 Oct 06 - 01:33 AM Another Restless Night Another restless night Of broken dreams And shattered sleep As I listen to your tranquil snores Studying your blanket sheltered form As it slightly shifts with each hoarse breath Frustrated I fling back the shadow darkened covers From my fatigued unadorned flesh To stalk in two furious steps To the concealed starlight framed windows And thrust aside an insignificant fragment Of the moon silhouetted curtains I gape through the murky windowpane To the silent flat across the car park Slowly raising my eyes skyward At these cold bleak southern stars Watching them throb with fragile distant warmth Straining to pierce this veil of winter I shiver as the bumps prickle across my body With the frosty air seeping through the glass I push the drapes back in position And crawl towards your sleepy bed Kneeling over you to tenderly sweep The plum coloured locks from your face And kiss good night your slightly opened lips nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Oct 06 - 04:34 PM Unexplained Wheels The violence of tires, partly a mystery, Is quite normal. Most scientists refrain From rash conclusion – but, it seems clear, tires are driven By a complex system, they explain. Endless attacks on roads, curbs and sometimes children Is a natural phenomenon because The complex system follows natural laws. Heat and pressure seem to come to bear and the true Impact of direct current flowing in careful time, too, Is poorly understood – these sparks and magnetics whirl And in some way define the tire's higher world Or the governing awareness of the wheel, Perhaps the seat of all that it can think, or feel. In any case, in their natural sphere, Force and erosion, and therefore, fear Are natural concomitants of living In ways that seldom see forgiving. It is thought that when these details are better understood The question of tire-violence will be solved; then, we should Be able to cure them of their tendency to beat Mindless and brutal, upon the sleeping street. Finding the source of their brutal black embrace Will make the road-world a kinder, stiller place, Free of the screaming cries of blackened hard assault, As soon as we learn just what it is we ought to call The governing power, or the subtle link That drives it – or so the experts think. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 05 Jan 07 - 02:22 PM Ragnarok And it was like Cassady to go in search of Death in the same way he came at Life with a manic grin and a heart full of curiosity leaving no room for fear tripping across weathered black railroad ties oozing tar in the Mexican sun kicking sparks from loose gravel flipping a sledge hammer in the air to count three and catch it by the handle his powerful frame drained by the drugs and the sleepless nights fooling himself that his indomitable will his Life Spirit could face up to Death and dog her down Calling, daring Death to come at him and wrestle in the desert in the magnificent Ratlands where the contrasts were clear good/evil life/death light/shadow energy/inertia and only Cassady and Death were party to that last episode and he was found like Thor fallen with his hammer beside him his big fists doubled-up and bloodied and a grin clenched in his face with his clouded eyes staring straight up into a sky as blue as the edge of eternity |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 05 Jan 07 - 02:58 PM Jaysus, LeeJ! Takes my breath away! Superb as ever, darlin'. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 05 Jan 07 - 08:58 PM DEGREES OF DIFFICULTY Stop, and you still the ripples. With a finger the tangles are raveled. The knots rot with the rope. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: slowerairs Date: 06 Jan 07 - 04:51 PM TRIANGLE With smile that spoke of years of love He kissed her cherished brow Then very gently, stroked her cheek As he remembered how She once could dance away the night And put them all to shame But that was then and this was now With only time to blame. Now looking in those faded eyes He knew not, why he wept For he was hers and she was his Yet still the secret kept So frail was she, he could not speak Of how he loved another Instead, he kissed her once again And whispered, Goodnight mother. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Hawker Date: 06 Jan 07 - 08:26 PM Wow what a thread! I have not found thid before now, MORE talent out there! Humble offering from sunny!!!! Cornwall If there was no music If there was no music What a sad world this would be There would be no running water No humming bumble bee Who would wake the morning If not the song of birds There would be no singing Just hollow tuneless words Silent would be the raindrops Tapping on the pane The wavelets gentle murmur No more a sad refrain The howling wind a silence The crowing cock would hush No more joyous chiming From the linnet or the thrush No church bells brightly ringing No cheery kettle call No violin, no harp, no song There'd be no sound at all. Cheers Lucy |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Hawker Date: 06 Jan 07 - 08:28 PM and a seasonal offering...... Jacky Frost When Summers blue sky fades to grey And swiftly ends the shortening day When coldness takes the flowers away Ill dance the dance of winter Over hedges see me trip To frost the leaf and haw and hip To petrify each sparkling drip And dance the dance of winter Ill fade the roses red to white Redress the landscape in one night Make the cobwebs crisp and white And herald in the winter I'll tiptoe over lawns and trees The water pipe I soon shall freeze Ill bring transport to its knees And turn all things to winter In leafy Hollows, see me hide I herald in the Christmas tide Where man keeps snug by fires inside While outside, I am winter. Cheers Lucy |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Metchosin Date: 07 Jan 07 - 07:21 PM Oh wow! This thread still gives me goosebumps. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jerry Rasmussen Date: 07 Jan 07 - 10:32 PM I are not a poet. I think that I've written a grand total of three poems in my life: two in high school under duress, and this one, after my Mother's death: Love Is Not Like A Bicycle Love is not like a bicycle You can't sit on it, or ride it It is not of the physical world Love may be expressed through words But words are not love Actions speak louder than words But actions are not love Love is not limited by time or space Love is omnipresent God is love In loving, we touch divinity On Friday, October 13th, Mom died But her love did not die Neither did our love for her die True love remains Jerry |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 07 Jan 07 - 11:02 PM Well done, Lucy and slowerairs! And, Jerry, who better to write a poem about but your mom? Thanks, folks! The folks I know Would to a person say I'll give you my love My caring, your pain takeaway. The friends I know Open hearts, open minds With gifts from above All the same, yet different kinds. The dearhearts I know Give to each or to all All kindness and care Though none sought glory to recall. (Bah! Haven't written a good poem in 2-3 years. Time to practise!!) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Illegal Poet Date: 08 Jan 07 - 02:13 PM OLD FRIENDS "Love what lives... fry the rest." Like ragged gravel poured across a gutteral rasp, the words spilled forcibly from his lips as he preached to the rusting shrines, those decaying automotive shells which house their dust laden, forgotten worlds. Sometimes he referred to them as his children, a ragamuffin orphanage of seasoned metal, glass and rubber, shelved, piled -- no, more like configured, with a librarian's precision, sandwiched between each other and his memories of their era; collated recollections selectively inserted here, there; affixed, as dated license plates 'neath grills and bumpers no designers will dare create again; autosculptors, he believes, have lost their nerve and context. Rabbits, lizards, cats and birds, a dog named Bolts... this rabbled collection of disciples who have come, comprise a choir of sifted souls; their brave enlistment, or desperate gestures chasing significance, join them to the sacred grounds which grow the dirt beneath the eyeless carcasses, broken-toothed chromium grins, and creaking groans of squeaking rust. These meticulous caregivers occupy Eden's corner, nurturing via the pat of feet, fluttered wing and choruses of chaotic praise, this fragile garden. A quite distinctive fragrance wanders there when whisper-soft melting rain, splatters icing over every thirsty surface, activates a secret scent which fills his nostrils, with... imagination; as freshened soil and weeds enhance the fleeting prospect of those shiny, momentarily reborn painted metal skins; which in that greying light lose blemish, dent and sorrow; unmasking lost personas. Upon occasion he does settle gently still upon a dustly aromatic cushioned seat inside some chosen craft and sometimes studies starry depths through glassless windshields, notes the moonbeam-laden dashboard, and is comforted by those white-blue reflections dancing across such glorious art-deccoed landscapes stretched inside from door to door. As he fingers silver buttons, rotates dials, remnants of the last of all the real radios, sometimes he allows himself to hear a greater Tune which enters slowly, through open, hanging door; almost audible, the rich wrapped groan, chorded moans, heaven-spilled raptured tones of cello, low and lonely plays mournful, powerful, complete. Washing through the car, it effortlessly wraps him in the blanket of a God who apparently, also, pays attention. G.Brown |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jan 07 - 09:16 PM Refilling The gas tank when low, the coffee-maker, are easy -- Filled up again when, burned away in cells and in cylinders, They are tapped out. Not many moments to be ready For a new morning and another run down to work, up to home, Over to her place, no? The heart, now, fills and empties on another map of things, And flies furthest when nearly empty, stays home when full, And breaks untapped and unheard. Mornings Are not so easy, but when filled up a new one can be made, Even the moon is not too far. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 01 Mar 07 - 11:26 PM The Concert The noisy public house grows silent as her fingers gently stroke the strings of her lap dulcimer, fondling each fret to create every note. The music reaches its fingers out to grab and caress the listeners as they sit, entranced eyes gazing up at her face. Once in a while, they they flicker to her hands in a vain attempt to understand her magic. She smiles inwardly as she watches the audience and the first words of the song are tasted upon her tongue, escaping passed her moving lips. She closes her eyes as the hungry words transport her back to burned out castles long since ground to dust. She can smell the blood of murders centuries old, the smoke of battlefields now overgrown, and the sweat of lovers whose names have long been forgotten. Her words fall faint, her fingers slowly grow still, and she hears the thunder as the gathered multitude roars in adoration. Her eyes open and finds she is on the stage once more. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 01 Mar 07 - 11:36 PM The Highway of Tears (I heard the owl calling out my name) By the side of a lonely highway Where the tall pines bend and sway Where the raven spins on a cold north wind And the owl spends his day. While the snow falls all around me And time drifts slowly by I turn my eyes to the cold grey skies then I hear my mother cry. Can't you hear me cry? can't you hear me cry? Oh Mother can't you hear me cry? And I'm sure I saw my sister Some time in the early morn. She came to me but she couldn't see me Standing here alone. And she seemed to look right through me Though her eyes were open wide. Then she turned around looking down on the ground and walked to the other side. On the other side, On the other side, Oh Sister I'm on the other side. And I wonder Do they miss me? Do they think I'm doing well? Does my brother know how I love him so Or can he really tell? Then somewhere in the distance At the closing of the day If the wind is right, in the failing light I can hear my Brother pray. Can't you hear me pray? Can't you hear me pray? Oh Brother can't you hear me pray? In the shadow of the evening When the moon comes over the hill I stand alone, chilled to the bone And I know I always will. Then morning comes around again It always seems the same My father's near I can almost hear him calling out my name Calling out my name, Calling out my name, I can hear my Father calling out my name. It's a long time now since I heard the owl, calling out my name. Calling out my name, Calling out my name, I heard the owl calling out my name. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Hawker Date: 02 Mar 07 - 04:18 AM Jimn Lad, that is beautiful, have you set it to music? it feels like a song Cheers, Lucy |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 02 Mar 07 - 08:46 PM LINES INSPIRED BY A GRAFFITO IN _OATH OF FEALTY_ BY NIVEN & POURNELLE Think of it as evolution in action: Nature cares nothing for your introspection. She has far cruder tastes in vivisection, Which don't give either of you satisfaction. Hegel be hanged! It's not a contradiction. Think of it as evolution in action: Call it a conflict or a counteraction, Collisions needed for lubricious friction. It's lunchtime. Stuff your mouth with mame-lokshn And feel your paunch expand with each contraction. Think of it as evolution in action. Don't giggle, or you'll spew the whole concoction. And if you find the only sure distraction Leads first to rage and then to self-destruction, Take comfort in the obvious deduction: Think of it as evolution in action. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: black walnut Date: 03 Mar 07 - 12:17 PM MARCH WINTER Sitting alone With you over there and your cool glass of wine Nothing to talk about Nothing to ask So I stare out the window At the warm blanket of snow And the sky is a bird And the feathers fall like the telling of stories. Held and displayed By untouchable walls Icicles of blue-rooted light Hang frozen on dead wood. I stand and walk Increasing the space between two Nothing to say Nothing at all So I lay down this sweater On the lap of the tall chair By the back door And tiptoe outside to my turned-down bed. (c)2001 D. Carroll |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 01:08 PM I will, Hawker. Still, I'd rather someone less "Celtic" did that to it too! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 01:43 PM Where's the right place to deposit some of my songs? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Hawker Date: 03 Mar 07 - 01:44 PM On a CD? ;0) Lucy |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 01:46 PM Heh, heh! You're too quick! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: AJR Date: 03 Mar 07 - 01:57 PM two flowers 1 Her excellency the High Commissioner picked dandelions for her silver vase not knowing they were only weeds knowing only they were strong, slender. sun-golden. We sneered 2 in the black muzzle of my Mauser she planted her red rose saying "peace, peace" Nor knowing my gun is my manhood knowing only her soft superficial certainties. I shot her (inspired by two newsitems. the first after the first Indian high commissioner had arrived, the second on a university campus in USA in 1968} |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 05:01 PM So where on Mudcat does one place song lyrics which are already deposited on a CD somewhere? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 03 Mar 07 - 05:15 PM Jim Lad, one usually would start a "LYR ADD" thread for each individual song, with lyrics, etc. listed. Or, in the case of a CD, maybe a single thread for the CD, with each song listed in a separate posting, with the appropriate info in the heading of that posting, i.e. "LYD ADD - Name of Song and Artist." That would probably be the best thing to do, one thread for the whole CD with each song listed. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 05:27 PM Always looking after folks, Kat. Put it on my tab. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Bee Date: 03 Mar 07 - 05:48 PM Abandoned Farmhouse Nobody lives here anymore 25 years ago she left To live with her widowed sister - Two old women with no old men To look after anymore. Nobody wanted the farm Couldn't make a living And the girls went to the City Neighbour didn't need the hay that year The barn long gone. She took a last look around Walked out the front door and turned the key Slipped it in her purse, she couldn't tell why Stepped away down the two flat stone stairs Between the lilacs and the daylily beds. In a hot dry summer I found her house Hidden in the spruce and fir that took the hayfields Saw the barn foundation, a hollow full of brambles Ringed with wild cherry and leaning apple trees. The lilacs were blooming Their scent was heavy around me A stranger peering into the dark front hall The peeling blue-painted door's still locked A yellow rag of lace rotting in its window. I'm a country woman, though I know to walk around Past the stone well To the never-locked backdoor Straight into her cool dim kitchen. Flowered worn linoleum growing moss Cluster flies on the dusty window sills Chipped and rusting cast-iron sink in the corner And I'm thinking of the dishes she did up And the babies she washed there. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 05:53 PM You took me there. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Bee Date: 03 Mar 07 - 06:18 PM Thank you, Jimlad. Took a bit of courage to put it up. Wrote it about five years ago, never showed it to anyone. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 03 Mar 07 - 06:46 PM I followed you from the flat stone stairs. You got me in the eyes with some shrubbery as I followed you round to the back door. Got to watch that when you're breaking trail, you know! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 03 Mar 07 - 07:59 PM Beautiful, Bee! It reminded me of a spoken piece by Jean Mackie, which Jean Redpath has on a CD. There's a personal note from her (Redpath) and the words to it on THIS THREAD. They both evoke along ago time and memories. Lucky us that you shared it! Jim Lad, they didn't used to call me "Mamakat" for nothing.:-) I meant to tell you I love your poem, too...should be a song, I agree! To late I've come to tell you To late for love to flourish The bairns all gone from the land now The old too frail for gathering. Once up and down the valley The sounds of work rang out Clearly spelling the prosperity Of all who lived and loved. To late, now, for any renewal To late to lift your brow To start from old which is not there To late to even care. (not sure where that came from! Must be channelling some sad old soul.) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 03 Mar 07 - 08:18 PM To late or not to late, that is the question.... Very nice images, all of you! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Bee Date: 03 Mar 07 - 09:15 PM Kat, thanks for steering me to that Ritchie piece - it is lovely. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 03 Mar 07 - 11:54 PM Always like to see a little more spun on this thread. Yes, Jim Lad, that one so begs to be sung. And Bee, I've explored that same old house several times, in several states many miles apart; you gave me chills. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 03 Mar 07 - 11:57 PM Not exactly a poem but here is one. The Silent Watcher The plastic tree stood next to the seemingly empty chair, reaching out to provide her ghostly form shade. The tiny green and yellow leaves swayed with each cool breath of the air conditioner, whispering inaudible songs into her ears. She sat and listened as she had for the last twenty years. She looked around the room, empty and barren but for the chairs, couch and coffee table organised almost haphazardly around the muted television set. She was waiting for them to come home, yearning to watch over them again, guarding them with her love. The tree told her all that has been happening to them since she left. Since she died, she reminds herself. It told her of the birth of her great grandchildren, now four and five and the deaths of her two sons. She wished she could hold the young ones in her arms, on her lap, but of course she could not. At least she could murmer songs to them as they slept, silent and helpless in the dark. She sat and listened to the tree, as it sang in harmony with the cool music of the A/C, tapping her foot onto the shining hardwood floor as she succumbed to the memories of her life, long over,some sad, some happy, but none of it would she ever change. Suddenly she heard the footsteps creaking and stomping across the floor, closer and closer. The air conditioner stopped and the tree grew quiet. However, it did not matter, not really. They were home. She was happy. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 04 Mar 07 - 08:21 PM The Drums on Television I overheard another boy in gym class say "he" was shot in Texas not knowing who they spoke of and later the intercom Principle Williams said "Listen, you'll hear a bit of history" and Walter Cronkite told my English class The President was dead Crouching on the street corner Lenny and I folded the papers tight the headlines leaving our fingertips smudged in black A man walked by and asked us what we thought about the assassination I remember Lenny and I looked at each other burst into raucous laughter too jaded at 12 to feel pain at a great man's death And my parents speaking in undertones Grandparents coming to town as if Death had visited our own family Down that road the plumed horses The caissons The White Horse riderless Down that road they took him as they have taken my grandparents Principle Williams, my parents until in my mind those days, too, lie entombed painted in wet gray tones framed in barren branches but most of all at the dark end of my twelfth year there was pumped into my soul the cadence of drums that for hours on end beat from televisions |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,LD Date: 05 Mar 07 - 02:54 AM 'Come walk with me, come talk with me' is what you said to me When, way back, once upon a time you stilled my urge to flee I'd been alone through many years watched seasons rolling by Encased my heart in sheets of ice Once bitten and twice shy I'd reinforced this heart of mine to see in love but pain You thawed my heart and made me want to trust in love again I took a leap of faith with you I left my native land I reached towards an outstretched hand A strange, yet well-known man You caught me, held me, loved me sweet that sunny autumn morn Then held me gently through my sleep I felt as if reborn But things were catching up with you The call of home held sway You told me then you'd thought again you would no longer stray You chose to walk that well-trod path and leave me standing there 'I'll miss you' were your parting words My dreams were but of air Now all I have is memories is longing, tears and pain Believe me, love, I wish you luck - wish I dared love again |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: black walnut Date: 05 Mar 07 - 02:03 PM That's gorgeous, and soulful, LD. Wow. ~b.w. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 05 Mar 07 - 02:14 PM LD just did a mind job on me! Heartfelt. Thank you. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,slowerairs Date: 05 Mar 07 - 06:32 PM Towards Eternity Against all odds the creature stands Recording deeds of men Those hidden from all human eyes Revealed with strokes of pen The list is never ending for The wrongs of men are great Take heed and change those evil ways Before it is too late. For when at last we leave this life As darkness takes our sight Let each one search his soul and ask What did the creature write? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 05 Mar 07 - 06:37 PM What beautiful, talented writers you all are. LeeJdarlin'...a resonance struck the Me who remembers that day, too. Haunting still those of us who were. Thanks for the beauty of your words. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 05 Mar 07 - 08:41 PM Always some flakes rise but it is correct to say The snow is falling. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,LD Date: 07 Mar 07 - 04:30 AM Thank you, I'm glad you liked my poem. It means a lot to me. There are many nice poems in here. I like reading them. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,slowerairs Date: 07 Mar 07 - 06:44 PM UNDER DAWN'S CLOAK Take care, my dearest love, for time may rob Thy loving eyes of beauty, the heart of peace Remember dearest, this our only night Oh sad are they, denied their right to love. Hasten you now my love, here comes the day The clock it chimes, for dawn is drawing near Farewell my love, forever let this be My precious night, that I once shared with thee. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 07 Mar 07 - 07:57 PM Slowerairs: Says a lot and yet leaves so much to the imagination. I can relate to this one. Magic! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: slowerairs Date: 08 Mar 07 - 05:33 PM Many thanks Jim Lad. Nice to know, someone is out there. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 08 Mar 07 - 05:59 PM I'm not "Out There" you know. I'm just shy. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Mar 07 - 10:10 PM In memoriam for Cathy-Cat, who sang folk-songs from many countries:
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,cmt49 Date: 17 Mar 07 - 08:46 PM Sorry about komputeral ineptitood. Here's one for the cat lovers: Familiar. ( To be whispered into the ear of a black cat.) Birds with no wings. Smiling mice caress your claws my silent one, my midnight. Moons of polished amber hold the ages of dark knowledge in your eyes. Essence of sensual pride, I shall dream for you a bath of curling ermine. Milk of Isis to your possessing tongue, my love, my black remembrance of Egypt. Birds with no wings.... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Jun 07 - 12:23 AM Haiku for Amos The people come here unclothed and take what they leave. This is the best thread |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 19 Jun 07 - 02:00 AM Letter to Jacinta I use to believe I hated Christmas most of all the dreaded lonesome holidays, as I imagined you waking up that summer morning with the early sun oozing hot warnings of the coming heat through the Queensland sky, small blue eyes glistening as you squealed and laughed, blonde hair bouncing with each giggling jump, with childish anticipation at the wrapped presents mounted below the plastic tree. But now, I realise it is Father's Day, whether it be in June or September, that drives the dagger home through my already shattered heart as I imagine scenes of what might have been. Your small gentle arms wrapped tightly around my throat, as you leap into my eager arms and yell out, "Daddy!" when I slowly open the door after a long tired day at work. You lying in your bed, smiling at playful dreams of doggies, lavender flowers, and koala bears, as I kneel down, softly brush the yellow strands of hair from your face, and lay my lips on your warm sweet forehead after a late night at the pub writing. You sitting in my lap still as a little girl could be, listening to me read you poetry, either my own, or by those whose footsteps I follow, including that sweet sad poem you were named for, or I would regale you with tales of knights and dragons, dwarves and elves, the heroic deeds of Fionn mac Cumhaill and Cu Chullainn, or my own travels and adventures in Tir na nOg and my years spent with the sidhe. Hearing your Australian voice whisper, "I love you, Daddy" as you caress the red fur on my face with your loving lips with a loud and decisive smack. I gaze at your pictures and my heart aches as I wonder, am I just an abstract figure in a hazy photograph, which you are told is your daddy? A strange American voice over the telephone telling you "I Love you, Jacinta"? A mere ghost at the edge of your tiny existence as formless as the morning mist? What am I to you? Know this, Jacinta, I will always love you and hold you tightly in my heart, and that although I may not be standing beside you or holding you tightly to my breast, softly singing, soothing your hurts and fears, that I will still be there. Slan go foill, a chuisle mo chroi. See you in my dreams. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Ythanside Date: 19 Jun 07 - 08:08 AM OUCH Poets all should have long hair, Dark haunted eyes and broken hearts, Should languish long in dark despair, Recording pain and sorrow's darts. 'Suffering', their watchword be; Consumptive, with dry wracking cough, Self-crucified for you and me 'Til, premature, they're carried off. Thus their gifted lines are wrought, That touch our souls and make us weep, Their lofty station dearly bought- Now vile usurpers on them creep. These upstarts in their pinstripe suits With simple style create distress; Their lines, as soft as hobnailed boots, That all begin 'Dear Sir, unless......!' (Must have been bill-paying time when I cobbled this together some 30 years ago) :-D |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 19 Jun 07 - 12:14 PM LEJ: Thanks. I am touchéd. :D Keep up the excellent work, you-all! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jim Lad Date: 19 Jun 07 - 12:38 PM Amergin: What a gift you have in your writing. I have to let your letter run its course before moving on to Ythanside's contribution. That only happens once in a while. Regards. Jim |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 19 Jun 07 - 01:41 PM {{{{Amergin}}}}} Ythanside, well done! My daughter called me the other night to ask me to write a poem for her friend whose almost one year old baby drowned while having a bath. She was a beautiful little baby, two months premature with some problems but growing and bring smiles to everyone. She was in her bath seat when the mom turned away to get a towel and turned back to find her drowned. I did not know her or my daughter's friend, but I said I'd give it a try. I sent the following to the friend and her seven year old son who loved his baby sister. Apparently it hit the spot and I am grateful. Jasmyn, little Jasmyn, Your Spirit shines so bright. You brought us Love and Beauty Then left too early in the night. Jasmyn, little Jasmyn Your brother loves you so. Please help him understand Just why you had to go. Jasmyn, beautiful Jasmyn, Be safe, be well, be free Our lives you touched forever May we know Peace, let it be. |
Subject: Lyr Add: A SONG: I once met the poet (Bob Clayton) From: GUEST,Songster Bob Date: 19 Jun 07 - 03:21 PM I don't know where this came from, though I did meet a poet in a Metro station once, and took it from there. A Song I once met the poet in the subway station (I'd seen him before, so I knew him, you see). He was standing in line for his daily blues ration, The same as the other commuters like me. Packed into the cars, we roared 'neath the earth Ignoring the people around where we sat, When the poet fixed me with an eye full of mirth And sang me the song of the hole in his hat. I once met a busker while mailing a letter; I tipped him a quarter and gave him a nod, And allowed as how he could play so much better Than most of the other street buskers, by God! He played on his fife for all he was worth, Depending on coins in the cup where he sat, So, fixing me with an eye full of mirth, Played me the song of the hole in his hat. So, if you happen to see me someplace (Now that you've met me, you'll know me, you see), Don't be surprised by the look on my face, For poets are known to be somewhat like me. I may talk about football, or music, or news; I well may debate the place of the cat, When, suddenly struck by my musical muse, I might sing you the song of the hole in my hat! © 1991, Bob Clayton, Silver Spring, MD |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Jun 07 - 11:20 PM Kat, simple and sweet. cmt, that says much about the nature of the cat, a mystery sleeping on the door mat. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 11 Oct 07 - 07:00 PM
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 11 Oct 07 - 09:17 PM Spontaneous symmetry-breaking, exits from loops, limiting processes making infs go to sups, a little irritable tissue, pairwise unlinked rings -- a friend will wish you all those good things. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 12 Oct 07 - 06:00 PM Widening Circle Two friends met Shared lives and loves Spread their net Cast wide and low. Two friends saw An open life Torn and raw They held it close. Two friends held The hurt one 'til love's dealt Healing was done. Three friends met... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Apr 08 - 03:58 PM Memory AheadStepping off the curb, scaring the random pigeon Approaching a conversation in an early city evening, Do you draw the face, the tremble of the fingers, in his colors? Choose the palette for pain to seep down, after leaving? Is it a fade, from grays to black, Or brilliant in real incandescen restaurant hues? How will it seem, when it comes back, Some day, when you are shopping for new shoes, Or cleaning up after a dinner, Happy with remarks about dessert, And how you look (younger; thinner). Then will the colors intrude, answering some subtle sign? Whites supplanted with that faded low- Light tinge of pigeon-gray And fear in chiaroscuro? And was this some spiritual design, Mapping a way across the street, With older shoes, on earlier feet? A step across the line dividing you From infinite changes and reminding Is a fine grained memory Ð too fine To built a public mind upon, though true. But, when memoryÕs moment clocks in, blinding Ð The face, and trembling fingers, in their native colors. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Jul 08 - 05:10 PM Both time and timelessness are easy errors To an eye bewildered, And a mind too crowded, Or ears betrayed by sounds. Sapphire beginnings; hard Ends of gold, feverish Days of penitence, shivered By hours made too loud For any heart to arise. In this maddened vise Between each minute and its loss Nothing is truly seen Neither the cold stone nor the soft moss. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Megan L Date: 16 Jul 08 - 05:28 PM In 1983 my new husband and I stood in a small churchyard in Wales looking sadly at a row of shiny gravestones each had the age of the young man each one had been on the Galahad. I remembered thinking that somewhere in Argentina someone could be standing beside a row of graves or a memorial for equally young lads from the Belgrano. War dead See my name all you who pass by As you are now so once was I. I was a son whose mother wept I was the husband whose wife kept A light in the window lest I should come To find my way once more back home. I was the brother whose sisters tears shall wash my stone I was the lover who will not come the one who left you here alone. I am your love the memory that will not die My name it matters not anymore Rhys or Ramone we are the same In death, a memory and nothing more MHTBL |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 16 Jul 08 - 06:42 PM Even though the clouds may fly, On high on such a beauteous day. Tis not that I will be out there, I'll be on Mudcat, far away. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 16 Jul 08 - 08:27 PM Me and Don By the convenience store he sat his feet propped on rusted breast plate inverted helmet inviting help. "The windmills of my mind" he sighed "are by my own intellect o'erthrown!" Inspired by irony I smiled and said "And you find yourself here alas o Knight of the Tarnished Mirrors in the shadow of a slain dragon transformed by wizards into the guise of a dumpster" He only stared in silence and so I walked away until his choked whisper split the silence "Sancho?" |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 17 Jul 08 - 12:10 AM Oh, Lonsesome, ya done caught me off guard with that last line. Big grin, but a torn heart, too. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 17 Jul 08 - 03:18 PM Me, too, LeeJ. Inspired and so poignant! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jay777 Date: 18 Jul 08 - 04:43 AM As a teenager in the late 60s, I lived near USAF Greenham Common. My family befriended many of the servicemen based there. This poem was written by one of them, whilst he was serving in Vietnam. He went back there, and we never saw or heard of him again. I thought it deserved a wider airing. AMMO by AFC 18756330 Ronald Brown, 1969 I work with bombs both day and night, And stand and shake with awful fright. My past is short, my future's bleak, I'll never last another week. My friends are dead or dying fast, I don't know how long my luck will last. Death may come in several ways, From gas or bombs with short delays, There's Sarin gas or TNT, Or fragment bombs to murder me. They say that nerve gas works just great, Five short minutes and it's too late, Of course blood gas isn't so fast, Fifteen minutes you can last, There's white phospherous and thermate too, They just sear and burn holes in you. You know that you are bound to lose, So you get a bottle and start to booze. You drink all day and drink all night, You go on duty still half tight. If the bombs don't do it, just wait and see, THIS DAMNED BOTTLE WILL FINISH ME!!!!!!!!!! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Sep 08 - 09:07 PM Aged DustShattered, without hope in the wind, Whirling where the world's face ends Itself coldly ended without power of naming Any future, or caring how to name -- knowing That one and another are not preferred But are same. Not even glumness shadows The lost decision from which complete indifference seems Eminently respectable. And fire not even a memory to the face, and the world's Face so over-remembered, it is a loss to try To tell one from another past, or pry futures apart. Paint it, and it stays painted; deny, and it will Oblige by disappearing. Call it and it will be. Be one with it and it will color you so gray That your name will be arbitrary and your Face vanish in the world. Fight it and it will oblige endlessly. These Are the molecules that will not disperse nor harden but Will endlessly prove the barren ice of time. How it stretches into the horizon, telling nothing because Nothing is. This is the heart of dying, hell Beyond the hope of measure, f For space is denied. But, What mastery within! To make so little from so much, To so completely nullify, must be the handiwork Of a truly great machine. So dust has its master, and if you only Congratulate him, he will withdraw, Sated with your precious admiration. You who command admiration command all things And dust's dry dominion dwindles to your light. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Sep 08 - 09:21 PM
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 07 Sep 08 - 11:20 PM I found this poem in some papers. I wrote it when I was 22. I had a strong urge to edit it, but resisted. An old man stumbled through the door his overcoat gray and solemn December Stark against the glassed-out sunlight he fumbled, spoke with a voice like cracked marble "My name is O.L. Brown. I sell matches." He dropped a brown suitcase like a basket of bricks the leather scratched and scarred with years of layered sweat- the young man's nervous sweat in buffed-brass waiting rooms the old man's thin moan of beaded sweat mapping the wrinkles on his face with moisture and the dust of the road. "35 years in the Advertising Game" he winked with a salesman's rude charm "My matches have carried names of men great and small into the pants pockets of America. My matches have shouted manure to hog farmers- have sung silver against the cigarettes of rich men. They have told barroom secrets to distrustful wives they have flamed for seven men-all strangers. For 35 years they have flashed in the cupped hands of nameless people. For 35 years they have told stories to chance eyes. For 35 years they have kept me from the cold." He smiled and held out a crooked hand. Small flames glowed behind his eyes. I reached out to take his hand. A matchbook fell with a whisper into my palm. O.L. Brown 35 Years in Matches |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 07 Sep 08 - 11:32 PM Love it, LeeJ, esp. as I used to sell specialty ad products just like that!**bg** A friend came to visit. In the middle of the night She was just there. I heard her first on the phone After months of no calls, nothing I said, I cannot believe it is you! She said, I've crossed over. I gasped with sorrow, cried her name. No, no, it's okay, she said, it's really nice! There we were in the middle of the night In a room of high ceiling, warm wood Singing, her strumming, a session of our own. I realised there were others there, singing, too Playing, too, a full session which filled me with joy And, wonder that it was there in my home, though not my home. How could this be, in the middle of the night A stranger on the phone, then known, then here? A dream, precognition, or a visitation? copyright 2008 Kat LaFrance |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 08 Sep 08 - 06:03 AM With the romani love of music , I thought id just place this old romany poem, first in romany then in english. Miro dadus miro jin, miro daia durogilo; miro pireni sar o iouzers jell. bor miro ker no, yeckoro tu mi bosh, miro mi yeckoro bor. ENGLISH My father I have never known My mothers long since gone My sweetheart with the flowers go of friends i have none, only you my violin are my only friend. A sad tale relevant today, it shows that many romanys who like me have no KNOWN family left, feel that they really dont have any friends wether that is true or not is debateable, I have many friends, all romas who have seen me through some very bad and sad times, but sadly there are times that as many people do , the feeling of being alone tend to overwhelm. Being of romany decent i know the real world of exclusion from mainstream life. Yes we are a race apart but since the first arrival of the roma folk in the 14 1500s there has always been suspicion and fear of the unknown, but only last week i was called a dirty pikey, by a shop keeper, because i had tied my horse to a lamp post as i went in to buy a packet of fags, had i pulled up in my car and parked in the same place would he have said anything?, but because i was taking the horse and trap out, he did, so what do i think ? sorry got on me soap box again. oops. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 08 Sep 08 - 10:12 AM I am sorry you have to endure such targeting, Romany man. I would think, by now, that that sort of categorical insult was behind us, buit this appears to be disappointingly untrue. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 08 Sep 08 - 12:57 PM Im used to it amos, life goes on, it will never stop, it happens daily, eventually you get either numb or bitter, i choose the middle road , ie dont hear it as i cant fight it. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 08 Sep 08 - 07:45 PM romany man, you might be interested in a few threads including this one: Origins: Traveller and Romany Influence on Trad. If you put "romany" in the search box at the top of the thread titles and use teh drop down box to set the date to "All" there are a few others. Similarly, if you use other words such as "romani, roman, etc." there are a few others, some contentious. Welcome to the Mudcat! kat |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 09 Sep 08 - 05:17 AM Thanks, some of the threads go way over my head with all the bitching and psuedo racism ie go to 5000 morris dancers, oh my god. ive chosen to drop nthat thread as its just tooooooooo much, i have and use the word loosely "suffered" all my life and im knocking on a bit, 3 major breakdowns, spells in looney bin, etc but hey im still here fighting the corner, love our music though we tend to keep it to ourselves, ive bought so called gypsy music cds and laughed at the obvious piss takes that the producers and non gypsy folk dont realise, still life goes on, just wish i still had the stopping places and work we used to have. Theres always a bye law that says no stopping and another that says no travelling, so good bye to the thirty foot trailer, in the words of the song. see ya |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 09 Sep 08 - 09:54 AM Four days it took to get to the tan, (camp) Here to farm for to work, Money to earn, to get food for the pan, Not known to us the gavvers (police, etc) did lurk. Vardos set tilts tied tight, camp fires burning heating the pani (water) Strong tea, an cheeseon bread will have to see us right, By morns rising to fields we'd go just like an army. The night was cold, the moon she was full, sitting high in the sky, little we knew how the day it would start, as sun replaced moon, they raided the tan, ol' joe the first to die, The gavvers cosh it hit him hard, the skull it did part. the waggons did burn the chavvs (children) they did run, the gavvers the council, the locals, didnt care for any, Pain and fear it ruled the day, many did die at the end of a gun, The new laws were in, no stopping it says, not even allowed to earn a penny. The travelling day gone , the people are next, settle you will, the law says you must, no land can you live on, your ways they are hex'd where ever you go your type we wont trust. a way of life, a culture being slowly destroyed and smashed, we the victims sit and watch, for to stand up and fight, would only bring quicker the time to be cashed. who will pick up the pieces, and see our plight. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 09 Sep 08 - 03:56 PM AW, jesus. Thanks, romanyman. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 09 Sep 08 - 08:36 PM A BREATH OF FRESH AIR AT A PARTY The moon, a little bag of death, shakes shit within itself above a tree: a Spanish-rhythmed slog with every breath insults the intellect, and me. Now, in a ferment smug and pure, this single buttock germinates and bursts, spilling a hate jazz out along the sewer of light, to taunt the common thirsts. It's time now for a job of talk. Why don't they fuck and bugger on the floor? I came in case they did, so I could gawk, and it is what they came here for. -- June 1965, but a remembrance of undergraduate mixer dances in the 1950s |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 09 Sep 08 - 10:18 PM Wow, Joe. Those dances were a sore spot with me, too. I never could figure out the game very well. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 10 Sep 08 - 12:14 AM Joe, shocking, disturbing, maybe a trifle disgusting. Very interesting and real though. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 11 Sep 08 - 07:11 AM Just marks in the grass, where the wagons sat; Just marks in the grass, where the horses grew fat, Just marks in the grass, the turf a bit higher, Just marks in the grass, where they had the camp fire, Just marks in the grass, folk stayed here you know, Just marks in the grass, they were forced to go, Just marks in the grass, Those lives they have gone Just marks in the grass, the bailifs my son. just marks in the grass, spattered with blood , just marks in the grass, we will stop this flood, Just marks in the grass, no body will care, Just marks in the grass, Gone , but where ? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: peregrina Date: 11 Sep 08 - 07:52 AM that's really powerful and poignant, Romany Man. have you thought of singing or reciting it? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 12 Sep 08 - 05:55 AM Nah just like to write it, the old ways are gone never to return, the younuns dot want to know us getting on a bit know the ways cant come back and are left to history, or museum peices, yeh i can still cut pegs and mend lodsa thing, but people want machines, and plastic, our history is bastardised, our ways treated with contempt. its always "oh you are a gypsy" then they are gone. ifn you want to use it please do, there are loads more, Ken |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST Date: 12 Sep 08 - 10:26 AM I think I shall never hear, After everything's been said, Nothing so sweet and dear as, "Original Poster, you give good thread." |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 12 Sep 08 - 10:57 AM Thank very much for sharing with us, romany man. Much appreciated. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 15 Sep 08 - 06:23 AM Off we went the hops to pick, Followed by apples, we gotta be quick, The winter is coming but harvest we must the hard times will soon be running. the wagons need paint, the chavvs need food, the money we earned a lot has been spent, time to knock doors with pegs and posies time to shelter we wont be cosy. Hard time is coming shelter to find heather to cut, brooms to bind. where to stop without fear can we go back where we were last year meat we will poach the keeper aware just a few few rabbits look there are children here they cant eat grass nor the hoss that we rear. what to sell just to keep em fed need warm things for the chavvs bed the boys on the ground. the girls fair better they sleep in the wagon the boys underneath on straw with the hound. some folks take pity on lives so hard others give fear and drive us away the hares in the field they will feed us for a week the deer in the forest a month they will keep the he knows and traps he do set we just want to live guv you have so much most game you dump after you have all shot. We are human guv dont to prison me send, who food to my young'uns will send as i walk to the gibbet for poaching the game i say to you boys keep liiving the game for young lads now men will become in just a few moments my breath will be gone look to your mother your sisters to look to our ways aqnd never give in. a right to live and a right to roam my dear sons it will soon be gone. look to your lives look to your ways lookt the sad times aheading your way. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Sailor Ron Date: 15 Sep 08 - 11:55 AM Full forty years and over this task have I done Ate the meal from off the corpse before the requiem. The 'sin-eater' of the county. I eat their sins with the wine & bread And with take unto my self the sins of all the dead.But who is there to take it on? Where now can I turn? For if no one steps forth for me in Hell's cold fire I'll burn. The sins of hundreds gone I carry in my soul What happens when the 'sin-eater' lies cold beneath his pall? With sins as countless as the stars, murder, lust & hate Will anyone step forward my legacy to take? The 'Death Song' they are keening, so to me they call Yet they'll cross to the other side fore my shadow on them falls. Will they watch my spirit flee bearing this black load the sins of generations past to be judged before the Lord? For this task you were chosen, so do not your duty shun For the only one to eat my sins is you my only son. Eat the bread, and drink the wine, as the priest at my mass The choice my son is in your hand, do not let this chalice pass. Or you condemn your father's soul to Hell and black despair. My son in love, I beg of you take up this cross to bear. Are you here to take it on? Unto you may I turn? For if you don't step forth for me in Hell's cold fire I'll burn Who is there to take it on? Where now can I turn? Or in Hell's fire, in Hell's cold fire, in Hell's cold fire I burn. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 15 Sep 08 - 09:07 PM A MIGHTY YOGURT IS OUR GOD A mighty yogurt is our God, And wicked as a teasel, Which makes Our Mother dark and cross As clouds above grass-laden sod That draw its great green breasts of loss Up to the Big Sloth Weasel. He, stretched upon the thongs of hate, Despises every inning Wherein poor pricketts pushing past The hateful health of Pa's debate Let go the thought of shorn things massed As if they might be winning. Soon comes the second -- aye, that long -- When they are caused to know it: Each prickly parent reams them through With a necessitated gong, To wake them up astride the ewe, And only snow to show it. He that did plow a Christmas path Amidst dark stumps of apples Shall sure upon the hills be struck With avocado pears of wrath And heathen antonyms of luck, Which each brown spatter dapples. Each now devises by his ways An ever crushing pattern Of rampantly abrading spheres Dispersed in swarms of bleak displays, To vomit heat on stellar fears, While Justice bides, a slattern. Evil are they that hate the witch That drinks their blood upon them, For it is purple, and can but Despoil the whimsies of our stitch Till naught but razor blades can cut Such strings, from such as don them. But worse and worse the wet flesh gets By every moonlit measure, So sprouts of vaginated teeth Infest the serifs of our debts, Like pintles holy men bequeath For our dendritic pleasure. And so the asterisks of hate Have synchronized their twitches In order to become the sight Of film-clothed Death (at any rate) And, with a little luck, of Night, Who comes in small, ripe breeches. [Written about 1959] |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: olddude Date: 16 Sep 08 - 07:36 PM AT LAST Elizabeth Akers Allen At last, when all the summer shine That warmed life's early hours is past, Your loving fingers seek for mine And hold them close at last at last! Not oft the robin comes to build Its nest upon the leafless bough By autumn robbed, by winter chilled, But you, dear heart, you love me now. Though there are shadows on my brow And furrows on my cheek, in truth, The marks where Time's remorseless plough Broke up the blooming sward of Youth, Though fled is every boyish grace Might win or hold a lover's vow, Despite my sad and faded face, And darkened heart, you love me now! I count no more my wasted tears; They left no echo of their fall; I mourn no more my lonesome years; This blessed hour atones for all. I fear not all that Time or Fate May bring to burden heart or brow, Strong in the love that came so late, Our souls shall keep it always now! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 16 Sep 08 - 10:29 PM Joe F, were you by any chance an early subject for lysergic experiments? I love the imagery! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 16 Sep 08 - 10:32 PM ELEGY FOR THE COMBAT ZONE (The raunchy district in Boston -- pornographic movies & the like -- succumbed some years ago to political pressure from the city and economic pressure from the expansion of Chinatown.) Farewell, O street of sleaze, For even sleaze must pass! Rebuild, O virtuous Chinese, That true blue Boston, Mass., Where men still had their powers, And women used their wits; And "topless" went with towers, And "bottomless", with pits. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 26 Sep 08 - 11:10 AM Renewal is joined at the head With the truth of things. That is the great secret, and why This thread comes back Over and over. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 26 Sep 08 - 03:17 PM Refresh |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 26 Sep 08 - 09:00 PM DEGREE-OF-FREEDOM BLUES What makes the mist boil off the street? What makes big molecules soak up more heat? Just that they can do it -- they don't have to choose. They've got those everloving degree-of-freedom blues. Why isn't the sky solid white with stars? Why don't you see much from Jupiter to Mars? There's lots of space for losing what you have to lose. Just don't let it give you those degree-of-freedom blues. Energy is everything -- so some people say, but entropy has got the keys and trucks it all away. Everything is plenty -- more than we can use, but most of it is down with those degree-of-freedom blues. We may get TV signals from deep in outer space, and funny, long-dead faces may stare us in the face. If they look a little green, that won't be news. That's just your dopplered-down degree-of-freedom blues. There are more words than you can ever say, more stars and people than ever come your way. You ignore the billions to learn the ones and twos. Open up your ears to those degree-of-freedom blues. Once love was stuck in cylinders and pulled creation's train, but now, if you believe it, it's falling with the rain. Love is free to cover whatever may amuse. I think I hear love drumming those degree-of-freedom blues. Ropes knot and snarl if you just let them be. No river runs straight down to the sea. Crooked ways are billions; straight ways, ones and twos. All the worms are singing those degree-of-freedom blues. We send our whores banging thru the sky; we keep on building bombs as if we'd like to die -- just cause we can do it (costs too much to choose). That's what's got me singing those degree-of-freedom blues. You can run a rocky road balancing a pole, but you can't run with water and keep it in the bowl. What you've got to run with has still more ways to lose, and what you've got to live with is degree-of-freedom blues. 1978 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 26 Sep 08 - 11:09 PM Joe, that's just brilliant,man!!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jeri Date: 27 Sep 08 - 11:04 AM I LOVE Joe's work! This, however, is all over the place, much like me. Doesn't know if it wants to rhyme or not. It probably needs editing... a LOT of editing. I used to write stuff like this when I was young, and I'd hide a bit of rhyme in it. I also wanted to turn this into a legend with a crow bringing the promise of life and setting the conditions. Stone Woman The world is made of one too many sunsets, Glowing bittersweet fire through dusky clouds at the end of too-short days. It is said that statues sometime live, No one knows what magic makes it so. Stone Woman watched as three times the sun rose- Molten gold in a sky of cornflower blue possibility The first day glowed with joyful color, Until the sky went black and the light was ripped away Like a door slamming shut After just a glimpse of joy denied. On the second day, the morning bloomed vermillion and marigold Promising fullness and warmth But smothering clouds soaked up the sun Sucked out the air and mocked her foolish hope. The world dimmed slowly, allowing her to believe sunset was illusion So when might came, it was all the sadder. On the third day, a bashful sun kissed the morning. The far-away was amethyst and peach; the sunlight, golden laughter. Stone Woman watched and longed to join the birds of dawn, and lift upon the breath of a sigh She thought, 'Night will only come again' But she opened her heart one last time. As long as life had not abandoned her, she would not abandon it. She wanted happiness but knew that day too would end, When it did, she faced west to never see the dawn again She was given three days to live and feel before she turned again to stone And in what passes for a heart in a stone thing She wondered at the cruelty love and life could bring She knew she was not blessed but cursed, to remember all and to be alone And she stood through cycles of day and dark for uncountable years The days were dimmer, the grey land stark, and the rain was all she had for tears. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 27 Sep 08 - 08:14 PM Professor, resting from your rigor to dimple the contour up, do not mumble "causality", say "because the sky is black at night so that there can be physics". Copywriter, moiling on the 23rd floor in an inside room, to be a nuisance and a liar just within the law, how much more you would stink with no seas to piss in! Man, how little you could make of life if you did not rest from your rigor at last! (ca. 1970) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 27 Sep 08 - 08:29 PM JOe, I love that degrees of freedom one, esp!!! Really brilliant! Jeri, no, no, and no! Don't touch it! Don't doubt it! Aye-yi-aye, woman! That is stunning. I love it!! (Esp. since my jewellery company is called "StonePeople!") |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 Sep 08 - 08:50 PM Beautiful work, Joe. Jeri, that is rich. Poignant, also. Good. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 22 Jan 09 - 10:52 AM Inauguration The impossible is made by street walking, Menders, and patchers, Fixers of today, making ready, lovers in wait. Teaching the earlier lessons, talking About small, important matters, About each; nothing heady, but nothing late. When embers are made new by the breath And such places prepared to be filled, Then it begins, by multiplication. Then, the whispers of old deaths Sing to bring out the impossible In the voice of a whole nation. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 22 Jan 09 - 02:33 PM CAPRICE Having no mind to make up provokes me defies that need to take a stand to resist deviation from a course of action that will identify me place me safely firmly somewhere written by Tamara Hiatt, between 1992 - 1996 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 22 Jan 09 - 02:45 PM FRACTIONALITY
Written by Tamara Hiatt between 1992 and 1996 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 22 Jan 09 - 03:43 PM I just discovered this thread today. Thank you Amos for creating it and for ressurecting from last post. It is going to take me some time to read through entire thread. I like to take my time with poesy. Some wonderful stuff here. Already pm'd one poster cause he made me cry. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,TJ in San Diego Date: 22 Jan 09 - 05:46 PM Mere singing makes not a singer, Nor mere writing, a writer. Wishing is not believing, Nor a promise, a deed. A dilettante's life is a life unfulfilled, Dabbling, trying, touching without feeling. A life must be more, with its pain and its joy, Without depth, one swims in a shallow pond, And dies, unremembered, and in need. Living is immersion, not simply connected, But one with your passions. Like a steed seeking freedom, Take the bit in your teeth, and run! Run until you bleed. Dare to be ridiculous, Dare to lay bare your soul, Dare the slings and arrows Of those less willing and more fearful. Drink deeply from life's fountain, drink indeed. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 22 Jan 09 - 07:48 PM Man after me own heart, TJ! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 22 Jan 09 - 08:35 PM Convected, fueled by the noon's fat (you are a flame in all you eat), in sight of our ruddy and pale tent at the top, we made a movable feast. Now we stand, staring at the east like the moon, and break our starry fast: golden-breasted, silvery-assed, unbound boots on reminiscent feet. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: John Hardly Date: 22 Jan 09 - 09:16 PM Cheese Limburger send your smell away Cheddar, the orange one on the tray Gouda's very very extraordinary Muenster, not the Addam's family Jack, don't hit the road I love ya babe Colby, just the smoky taste I'm bound to crave Gouda's very very extraordinary Muenster, not the Addam's family. Bleu I serve you in my salad bowls Swiss I stick my fingers in your holes Gouda's very very extraordinary Muenster, not the Addam's family. Baby, baby, I'll Brie around. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Indrani Ananda Date: 22 Jan 09 - 11:52 PM I've only just discovered this! So here's one from me. I wrote it when Tabitha my cat died five years ago. Lost Treasure It's not for a child that I'm grieving; No daughter, no son, not that; But the memory I have that is sweetest - The soul of a beautiful cat. But what of the cats whom nobody loved - The feral, the wild, and the stray- Do they abide in God's memory To wake and be treasured one day? Indrani |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 23 Jan 09 - 12:10 AM Wonderful new additions, folks! Thanks for posting them! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Stephen L. Rich Date: 23 Jan 09 - 01:28 AM Beware By Stephen Lee Rich Beware the man who offers a list of how much we must fear and boasts deliverance. Beware the man who cries, "Hide under your beds and I will make your beds a safe shield!" Beware the man who arrests angels from their flight then demonizes the fallen. Beware the man who proclaims, "Those who do not know terror, who stand up to and face it are dangerous fools! I shall smite them down along with all those amongst the scribes and rabble who applaud them!" Beware the man who brags that he can make fear know fear. While it is true that there is much in the world of which to be afraid, we must ask ourselves this question. Against whom do we need the greater defense, The foreign terrorist who hates us and wishes our destruction simply for being us, Or the man from our own home who is having breakfast in the bed under which he would have us hide? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 23 Jan 09 - 09:36 PM Ever since Alan T. and Johnny von, We've known that life is just a silly con -way game, an endless evanescent volley of bytes inflicted by a melancholy on us black sheep in this enshrouded valley, true to the falsity of golden Cali., despising cant, and doing all we can, despite CO, to keep up with the van. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 24 Jan 09 - 12:44 PM Notes: words and music by Malvina Reynolds; copyright 1964 Schroder Music Company, renewed 1992. People often think of this as an ecology song, but Malvina wrote it after reading Mark Lane's book, Rush to Judgment, about the Kennedy assassination. God bless the grass that grows thru the crack. They roll the concrete over it to try and keep it back. The concrete gets tired of what it has to do, It breaks and it buckles and the grass grows thru, And God bless the grass. God bless the truth that fights toward the sun, They roll the lies over it and think that it is done. It moves through the ground and reaches for the air, And after a while it is growing everywhere, And God bless the grass. God bless the grass that grows through cement. It's green and it's tender and it's easily bent. But after a while it lifts up its head, For the grass is living and the stone is dead, And God bless the grass. God bless the grass that's gentle and low, Its roots they are deep and its will is to grow. And God bless the truth, the friend of the poor, And the wild grass growing at the poor man's door, And God bless the grass. Malvina Reynolds |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 24 Jan 09 - 10:03 PM We whom fear and chance deprive of dependents to deprave must take our consolation prize in foul but charitable praise of precious peers who will connive at comfort in a naked knave, whose laugh affirms what sense denies, whose love is death to yeas and nays. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jan 09 - 06:13 AM Prison Breaks Who does not dream of prison-breaks? A pal with a motorcycle or a hidden airplane on the moor? To heal the hard scars And too many churlish thoughts from Brute planet-living where The food is poor. Not enough drink. Corners smell of sweat and The entertainment's lousy and All the fun is happening Somewhere else. It stinks. Who, if only they had a map, Would not bust out and Take your chance On the outside? But you're dreaming, pal. The place is too well organized, see. You've been trained into it, see. Just go back to sleep, would ya? Nobody's going anywhere, no Breakouts; you'll be right here tomorrow. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 25 Jan 09 - 07:55 PM You cannot sleep forever on percale. More transient even than a fancied kiss is the complaisance of the pillowcase. Weary though you may be, and strong the pill, Dark's consolation, like itself, will pale. You cry, and blow your nose. You sleep, and piss. One-two, fuck-you, mad Nature sets the pace For us, too frail to help, too tough to kill. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jan 09 - 08:25 PM WE're in dark veins together, Joe, as the strep said to the staph. :D A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: John Hardly Date: 30 Jan 09 - 08:03 PM Dandelions are dangerous Dandelions don't need gardeners Dandelions are artists They ignore all the boundaries in the yard Flower beds? They're in them and they're out of them Wreaking their insomniac havoc all about. The crafted and groomed watch jealously From their straight rows and their well planned lives. And they can see who is having the fun. Painting dada smiley faces on daVinci lawns The other flowers are not stupid Just stationary And, sheltered as they are They know who's been around Growing zones? Don't make me laugh The other flowers are not stupid They just have the plastic-ness left on their couch-ness They have their "Do Not Touch" signs Displayed in their careful elegance Meanwhile the children make chains with yellowed fingers Meanwhile the children test to see if they like butter And the crafted and groomed look on And wish they'd come up with that simple idea first. Dandelions are artists. With their outrageous style And a bright yellow Tina Turner hair-do With outrageous opulence that doesn't spare a Springtime acre Subtlety be damned. Dandelions are dangerous Dandelions have no need for gardeners Dandelions are artists. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 30 Jan 09 - 08:33 PM Pretty is thy thatch, pretty thy fur, Pretty thy golden ears wherein my tongue Shall fuck, whereon my lips shall nibble, where My murmur to embrace shall lovelike reach, And we shall lie like mortars, each in each, In wavy luxuries of flesh and hair, Grasping with teeth at last joy's bottom rung, Until we clasp as wet as once we were In the first camp of praise. Some oil drips, Some burns, and finally the engine bursts. Suffer our thousandths to be like our firsts, And we will be content with ears and lips, With tongues and teeth and fingers; but above Hover these fears of boredom: thoughts of love. (ca. 1968) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 31 Jan 09 - 11:39 AM Today's Sheldon reflects on aspiring to poetry. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 31 Jan 09 - 12:12 PM In 2004 I had this published in an Anthology of Erotic Verse. I called it:- The Noises You Make. As I gently caress your delicate breasts, Sof noises emanate from your ears and nose. I slide my hand from your breast and let it, Glide slowly towards your abdomen. I reach the soft mound of pleasure and, Caress the hair which hides your maidenhood. All the time kissing, licking and chewing your lips, My tongue probing the depths of your mouth. My fingers find your clitoris and so, Begin to gently massage that little pleasure dome. The sounds coming from you get louder, As I lift myself gently on to you. The noises you make are reaching a crescendo, As I slide in and out once more..... I can't help but think to myself, I wish you wouldn't snore!!!!! Sorry but all my poetry has a twist at the end. Best wishes, Mike. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 31 Jan 09 - 12:51 PM Georgiansilver, that is so wrong ...and so hilarious. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: romany man Date: 27 Mar 09 - 04:02 PM My mate John Barden has put the words from marks in the grass to music, it can be found on you tube, just typr marks in the grass and you know the rest, many many thanks to john for his work on the poem, now it has a voice, again thanks john |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 Mar 09 - 04:38 PM Like you, I am just visiting here From stars or from songs; I refuse the cold origins of stone and dust Because there is no truth in them. You can say such conclusions are mad, Yet they bring new spaces, laughter, difference. If your sober analysis is sane, Why does it lead to solids, entropy, The inheritance of spite in the wind? If I say "Let it be mad, And let us make the most of it." The world slipping toward occlusion shrugs, Falling down in the wind, It can only strive In the making of nothing. And though there is no ether by hard measurement, Something still carries light from the stars, And something sings from the heart. AHJ 3-27-2009 San Diego, California |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 27 Mar 09 - 06:41 PM romany man, thanks for telling us about John Barden singing your song. It is really beautiful and he's got a wonderful voice. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 27 Mar 09 - 08:09 PM Epithalamium A plainclothes imp saw the first second of a shameless Boston summer love. Satan blushed and vainly mobilized: Hell's frontier was compromised. Up in the universe, everything became slightly more physical. The same stuff went on, transfigured by defiance, just within the laws of science. Masses of granite kissed each other's faults, two-stepping quarks took up the waltz, in a tree's lee, sucking summer heat, whirlwinds coupled in the street, crook'd molecules forswore the pentagon, Don Júan put a condom on, an ag'd curmudgeon lost himself in lewd ecstasies of gratitude, nature turned out a zero-defect freak, trout held their breath in Boulder Creek, far from a blazing, basking barley field the sun exploded and was healed, shrimp wagged their tails and stirred up the abyss, English bent itself toward this, all in a second. There've been eighty million since: heaven could use a billion. (1983) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Mar 09 - 01:07 PM I love that, Joe!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Mar 09 - 01:14 PM The Jester, when he wakes Finds he has a head full of maps And no-where to go. He rolls out to shave, looking for A madcap renewal service and Cursing the stubborness of nouns. "Damn the nouns, nouns, nouns , nouns!" "Damn the nouns, nouns, nouns! The nouns Are all against me!", he yells into the mirror behind the sink. The fog of new water hides the smirk Of his reflection, and then the wink. The reason nouns are up in arms is a rumor they have heard, That he had muttered it in his fitful sleep: "God is a Verb." |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 06 Apr 09 - 10:18 AM # What is National Poetry Month? National Poetry Month is a month-long, national celebration of poetry established by the Academy of American Poets. The concept is to widen the attention of individuals and the media—to the art of poetry, to living poets, to our complex poetic heritage, and to poetry books and journals of wide aesthetic range and concern. We hope to increase the visibility and availability of poetry in popular culture while acknowledging and celebrating poetry's ability to sustain itself in the many places where it is practiced and appreciated. # Who started it? The Academy of American Poets has led this initiative from its inception in 1996 and along the way has enlisted a variety of government agencies and officials, educational leaders, publishers, sponsors, poets, and arts organizations to help. # When is National Poetry Month? April. Every year since 1996. # Why was April chosen for National Poetry Month? In coordination with poets, booksellers, librarians, and teachers, the Academy chose a month when poetry could be celebrated with the highest level of participation. Inspired by the successful celebrations of Black History Month (February) and Women's History Month (March), and on the advice of teachers and librarians, April seemed the best time within the year to turn attention toward the art of poetry—in an ultimate effort to encourage poetry readership year-round. T. S. Eliot wrote, "April is the cruelest month." It is our hope that National Poetry Month lessens that effect. On a lighter note, Chaucer wrote: Whan that April with his showres soote The droughte of March hath perced to the roote, And bathed every veine in swich licour, Of which vertu engendred is the flowr Finally, Edna St. Vincent Millay asked, "To what purpose, April, do you return again?" For National Poetry Month, of course!---> |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 06 Apr 09 - 02:53 PM Sundown Meadow No man built this church These dark groves of old aspen keep their secrets in shaded depths The slanted sun showers the ridge with golden light aspen leaves quake green and silver in the soundless breeze A field in yellow flower each stem illuminated in the setting sun Myriad of tiny insects drift between the blooms Elk emerge like brown spirit shapes from the distant treeline Above, snow-topped peaks subdued to silhouettes as the sun's last brilliance is given to the meadow Your hair, lips, breasts the color of the sun and the sun's heat within you Here the Piper might be heard behind the silence summoning the stars to emerge from groves of night and hold court with the quarter moon Here the evening is bourne gently on long shadows Two wheels brought the two of us here up a twisted path to speak of building a home in the meadow only to know we shall never dwell within this but that instead this hour shall dwell within us |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 06 Apr 09 - 03:46 PM LEJ: Wow. Beautiful. Makes me jealous!!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 06 Apr 09 - 06:37 PM I'll second that, E.J.; beautiful thruout, and the "punchline" is sublime. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 06 Apr 09 - 09:06 PM When April pours the colors of a shell Upon the hills, when every little creek Is shot with silver from the Chesapeake In shoals new-minted by the ocean swell, When strawberries go begging, and the sleek Blue plums lie open to the blackbird's beak, We shall live well -- we shall live very well. -- Elinor Wylie * BITS There once were ones, now dead as Napier's bones, Who, once they'd reached the right-foot little toe, Had barely got the sheep down past the teens, But you can toggle off a million beans, Add five percent, and still be home for tea. A *software artist*! That's a thing to be (Trade-jargon with lascivious overtones)! Another (string, hell!) fiddle for your bow! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,William Everett (was Zeke) Date: 12 Apr 09 - 01:59 PM If I were a proton in a microwave oven (which is an electron accelerator),, I might see history, as it has seen me: starting to know me with Neil's Bohr, ...the Moses of the nucleus.... I am atomic number, and my nemesis neutrons have me in my cocoon,,, someday, in new age, I will escape in a proton beam.. I have a love/hate relationship with atom smashers, and the nuclear forces that have bound me, only able to feel my lady electrons, not able to consummate them,,, and the microwave oven fights me as I try to pull them ever closer,, It is an electron accelerator, and I cannot beat that, only someday hope to join it, and butterfly away ....! But, all we have now is patters of waves, orbits, I feel your spin,, lovely electron lady but you move so fast that I cannot pull you in, as if the earth was to be swallowed by the sun...! Why how my urge could be so destructive of your flight...!! !!!!!!!!,electron shells is sometimes a lonely word, only used in high school chemistry , and then you forget how much more I am than a puny proton, or lowest of all the lousy leptons....!!. . I am so much larger than there subatomic particles, quarks are jokes that I tell my friends... And when ionized..oh what a lonely atom it is!!!. Unless we have gained an electron,,,!! Even then often I have to share with protons in other nuclei,,, and you do not know the pains I have felt, when bonds are broken,,, I only can survive it by becoming a teacher....!!!.... Heisenberg saw that he could not see me, and know where I am at the same time.... Someday I will chase those photons in a beam, Screaming to know what is on the other side of the nearest black hole,,,, I will travel thru and you will call me quasar worm hole, brightest, and longest of all lights, little bang until you get close,, believe me it is BIG, big bang when you get close,, Quasar is God's light.....and the end of black night... A new dream,,endless stream....have faith |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 12 Apr 09 - 08:40 PM From a letter to a friend, in response to a poem of his, 1981: ...whose shitkickers still stick in T.O. clay, I greet you gratefully from far away. Mine crackle broken glass: Greetings from Boston, where people are abstractions on concrete -- plenty to look at, very few to meet. It's true there's Culture, but that mostly lost on The likes of me, who value most the chance I've had to get _away_ from Entertainment. Being an urbanite has in the main meant not this or that expensive song & dance, just easy simple ways (at least so far) to mind my business & not own a car. You like me "more than most", it says here. Well! more than you like most? more than most like me? Bless English for the ambiguity. In either _case_, it's good I got the hell away from there, so we could talk at last. You've noticed how unlikely conversation is in our bourgeois corner of the nation. Pisses me off. Jacques Barzun thinks it has t- o do with feeling only feelings matter -- and fights start if you dig beneath the chatter. Well, no-one's more afraid of that than I -- but now I must be careful what I say or damn sure I'll drive even you away: Right-minded people always wince & sigh when someone "runs coself down", but the trouble is that your comfort-worshiping taboo gives me no better things to say or do -- it just makes half the world unmentionable. The reigning bitch permits no comment on her: once it was Sex, then Death, and now Dishonor. Besides, you likewise must have had enough of Brechtian Byronics by this time. (But Koestler hints Brecht really took the rhyme scheme -- and a poem -- from Villon, whose stuff I've never read. I think I'll check him out, now that I've breached the Widener's straitened gate. He'll have been bucks for someone to translate in this new age of raunch, I have no doubt.) So, trusting you'll come back, I'll let you go and grant you peace. Love, F a/k/a Joe |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Nehi Date: 12 Apr 09 - 10:55 PM Paying my dues. Copyright 2006 – Tennessee Jim I'm standin' on the corner with my guitar in my hand Yeah, I'm standin' on the corner, with my guitar in my hand Playin' for tips from anybody I can. Keep wonderin' if I'll make it out of this town Wonderin' if…I'll make it out of this town. Before whiskey or the Devil puts me down in the ground. Chorus: Just playing the blues And payin' my dues. Livin' a hard life but one that I choose. Rode an eighteen wheeler up from New Orleans Old eighteen wheeler, up from New Orleans Running from a woman, and some bad cocaine. She started talking marriage and settlin' down Talking 'bout marriage…and settlin' down. Had to take my guitar, get the hell out of town. Chorus: Now I'm playin' the blues and payin' my dues. Waiting on the the good Lord To give me good news. The wind's pickin' up, I feel a chill in my bones North wind's blowing, I feel a chill in my bones. Winter's coming on and I gotta go home. I hear the whistle blowin', on the evenin' train Hear that whistle blowin', on the evenin' train. Take me back to Mississippi or New Orleans. Chorus: I'll keep on playin' the blues and payin' my dues I'm gonna go back home Where there's nothin to lose. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Nehi Date: 13 Apr 09 - 03:41 PM Lethe— The phone sat at his side for two days. Stagnant air, sweaty, opaque enclosed the house- Uterine walls suffocating the adult fetus within- A birth long overdue—silence screamed at him. Measured portion of bran and fruit—no coffee—some juice instead. another procession of measured meals and self-injected insulin. . . . Running out of places where the skin's not pricked. Kyrie Eleison. He roamed through deserted room after deserted room with whispers haunting where his mother was- the funeral dirge, the cousin twice removed, the chicken soup and ham and cheese, the lapel rent, the priest paid. He fluffed the pillows—straightened the shade. Measured portion of fruit—green salad, no salt . . . another in procession of measured meals and sel-injected insulin. Running out of places where the skin's not pricked. Kyrie Eleison. He turned on the iron. Filled the water just so. Readied the starch, removed the plastic and tags and pressed. He had an important date and must get dressed. Every wrinkle gone. Handkerchief and undershirt clean. But there seemed no end to the wrinkles and he scorched the shirt—but on the tucked-in part. It wouldn't show. Measured portion of fish and greens—bottled water. . . Another in procession of measured meals and self-injected insulin, Running out of places where the skin's not pricked. Kyrie Eleison. He took the polished key. Unlocked the drawer. Sifted through neatly stacked statements. Wrote the checks. Stamped them paid. Two months ahead. Should be enough. Returned the key. Thoughts of all he owned. Empty, hollow thoughts. then turned instead and read from "Prufrock" and The Confessions, donning mendicant robes. Insensed air around the pallid priest, "pater noster, qui est in calis." A blessed Saint Anthony. A cup of tea. A peach. Running out of places where the skin's not pricked. Kyrie Eleison. "Keep things private. All's in order," he wrote. Dressed in pressed clothes--(Dawn comes soon after the moon falls)— "Mustn't be late. 440 to 65 North. Off at Shelby. 17 blocks down. 10 minutes, no traffic." He had practiced Saturday and every night since then. He parked at the lake. The rains had not come as promised to cool the stagnant air. So he plodded through the Stygian nights 17 blocks watching the city expand large before him. Diminishing him. A gunshot rang to is left. A domestic dispute that did not involve him. He wished it did. He ascended the crest of the tumid river. Torpid, he studied the sluggish slough of despond below. A pilgrim himself. A propitiation. And he though of measured meals and self-injected insulin. He'd run out of places where the skin's not pricked. The General Jackson found him tangled under a riverfront dock. "No tourist saw, thank God. Might blemish the city. You can't shield everybody from everything." As they pulled the body from beneath the dock, they noted, "he had his shoes and his socks on and his shirt tucked in." |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 13 Apr 09 - 03:48 PM Vivid stuff indeed, Nehi. Thanks. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Apr 09 - 01:39 PM Middling No ruts, no wheels, no wagonloads; Cleaving to the dry middle hump of the road, Safe in the center of neglect. A quiet middle, free of intersection For meetings are always done at the edges. Minds that live here fear the ditch and hedge And define their paths by staying away From all directions. Heaven is not desired, and the dull middle voice Goes to eleven. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 18 Apr 09 - 03:16 PM Very well done, A. Nehi, that gave me a chill. very strong stuff. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Nehi Date: 20 Apr 09 - 05:52 PM Thanks, that's my daughter's work. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 18 Jun 09 - 01:28 PM The Midnight Snack I reach inside my close cropped hair and graze my fingernails along my scalp summarily probing for the banquet I unearth it, as it twists aroung, dark and fair, newly emerged from the nits sown upon the ruddy stalks of fur it's miniature legs squirming alongside my avaricious thumb and forefinger as I heave it into my mouth with ravenous bravado savouring the quiet crunch within nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 18 Jun 09 - 03:23 PM LMAO Amerigin; was that based on a recent personal experience? : ). |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 18 Jun 09 - 05:54 PM An extra stanza, written ca. 1980: Saw a crawdad big as a whale: Jesus bugs fucking -- I was on their scale, Sugar babe. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Jul 09 - 03:32 PM Then came a software engineer, a man Of registers and bytes, of Nors and Ifs, And calls to subroutines. He said, "I know in life's raw fire a thing may be so And be at once not so, and both be true. But this truth I cannot allow, It will not make a tool somehow Or move an algorithm to resolve The data it is given. Truth Is not the use to which I strive, Or how we, in my trade, Are paid, how we survive." A lawyer friend, sharing the patio, replied, "I understand. The truth that may abide Is vastly overrated in the normal flow Of our affairs. I too cannot allow The glittering lure of truth to force itself Into cases, or their place in law. You and I Are brothers in pursuit of some other good, Knowing the data has no use than That to which it can be put." Just then, a summer rain began, And both the lawyer and the engineer, Laughing, took their wine And retreated to the family room. A large screen brightened up the space, Offering basketball of great importance to them both. ANd so they settled on their path For the next few hours, watching the brilliant pixels change, and change and change, And thirsting for the game, between the ads, Neither thinking the other one was mad. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: greensue Date: 15 Jul 09 - 06:42 PM Just a Drop Drip, drip, drip. The sound of life In the cool of the morning. From tree to bush, Blade of grass To Scorched earth. Drip, drip, drip. Drink green sprouting shoot, Drink the blood of the land. One drip, would clean a child's eyes! One drip, moisten cracked lips. One drip, moisture for the swolen tongue. For me, it runs throughmy fingers Like the gold of a jeweler. For you, it's maybe soon. Maybe, matbe. How could I get to be so old Without realising how wealthy I am? Drip, drip, drip. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 17 Jul 09 - 06:10 PM From Deda: Reading a Poem I commit to read a poem. I stop everything else. I sit down. I read. I taste each word in each line. I take in, know the feelings. I come to the end. I consider the whole. I study the poet's name, the blurb. (He died young. He grew up in Brooklyn.) Finally I declare that I am done. I will not read the next one. Otherwise I would sit there with the pages forever, Turning, reading, rereading, tasting, drinking. But no. I stand, set down the pages, and walk, purposefully. I look, act in command. But my head is blowing up. I have opened up a box, and things are flying out. Words fly around my head like Harpies. They scream and swoop and laugh and cry. Sometimes they fly together into phrases, lines. "Pine!" yells one. "Spruce!" yells the next, and they cackle and swirl in circles, like swallows in traffic, daring cars to hit them. "Trees?" I ask, "or verbs?" "YES!" they shriek. "And STREET names! PLACES! Names of SHOPS! AROMAS! TEXTURES! COLORS!" They taunt me. They are Harpies, Furies Who want me to turn them into Kind Ones, Into Eumenides. I don't know how. I would have to write, and write, and write, Take their dictation, until they drop to sleep. And then they might be altered. For some little while, perhaps. They will pursue me, in any case. If I read for ten minutes, they will chase me for hours. I have to buy a mop and a pan, I have to clean the kitchen. I have to look for work. This is why I don't read poems As often as I might. July 14, 2009 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 20 Jul 09 - 11:17 AM More reasons to Keep Writing Them! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 20 Jul 09 - 02:44 PM Memorial Day Memorial Day. The sun is punching through the threadbare residue of the cumulous clouds, a hazy veil of indigo sky heralding the ordained invasion of summer. The battalions of young libidinous girls march in formation as they cruise the unkempt thoroughfares of downtown Portland, their uniforms of skintight shorts, and miniskirts, unmask newly shaved legs scintillating with the lubricating dew of perspiration. Their breasts, scantily obscured by bikini tops and low cut blouses, jangle with the penetrating goose steps of their high heeled sandals. The volunteers of this estrogen brigade are flourishing fuchsias aspiring to be harvested from the yielding topsoil of their birth, a desperation engendered from the eroticism of the antiquated spring. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 22 Jul 09 - 03:01 AM A Late Night Walk An hour and a half passed midnight, To the west is the taunting tail of the false sunrise Birthed by the counterfeit luminosity of the metropolis Just beyond this swathe of animated timber, protruding Through the rippling channel of the Columbia A crane traipses down the unyielding planks of the marina In a twitching prance reminiscent of Egyptian hieroglyphs Beak protracted before him, pitching from stem to stern Along his S sculptured throat, with each dodgy step, To the incessant screeching of the steel gangway Chafing against the dock, with the minute swells Manufactured by the rapacious currents I recline on the serrated surface of a picnic table The iron bolts swiftly refrigerating the sweltering moisture Saturating the obsidian cotton of my t-shirt Arms elevated to shroud the streetlights Endeavouring to suppress the celestial painting from my vision The galaxy, the universe, cavort their pirouetting jig above me An intricate spider web of vibrating stars Each a solitary flame, a candle floating in a window Compelling, navigating their sailors home nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: greensue Date: 28 Jul 09 - 05:08 PM Come on you brilliant lot, more required please. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 28 Jul 09 - 06:11 PM Jane's Eyes Jane's eyes can not detect the way and so she was guided slowly to the table "Ah the Sun!" she said We sat on the bright terrace heat rising from the painted deck a breeze rustled the table cloth Jane sat silently as a buzz of conversation rose in the warm air she wove her fingers together then, said "what is out there?" the buzz ceased, "rocks and trees" said Vic -a fact no one could dispute- but Jane's fingers worked again, her head more inclined I said "we are perched on the rim of a great valley. I see shadowed ridge lines 5 and 10 miles away, partly obscured by great pines that stand before us below, perhaps 200 feet, there is a small meadow where deer would graze, and a trail to follow ending in a defile where a creek might roll in rain" A toast was raised by someone, I raised my glass and gazed upon the hundred purples of the distant ridges and I drank of it long and deep despairing of words |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 28 Jul 09 - 06:45 PM As brilliant as they come. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Jul 09 - 12:23 PM And then I dreamt I'd lost my ship at sea And swept up in the storm, was slammed among the broken spars, Hit on the head, and taken down by salt waters at last. Finding this broken skull and drowned flesh beneath My standards, I left it, and drifted The length and depth of the Pacific, trying to understand. I found at last a settling place, descending Into the form of a blue whale calf, new-borning And felt it was something I could be. So I kept it. Imagine the learning! How deep is down, how often up, Blowing with precision, spy-hopping, how to fight For love and sing to the clan at depth. Not an easy course. Especially the singing--in my dream I kept remembering the Shirelles, And wanted to sing Doo Wop to the blues around me, oooo-wah. But the elders butted me and the rest ignored my trying Blue Moon. My mother loved me, though, and knowing that was enough. I practiced using my voice, alone on the 100 fathom line, And sang remembered pops in whale tones. I got good, too! I even mastered the Shhh in Sh-Boom, a foreign sound. And When the time came I had to be my own whale, I could do a dozen numbers from the Fifties. So I cruised the oceans looking for a research team with Microphones in the water and when I found them, Of course I sang Dream and Santa Catalina, in dark whale tones. It freaked them out, of course, and then they lured me to some bay And I would breach and bellow The Book of Love or Donna Octaves below "C", splashing down and rising again for the chorus. Crowds in small boats and large bobbed out to hear it! It was a wonder! How could a whale learn such old tunes? I was a smash, a blue baritone hit. But after a while people began to say it wasn't that good. They were annoyed because I wouldn't pronounce The words as well as the originals they loved, And became disenchanted with me. Attendance fell. So I left, Went back to the deeps, started my own family In bottomless waters where I sing To the calves as they grow, about the Book of Love. The dream ended well, even better than the original, I think. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 29 Jul 09 - 02:51 PM A whale of a tale! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Jul 09 - 04:13 PM YEah, but it makes me wonder what the hell I've been smoking.... A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Neil D Date: 30 Jul 09 - 10:42 AM Many ages gone and I hold him near Centuries silenced this sweet voice I hear Faded by time's mists to my eyes so clear Who asked where are the snows of yesteryear As bold as cold brass, so wracked by sick fear Loving God, robbing churches, crime his career Despicable man whom we hold so dear Who asked where are the snows of yesteryear Luxurious days, the life so auster Cynical soul whose heart was sincere As common as sod no other his peer Who asked where are the snows of yesteryear Passed from here for half a millenium Still atop poetic continuum |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 30 Jul 09 - 11:18 AM Proposing I will not say my heart is thundering, My mind isn't glazed with awe, or sauteed with pity; But I think of you often, and have been wondering If you might see the possibility. This is what I saw. I will be the measurer, and the counter of dimension. I will do your taxes. If you could just make sure I have something to eat, not junk, but not raw And you can be in charge, too, of feng shui, colors and time. I will count up your RAM, your voltages, your ROI, You my carbos and my waist, and tell me when To get a haircut. So we could live, A good arrangement, one that good save Nine per cent of our combined incomes before taxes. You do the food, I'll do the numbers. What more could we need? Come on, And say, "Yes". It's sensible! It could be fun! Now where are you going? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 30 Jul 09 - 04:29 PM The Carnival King From Snow and Ice He arose Decked in finest Motley and wearing the Fool's Crown We proclaim Him King! His throne is gold studded with gems yet it is deal withal covered with paint and paste And He has reigned a Fortnight We have hallowed Him with strong drink and Wantonness with song and dancing until we are spent This morning ends His reign at last We drape Him in ivy His throne decorated in sheaths of corn Drowsy from His revels He takes little notice as young girls pull Him on a wagon through the village street At the river he is cast down ripped with scythes and pelted with stones and given His true name For He is Death and He must Die to bring Life to us all To the birds upon the leaves To the roots that twist in soil And so we have torn Him taunted and beaten Him and cast His bones into the furrows The Carnival King is Dead! and we shall live another year For He is Death and He has Died to bring Life to us all |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 30 Jul 09 - 04:56 PM Ferociously good, Ernie!! Whew! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 30 Jul 09 - 04:58 PM Time goes and steals our lives Leaving us shaking our heads in the dust Left behind in its wake of childhood, School-yards, partners, lovers, children, loss and love. Left to introspection sidetracked for years The dust settles, sight is clear, if chosen, Paths cross or separate or veer off to the unexpected We say, "Well, I never!" Or, "Wouldn't've believed it!" And there we go...filling up or in time, Making our own dust devils, feeling alive again Dancing, crying, building up, pulling down Opening up, closing up, and moseying along. (So rusty! Just a few fragments. I'll have to get up to speed. You fellahs are doing so great!) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 30 Jul 09 - 05:17 PM I like it, Kat. God knows I have some dust I'm dealing with. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 30 Jul 09 - 05:20 PM Oh Poet To possess that anima mundi To wield that red branch If I a rat-rhymer could be To curse and to rail and make strong men quail To succor the frail and balance on my tail Like a kangaroo Another rat, whose poetry a physical loquacity, spreads and commands many Whose rhetoric of power and grace Controls the pack and the place To thump about with huge wordy feet Kick box my meaning at obscurity's face Not merely anonymous commentary, from me But hard earth shattering truths Well aimed and landed hits Oh a poet to be. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 30 Jul 09 - 05:34 PM "To thump about with huge wordy feet Kick box my meaning at obscurity's face" Great lines, VT. Remind me of the lines "a poem should be palpable and mute as a globed fruit" Words you can hold in your hand. Or in your case, even sprain a finger.;>) Neil, I am motivated to know more about Francois Villon now. "Where are the Snowdens of yesteryear?"....Catch 22, Joseph Heller |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 30 Jul 09 - 06:04 PM Cereal Killer or Serial Liquor (I haven't figured out which yet) Take 'em all Seinfeld and his lucky charms Friends, Ellen - I am not Mad About You "Silly rabbit sitcoms are the skids" and all the rest of the prime time got to syndicated hell Flakes put them in a bowl and just add a Dairy Coucil public servant annoucing "I won't always look like this cause I'm drinking" HEAVILY and when they are soggy the Madison Ave hypies won't bite anymore even K-E- double L- O- double good won't eat them And neither will Mikey cause he hates everything. I do everything my Rice Krispies tell me to do. Diggum |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 30 Jul 09 - 07:11 PM I do everything my Rice Krispies tell me to do. That is a GREAT line, BTW!! LOL! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jeri Date: 31 Jul 09 - 05:27 PM Those without the oak door thundered Yet it was I who spoke 'four hundred' I wondered, but I should be fine The last one was three ninety nine Oh be you counters of the hundreds wary-- You think you're safe, and then comes Jeri |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 31 Jul 09 - 06:05 PM I( can't read that now without picturing, and "hearing", Jeri singing it; cute, but not as impressive as two weeks ago this evening. :-) Dean |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 31 Jul 09 - 06:08 PM I(can't (figure out where that (parenthsis came from either... |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 31 Jul 09 - 07:07 PM Dean, I thought it was the top of your head in a really BIG smile?:-) Thanks, LeeJ...dust it off, darlin' and keep on moseying. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Neil D Date: 31 Jul 09 - 10:30 PM Lonesome EJ, Thank you. That was my purpose. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 01 Aug 09 - 03:17 AM The three-fingered Dawn, creeping slowly over the hills and the foothills of one's cerebellum bleeds profusely for the loss of all one believes in Souls unlit by flame untouched by passion and unknown by others transported from one place to another places within and without places we're afraid to cry about yet gladly call home like E.T. Still, though, the ship courses on through the blood red three-fingered waters headed homeward like a tired sailor headed homeward homeward towards Love |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 01 Aug 09 - 05:48 AM Kat I moved by the dust and dust moving in your piece. More about dust, the good and the bad of it please. We are made of and return to dust and I just reread Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials so have dust on the brain. Must now look in dusty journals to find my long forgotten mental dust. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 01 Aug 09 - 05:51 AM In the meantime- this on an old interactive poetry forum I used once to frequent. PLAY GOD A universe moves Infinitesmally small worlds Breathed into being From dust Swirling slow Isolated Intrinsically connected A cosmic dance Watch Like God Be pleased with The creation Be giant against it But unable to Control it It is set In motion Nothing to stop it But A black hole Go get the vaccum cleaner! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 01 Aug 09 - 02:31 PM I was hoping to earn some praise on my "Three Fingered Dawn" poem. Now I have to own up...I didn't write it. It's my favorite bad poem, read by Bill Pullman to Ellen Degeneres in the movie Mr Wrong. My apologies to everyone. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 01 Aug 09 - 02:43 PM Thanks, Virginia. I'll see what I can dust off.:-) You've got some really memorable lines in several of yours! LeeJ, I knew that wasn't you...I *think*!**bg** Amos, the blue whale has been a big hit with sisters and a girlfriend! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 01 Aug 09 - 03:16 PM PSYCHIC DE-LILAC I am a comfort flower attracting needy bees drone humming cares into me what you glean from the visit I can't say but I hope you make good honey from it. This is from back in the mommy to teens days. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 01 Aug 09 - 03:27 PM Blowing more dust off old stuff... this written in 2000, a year before I met my partner and surprisingly applicable. SIP If we were pressed one upon the other agitating the ferment and allowed to cool in one another's juices ~~~ If our combined elements were further strengthened joined in the psychic and corporeal alembic ~~~ What distillate spirit we would be brandy love ~~~ In future to taste the old draught and say ~~~ "That was a very good year" |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Neil D Date: 01 Aug 09 - 03:29 PM Well EJ, I didn't want to say anything but... Here's my favorite bad poem, from "The Man With Two Brains" with Steve Martin: Oh pointy birds Oh pointy pointy Annoint my head Annointy nointy Not as subtle as Three fingered dawn perhaps, but pretty funny. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 01 Aug 09 - 04:42 PM LEJ: I wish you hadn't gone and confessed!! I liked it so much I thought I could have written it myself!! LOL!!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 01 Aug 09 - 04:42 PM Again, my apologies for tainting an otherwise serious thread with silliness, but to get the full impact of Three Fingered Dawn, click here and move timer on the vid to 3:03 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 01 Aug 09 - 07:10 PM Well, you are a better and kinder lifter of lines than yon Rapiare--he never apologizes or surrenders credit!! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 03 Aug 09 - 06:48 PM I have made more noise than I should have. I have roared back at the world, raised Cain, Stamped my foot. That I thought It was all a celebration of life Was a trick of the world, Which I fell for. Oh, I have been a bull-roarer, full-throated Claiming the power of life over stones or dust, And my kind of meat over others'. But, what a bamboozle! Life it self is so still, a zero-being force And is itself all silence. That the world is a tar-baby And I the fool who swung (loudly) at it Entirely escaped me. Despite this error, I hope to be released into The natural briar-patch of silent breath. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 04 Aug 09 - 06:46 PM A True Story A true story is an oxymoron, too. You never can get there from there or here; The connections are not true, But are laced in half-way down the ear. The meanings painted on by wit Are not in the story, And certainly not the true half of it. The morals are bought cheap from fear, The I, the thou, all loaned by you; The teller flown in from elsewhere, just to sit. But that is how we are, and what we do, and we are never sorry. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 01 Sep 09 - 09:01 PM A Restored Soldier? He pauses at the counter, hair still slashed in a military fashion, slightly bronzed arms poking through a sleeveless shirt, gripping delicately in his hand a young blond girl approximately 3 years in age, her ringlets spinning down her pink and indigo dress, proudly exhibiting her to a myriad of acquaintances that approach him for a momentary visit. His eyes squint vaguely in the perpetual strenuous pain, from the continuous pressure positioned on his surrogate leg....a metallic souvenir of titanium joins, ball bearings, and shafts, a memento of the armed confrontation he left behind. His open visage appears attuned to home....but what disfigurements does he possess upon his psyche? What events did he witness that he will never verbalise? What forces certain individuals to suffer a ghastly defacement, but evolve and situate everything behind him, while others, who display no tangible mutilations, submit to the enticing siren's cry of self administered remedies and alcohol, envisaging the combat in the shadows of his damaged mentality.... submerging their trepidations and secreting tears in one more shot? I observe as he and his petite girl ungainly saunter out of the supermarket, his upper body inclining left when his Nike shod counterfeit leg clouts the gleaming tile floor. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 01 Sep 09 - 11:07 PM VERY evocative, Nathan, well done. Thanks for sharing. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 02 Sep 09 - 08:41 PM A free translation of Liebeslied by Bertolt Brecht: No J.P. had signed a certificate, No-one said blessings or broke a glass, Your clothes were the same as on the day we met, And there was no rice on the grass. Don't stare at your plate when the food is all gone -- Put it up to wash with the rest. Our love will go on, or it won't go on, If not in the east, the west. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Sep 09 - 02:19 PM Singers Here is something strange and Ancient as treefrogs. A dozen tongues, meaty and wet Two dozen lungs, each a damp pink pump For air, in and out. Cheeks, two dozen, long or short, thin, or weighted Ears for coherency's sake. Twenty-four lips, various. All these delicate cuts. fine flesh assembled in one Generous box. Informed by A bright laughing river of common mind, And impeccable brain-pulse timing for Time In a midnight hall or family room or hill camp. Each fire joins in and the corners reach the center, flames licking, And a swelling music is born, singing "Wade in the Water" Or come from Alabammy or McDonald's Farm or Way, haul away! Or the Johnson boys.Or just brek-keerex! These neat meat pieces driven By a dozen hearts Bridging eternity by singing. Miracles never cease. Even tree-frogs know. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 07 Sep 09 - 06:05 PM Amos: %^) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 08 Sep 09 - 07:47 PM A Tree Frog in Oklahoma The pipe was rust encrusted an upright tunnel in which a tree frog crouched peering out at the day He was the size of my thumb and his eyes rolled in different directions leafy branch left human right He appeared casual and noncommittal his arms folded under his chin like a tiny executive taking a power nap but the skin he wore! Something of grays and greens ochre whites and muted blues and on this surface his eyes like leaves on a mossy pond and he was intelligent he had not builded himself a house but his intelligence was a thing of a primal nature for he had fashioned for himself this skin-cloak so very like the tree 6 feet away that had he been there I would not pick him out But hiding was not on his morning's agenda and so he rested, trusting the rightness of things against the perfect contrast of a rust red pipe |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 08 Sep 09 - 09:18 PM LOVE IT, Leej...you are my fav. author!! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 08 Sep 09 - 09:21 PM Beautiful paint job, LEJ!! What wave of karmic connection has led us to tree frogs in this late hour of our lives? Hmmmm? A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 08 Sep 09 - 09:25 PM Long live this thread; it's a consistent source of delight. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Sep 09 - 01:45 AM Will you believe it Amos? I never saw your poem until your comment on the tree frogs made me look. Great minds in synch once more. Oh that such powers could be harnessed for the good of mankind. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 09 Sep 09 - 02:51 AM EBB TIDE COTTAGE A restless fourteen year old An early summer morning Before the house wakes. Paddling the jon boat Across the Chickahominy River Wraith steams and mists Waltz over dull grey water Sitting solitary 'neath cypress trees Boat bumping 'gainst cypress knees Watching the ball, wisps float, mingle, fade Waiting for the sun another kind of ball To rise, chase the dancers away A glint off the kitchen window A reluctant row back Across now sparkling water Catch the aroma of coffee and bacon The surprising jolt of hunger And the drudge up to the house In dew sodden sneakers. (written August 2009 for my Aunt Dot) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 09 Sep 09 - 12:31 PM A Water Moccasin in Oklahoma This was not a turtle's head conning above the water for a turtle peers in benign curiosity upon the esoteric actions of humans in his lake No,this head was attached to a body filled with purpose as it pushed its rippled path across the surface A Father, his two chubby sons and small daughter in the water by the dock and we shouted "Snake! Get out of the water!" The chubby sons, nearly to the swim raft crawled out breathing hard Small daughter thrashed to the dock ladder and up While Father sat immobile in his inflatable chair The water moccasin made a line toward him, fast "I see him" said the man brandishing a foam float in defensive mode and the snake came on, stopping at last nine feet from the man suddenly still in the water his black eyes on the man's Who, sensing resolve in the creature spun suddenly and climbed the ladder in panic This the snake watched, then lunged forward into the man's wake emerging on the other side in cattails, disappearing The lake was still but in the deceptive, gentle ripples we saw the shadows of something beneath the surface something of dark purpose sensing our presence as a minor intrusion which it would ignore, or dispose of, with equal cold calculation |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 10 Sep 09 - 12:15 PM WOw. Perfect picture. Do I want to know why you were in Oklahoma? A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: greensue Date: 10 Sep 09 - 05:43 PM katlaughing, I love your stuff. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: greensue Date: 10 Sep 09 - 05:54 PM In fact I think nearly everything is bri on this site. Not so keen on the silly stuff but c the need 4 it. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 29 Sep 09 - 12:31 AM My Mommy's Sick She sat on my lap as I read the book to her, her light brown hair draped over my left arm pointing to me the pictures painted on the cardboard pages. She turned to me I looked in her face and saw the shadows of the faces of her mother and father imprinted in her eyes then she spoke to me two sentences to shatter my heart. My mommy's sick When she gets better She'll come and see us. I held her tiny body squeezing her against my breast, so as not to reveal the tears she invoked in her childish innocence. Yes her mommy is definitely ill lost in a rundown house or an apartment littered with empty cans, food wrappers, cardboard boxes, dogshit, dirty nappies, and human waste as she sits back grasping an aluminum foil pipe losing her soul in one more hit. My mommy's sick Or she could be sliding one more needle into her veins feeling the rush in 15 quick seconds as the poison drips through her heart to the haunted centers of her brain tossing the empty needle to the floor to bounce along the pile of rubbish. My mommy's sick This once corpulent woman teasing her husband with her affectionate smile as he ran his callused hands along her velvety skin each touch a symbol of the vows they spoke before god. My mommy's sick. Now she shuffles down the vacant streets of Spokane a skeleton wrapped in a shroud of blotchy skin her teeth decaying in her virulent mouth as she searches for something to steal or a lustless fuck in an alley to donate more money to her newfound god, a god she loves more than she loves herself, all that came from her. My mommy's sick When she gets better She'll come see us. I sat and wondered that night as I talked with the girls father as we sat and drank from a bottle of Jamesons on his front porch beneath the autumn sky over Spokane: Will she ever care again? Will she ever get better? nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 29 Sep 09 - 04:51 PM Jacinta's 5th Birthday Party There was a young girl who lived across The blue white capped mountains of the sea She loved to dance with the springtime sun Dancing to the eternal song of Faerie Dancing to the tune of the harp and flutes Jumping to the air in half time salutes She closes her eyes, floats off to dreams Hazy visions of the ageless queen Oak trees swaying in the buoyant mists Round the mistletoe crowned grove so green Whistling, enraptured by the magic of the song The grass stains the footprints of the throng She would laugh at the blue painted men Beating their drums of tightly stretched skin And the didgeridoo of the Dreamtime Mingling with the beat note filled din Each jubilant song rejoicing life As the salmon reels, playing his fife The light dampens the strength of the fire As the sun gives birth to the springtime dawn And her eyes twitch and flutter awake Her lips stretch and strain in a morning yawn When the land of the ever young fades from view Her dreams won't flag, as she laughs in the dew nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 25 Nov 09 - 02:41 PM Amergin Mommy's sick is heart rending. Jacinta's birthday party - love all the allusion to ancient pagan ritualism. The line "The light dampens the strength of the fire" moves me beyond words to describe. Leaves me feebly fumbling for wondrous dreams lost upon waking. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 25 Nov 09 - 02:58 PM Loblolly Forest My spirit rallied How those pagans danced Tossed their hussy heads Laughed at thunder cannon and storm swords Children, heedless of natural wars My mind burned Drawn at dawn to see the orange fireball Rising to light each dew drenched finger When zephyrs left from the last night's fracas Startle water diamonds from their grasp My body soothed By sultry swaying on Indian summer afternoons That first glimpse of movement and hope Harbinger of a breezes to come First messengers of so welcome a guest My heart broken When the winter ice axed its way through Felling my dearest friends by the hundreds With splitting thuds and huge rents in the Earth Every breath a sickening stench of pine blood |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 25 Nov 09 - 08:11 PM Gooood, goood, stuff, Virginia Tam and Amerigin. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 26 Nov 09 - 02:46 AM Thank you Prince... I am weeping rereading as I wept upon writing it as I wept upon seeing the decimation of my pine forest. Lost 26 of the 50 odd pines in my half acre plot alone. And weeks after the quiet punctuated by chainsaws clearing up the desolation. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 29 Nov 09 - 11:53 AM Had I no song Sad and songless I Would be mad before long. Were I songless, we Would not be one nor Even I be whole alone. Songless, sad madness Would descend shortly And, in such pique Harrows of harm and Wild harangues ensue. Curing this deep hole seek Solutions or exciters where Lights and sound run long And find nothing turned on The song within but you. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: WalkaboutsVerse Date: 29 Nov 09 - 12:13 PM Poem 106 of 230: TESTING 4,3,2,1 I've tried to learn to sing a song Well enough to let a singer Know the way I found to sing My lyric-only songs. That is, just in case a singer Was in want of a way to sing These lyric-only songs. But I'm sorry there's no notes with the songs, And hope they're okay said, if not sung - As love songs. (P.S: writing, via mimicking, my tunes came late, But they were all in shorthand by 2008.) From http://blogs.myspace.com/walkaboutsverse (e-book) Or http://walkaboutsverse.sitegoz.com (e-scroll) (C) David Franks 2003 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 02 Dec 09 - 09:27 PM Dream Time and ReturnI have just returned from there--the Dream Time, Where each instant is a grand knowing But of late I seem to find Getting there's harder, and returning rougher going, Than it was before I worked for a living. Once there the walls are gauze, and melt. Here there are takers; there, each stranger is giving And every face acknowledges it is yourself Simply dancing otherwise. You walk there among forms that are just knowings The spirit I among the endless possibles, all just right, All true. The thought is the act in staying and in going, The walls newly known as they are met, the night Newly seen dark, the day newly seen light. Each step gliding, each embrace flowing Each surprising vision a known sight. One thought, a sunlit season's sowing. In the dream-web thoughts become real Where souls are as open as your own mind The days are scripts of the heart's feeling, You are the author of the rattling time. And even at the boundary, coming home to land The blending confusion of transition remembers Who defined the winds, and decided the sand And when the flames should be, and when the embers. What is it, then, convinces you When the snoring stops and pillows grow hard, That anything else must now be true The playground now a prison-yard? What single token in the shift of times Betrays your own large knowing That colors or pain are powers of one mind Its single grace endowing On the hard boards and cold kitchen walls of morning? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 26 Feb 10 - 11:16 AM David: For the love of poetry can you please, as requested in the past, confine your couplets to your own, more than generous threads? Thanks, A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: WalkaboutsVerse Date: 26 Feb 10 - 04:58 PM Amos: why not remind yourself of your opening post, before posting another piece?
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: mousethief Date: 26 Feb 10 - 05:57 PM I haven't kissed you In many weeks Been too long since You shaved your cheeks Burma-Shave O..O =o= |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: WalkaboutsVerse Date: 27 Feb 10 - 05:50 AM Joe - due to the collapse of a website-host, the WAV threads are now full of many broken links, so it's probably better all round not to use them/close them down; hence, I thought I'd post here occasionally, and wait a while (for more newbies), before starting another WAV thread - until I just read your message, that is. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 27 Feb 10 - 02:13 PM Why would you want to expose newbies to your amazing lack of talent?
-Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 Feb 10 - 02:50 PM Like architecture foiled by gangs' Slogans and initials spray painted, besmirching-- So poets disfigure their art with An insistent spray of judgement. What would the clean lines show in poems Without them, skeletal in a sunrise? Does beauty have an opinion? Do not be silly. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 06 Mar 10 - 11:02 PM Vimmer in a dream you came to me and I was only a little surprised to see you and realized I must have imagined your suicide- that ridiculous misconception corrected, you only laughed and merged into the background but the old vets knew how to wrap it up in their fatigue caps and shining pins and medals your written orders to report to the Post Everlasting sealed in an envelope and ignited in a silver bowl your name stamped in bronze and placed on a plaque an honor guard who fired rifles into the sky making us all jump as the casings skittered over the asphalt your brother took up his guitar and sang a patriotic medley with an odd self-penned bridge marking to the minute on monday morning the moment you reported for heaven's duty in all this, the only moment when I felt your presence was when the old vets tangled the flagpole lines and the flag doggedly resisted their efforts a touch of black comedy that would have made you laugh and listening to your brother's well meant song I thought of how you would have liked to have Ripple, or Uncle John's Band instead and then the stories were told well, and cleaned up for the occasion and your friend, who could barely croak words through his tears somehow told the story about you the best I kept silent, my stories all wrong for the occasion.. when we stumbled drunkenly to the lake's edge, your leg in a cast and how you lost your footing and fell in and then I thought of your old trick of catching me offguard with your words that sometimes made me think of you as a true son of a bitch but you should never speak ill of the dead and anyway I could never have explained to those wounded people that it never me made love you less |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 Mar 10 - 02:58 AM Bravo, Lonesome; bravo. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 08 Mar 10 - 01:07 AM Stunning, as always, LeeJ. Thanks! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 01 Apr 10 - 06:38 PM A Poet Drowns Alone He had taken a deep breath and swam Towards some cloudbank on the horizon That held the illusion of dry land And she had wept, and cursed him And become exhausted with treading water. Seeing me not far away, her hand reached out To keep her up, or have me go down with her, Each choice better than to struggle on alone and exhausted in a bottomless ocean. Yeats with his golden bird was right There is no country here, no island. At the setting of the sun they will lose sight of you Nor remember you at the dawn. Even Cummings' insensible scuttling claws Lay a great distance and a slow metamorphosis away. This endless blue vista pales poetry And can be no captured beauty. The spoken words Insensate gasps, the unspoken a chain of foam. I no longer see where she was, no shadow Fixes her place on a featureless surface And even my memory is suspect As I sink without a trace Sans claws, sans Byzantium Sans everything |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 01 Apr 10 - 08:03 PM That is without a doubt the greatest poem I have ever read. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 01 Apr 10 - 08:04 PM April Fool! (But it's a good one) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 01 Apr 10 - 11:29 PM That is one of the best to grace this thread, and that's no joke. LEJ, you have The Voice. Treat it with joy. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 02 Apr 10 - 12:53 AM FP, I'll get even with you! ;>) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Young Buchan Date: 02 Apr 10 - 10:19 AM [When I visited Headington Church in the early 70s the churchyard was kept locked and could only conveniently be visited by going through the church when there was a service.] At the Grave of William Kimber Having paid admission (An hour's Sung Eucharist) I left the church's tollhouse To find one special grave, Whose newness sparkled in the noonday sun Setting it apart from those That moss and rain-stain long since dulled. What came I here to see? To left - seventeen stones, rough-hewn and crazy-paved. To right - the headstone, and below - Stone bellows, too carven to move, But that show more clearly than the inscription How Merrily he refathered English Morris. What came I here to do? To stand with camera at the grave-foot; Record my momentary passing At the transient memorial brightness That stands above the ninety-year-old bones Of never-fading music; Repay with the little effort Of ascending Headington Hill (And an hour's Sung Eucharist) The stretching of his fingers To inspire my generation. What came I here to hear? Double Lead Through played on stone bellows, Though almost drowned by squeals of music From the toll-house organ; Haste to the Wedding, very softly played, Lest it offend against the matrimonial rites Beloved of sixty Oxford Anglo-Catholics Emerging to their cars and Sunday lunch. |
Subject: Lyr Add: A SONG: I once met the poet (Bob Clayton) From: GUEST,Songbob Date: 02 Apr 10 - 03:03 PM A Song I once met the poet in the subway station (I'd seen him before, so I knew him, you see). He was standing in line for his daily blues ration, The same as the other commuters like me. Packed into the cars, we roared through the earth Ignoring the people around where we sat, When the poet fixed me with an eye full of mirth And sang me the song of the hole in his hat. I once met a busker while mailing a letter; I tipped him a quarter and gave him a nod, And allowed as how he could play so much better Than most of the other street buskers, by God! He played on his fife for all he was worth, Depending on coins in the cup where he sat, And, fixing me with an eye full of mirth, Played me the song of the hole in his hat. So, if you happen to see me someplace (Now that you've met me, you'll know me, you see), Don't be surprised by the look on my face, For poets are known to be somewhat like me. I may talk about football, or music, or news; I well may debate the place of the cat, When, suddenly struck by my musical muse, I might sing you the song of the hole in my hat! © 1991, Bob Clayton, Silver Spring, MD |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: VirginiaTam Date: 02 Apr 10 - 03:50 PM LEJ - A Poet Drowns Alone took my breath away. I am envious. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 02 Apr 10 - 03:51 PM The Dancer's Sonnet She dances, feet kicking from the dusky floor Obsidian shoes hammering their adoring caress With the drum beat upon the hardwood decor And the lacy hems of her long ebony dress Smoothly sweeping as if she were gliding An angelic apparition floating upon each note Her eyes closed in her shaking head as if hiding From the dimmed lights shining on her silky throat Her velvety quivering breasts threaten to burst Their tender confines with intoxicating wit Her passion blooms with a hedonistic thirst Her soul lost in a musical trance as she submits To the song, to the cadence of ecstacy's brink She dances with the rapture of her aural drink nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: frogprince Date: 02 Apr 10 - 07:28 PM Amergin, forgive me, but that lovely sensual imagery took me way back to this: Saturday Night in Everett, Washington (from a slightly more innocent time, in July 1967, when they were called gogo dancers, and they wore complete bikinis) Sharon's shaking that shapely frame again Making goosebumps pop up on the skin Making male minds meditate on sin Quivering shivering stretching your mind thin To the unintellectual sensual sexual din Trembling twitching twisting you within A graceful animal molded in skin Sharon's go - go - go dancing again. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 07 May 10 - 08:19 AM The Junkie She reaches into the steel rubbish bin, lined with a pale clear plastic bag. Her dirt stained fingers dig for the aluminium gold, desiring to bestow upon her another nickel toward her next hit. She lifts one soiled arm back to her side, raising it toward the sun, as she pushes it's unwashed sleeve back to her elbow, in a vain attempt to prevent further ruination onto the once white cotton fabric. Her action reveals in the late summer afternoon the bluish purple blotches in her skin, needle point reminders of her soul stealing damnation. She plunges her arm back into the receptacle, rummaging through its fly ridden depths, until she jerks her arm back out. The sunlight glitters on the dull metallic surface of the empty aluminium beer can held triumphantly in her right hand. Her dull eyes briefly glow as she spreads her prematurely wrinkled face, (her youth stolen, another year added by injection) unveiling blackened stubs of decaying teeth, resembling the dark maw of a cavern. She picks up the brown plastic bag fluttering lightly at her feet, and shoves the can within. She drops the bag, and grasps her way once more through the basket, fingers pushing their way pass empty grease stained brown paper fast food sacks, spit adorned napkins, and the alcohol perfumed dribbles of vomit, hoping to strike another five cents, only the search is in vain. Discouraged, she stands up, wiping her gaunt filthy hand upon her faded ragged blue jeans. Then she ambles to locate another bin in her desperate search to score another bag of death's solace. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 07 May 10 - 11:33 AM The surfers learn early To walk into the chaos And find infinity on the other side. Those who can learn to find the wall Leap up to it and scale the Crest just as it tumbles down. Here is grace amid great forces Tumbling to the floor and swift TUrning to climb the wall-face again. Taking the tunnel of green collapse As a passage to the next leap Never accepting that gravity could be terminal. As they return, in the morning To begin it all anew, like smoky larks on sky, The surfers learn Never to trust a man Entering the water Who cannot tolerate infinite space. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 09 May 10 - 03:09 PM Heraclitus, e.e. cummings, Sisyphus, and the fire-giver, Met for tea around the rock-face Where Prometheus lost his liver. He assured his guests quite calmly It would grow back in again, And Sisyphus remarked, all kindly, "Lucky they don't eat your brain!" This, they all agreed, was lucky! "That would be an awful shock! "For the sin of giving fire, To lose your brains upon this rock!" "Never fear," said mister cummings, "Gods are feeble in their schemes. "What they call a ghost is waking, Not a hypnotized undream!" Sisyphus then made excuses, For he had a rock to roll. As he left them, e.e. asked them, "Is he happy in his soul?" Heraclitus nodded wisely, "This, I think, is hard to know." "Even Gods can't reach the answer. Still, we must imagine so." Kam Ooeue Songs of a French Colon Cambodian Free Press, 1969 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 10 May 10 - 02:32 PM The Bull Rider Randy Stoakes eases himself down feels the momentary grit of cartilage on bone singing like electricity in a line that rings in his spine as the dirt-colored bull lurches against the raw slats Keet Lawson puts a boot heel on the brahma's shoulder muttering "nasty ol bastard" as he tries to wedge him out the echoed squawk of PA says "have a hand for an ex-champeen, down in the runnin needs a big ride on ol Hot n' Nasty" and Stoakes wraps his fist tight and ruminates on a beer-borne dream he had last night back on the old man's hard luck ranch by Ten Sleep, he was stalking a frozen creek for calves,in a lash-locking wind when he come up on Delbert his brother dead ten years hunkered down in the lee of a big boulder embers from the coffee fire scattering in the whirling air across the outstretching white crust of snow without speaking, he sat a busted spruce log, and took the cup from Delbert The bull lurches sidewise again and the quick pain brings him back in time to hear the bell, watch the gate snap open feel the bull spring in the long leap, spinning the ass-end in a kick Randy lets himself swing on the loop but then the animal reverses with a sudden twist flipping the cowboy into air, palm pinioned in the rope he has time to hear the crack of his wrist before he blacks out staring at Delbert's crooked smile tasting bitter camp coffee and waiting for the Wyomin wind to slack so they can head down the draw to warm beds |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 14 May 10 - 08:13 PM Sveta In The Promised Land Hope glimmered brightly in her future, it was a Desire for an education, a hope for love, a teacher's utopia A hope for a family of her own, so she kissed farewell To her parents, and left the damp somber Eastern land She called home and followed the illegal pied piper's song Across the green billowing sea to the Promised Land In her uncle's nightmare, she found her dreams scattered One by one as she was beaten, her blood vessels shattered Beneath the smooth pale layers of discoloured skin Bones fractured through repeated "trips down the stairs" Her spirit assassinated as she suffered rape after rape Trust died in her eyes every day in the Promised Land. The title deed of her enslavement was transferred At a poker table in an underground gambling den Her new master insinuating the corruption, the toxins, The junk she smoked, snorted, injected, to alleviate the agony, To asphyxiate her sorrow as she turned tricks on the street His financial gain, the capitalistic dream of the Promised Land Her youthful beauty eroded with each hit, with each screw As her body gradually deteriorated from the drugs And the abuse, the misuse inflicted upon her sexual being The hooded haunted look hollowing out her stare Until she recognised her abandonment on the avenues A piece of refuse scuttling down the gutter of the Promised Land Fear mesmerises her, a snakelike coercion, imprisoning her As she patrols the burgeoning Russian communities Of Portland and Vancouver, too ashamed to return home Sometimes at night in a dark alley she cradles a photo Captured of her when hope still glimmered in her eyes The illegal emigrant's reverie, the dream of the Promised Land nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 May 10 - 12:27 PM strong stuff, Amergin |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 19 May 10 - 02:08 PM Jaysus, Amergin, you really turned a corner with that one; I have never seen the like from you before. Well done! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 22 May 10 - 05:42 AM Thank you both very much. I should say that Sveta is, unfortunately, a real person. she was interviewed in one of the local alternative papers. It just plain broke my heart, when I read her story. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Jun 10 - 07:14 PM From Deda: Put not your faith in princes Whose only faith in you Is that you'll play roughs and ditches So the princes can play through. DonÕt place your hope in bankers Who only hope for wealth, Who trade in guns and tankers, And profit, pounds and pelf. Waste not your love on lawyers Whose hearts have turned to dust, Those Ivy League marauders Steal the pie and sue the crust. May my faith not diminish. Let my hope not erode. Let love be the start and finish And the entire road. (c) Rebecca Jessup 2010 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 17 Jun 10 - 02:12 AM TO BE WITH YOU Oh love that steals my dreams, That wilt not let me rest by night or day. That makes my sadness weep, Now that she has gone thither, far away. Oh love that steals my sense. That takes away all reason from my brain. That makes me think of nought, Except that I should be with her again. Oh love that steals my life, That rests the knife so easy in my palm. That opens up the wound, To let the blood, like some relieving balm. Oh love, 'tis that I die for you , The blood slips from my body oh so fast. Here lain upon your lonely grave, Is where I deign to breathe my very last. Mike Hill. February 2009 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 17 Jun 10 - 06:00 PM A madman to his old love made a phone call one year. Said the madman to his old love, "How I wish you were here! For the past is full of shame, and the future full of fright, And if ever I had need of you, I have need of you tonight." (1997) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,CaptainFarrell Date: 18 Jun 10 - 04:41 AM There is a Pints and Poetry session at Saddleworth Folk Festival well worth checking out run by Mick Cartwright with help from Sid Calderbank |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Jun 10 - 04:28 PM School Prayer Now I sit me down to pray to the guy who made the universe in 7 days... Free me Lord from the lies that pass for truth down in my science class that dinosaurs lived near here back more than a million years! We know the earth's only 5,000 years old in Genesis the Bible tells me so. Don't try to tell me that my teacher knows more science than my preacher. Those dinosaur bones just aint that old they're skeletons of angels, I've been told And all this crap about evolution? God didn't put that in the constitution. And the anthropology we been readin? Weren't no neanderthals in the Garden of Eden. And the Jews and Buddhists and non believers the wicked muslim turbanned deceivers their parents are mostly ignorant fools and could use some Jesus in the schools. Amen |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 19 Jun 10 - 04:52 PM Lonesome, you demonstrate a powerful ability to permeate and see the viewpoint of the most compressed and frozen minds. I do hope each entry has an exit strategy! A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 20 Jun 10 - 03:35 AM Compressed and frozen minds!... are they the ones that haven't the ability to take everything in without questioning or criticism? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: wysiwyg Date: 27 Jun 10 - 03:35 PM Author of the below, Ellen Waterston, was Saturday's offering on The Writer's Almanac. I just cannot keep it to myself. ~S~ ==== After ten hours of trying the instructor undid my fingers, peeled them one by one off the joystick. "You don't need to hold the plane in the air," he advised. "It's designed to fly. A hint of aileron, a touch of rudder, is all that is required." I looked at him like I'd seen God. Those props and struts he mentioned, they too, I realized, all contrived. I grew dizzy from the elevation from looking so far down at the surmise: the airspeed of faith underlies everything. Lives are designed to fly. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 27 Jun 10 - 07:44 PM You need two out of three -- altitude, airspeed, and a brain. -- Saying among pilots. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Jul 10 - 11:39 AM Why is a fern in a wet morning More beautiful Than, say, A rusty truck? There is no comparison. Truck kills fern, Fern eats truck. Each one loves the game. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Jul 10 - 12:47 PM When I was in my First cause, I had no God, and I was cause of myself. Meister Eckhart |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 Jul 10 - 11:28 AM "Where the liberal-humanist sensibility has always held the literary work to be a form of self-expression, a meticulous sculpting of the thoughts and feelings of an isolated individual who has mastered his or her poetic craft, a technologically savvy sensibility might see it completely differently: as a set of transmissions, filtered through subjects whom technology and the live word have ruptured, broken open, made receptive. I know which side I'm on: the more books I write, the more convinced I become that what we encounter in a novel is not selves, but networks; that what we hear in poems is (to use the language of communications technology) not signal but noise. The German poet Rilke had a word for it: Geräusch, the crackle of the universe, angels dancing in the static." From this article in the Guardian about the novel "C". |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 11 Aug 10 - 01:18 PM The Secrets of Women The practiced angle of the neck, the chin And always of the eyes--all are learned young. Using the hair to call or to dispel, tossing it for some And for others presenting a dark shield. The use of each tooth, in combination, well-practiced, And how the lips must form to spell temperatures. Liquid joints design the edited message Scrutinized in rehearsal for degrees forward, back, The illustrating turns, peer-reviewed in overnights. The arc of presentation, detailed and designed, Combines with an array of chosen curves Into the certainty the practiced eye assures. The painted tips and ends, and every measured beat OF lash and finger and toe contrives To flavor moments hot, or cold, or sweet Or bitter as only the artist may decide. The cold kiss arched aloofly back, The passioned offer pressed The echo of the wrist and lips And deadly answer of a hardened breast-- All make a puzzle erudite, For scholarly minds to puzzle on While in the pouring rhythm of the street THe tide and song and measured dance move on. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 13 Aug 10 - 01:37 PM I come back here from time to time And read the long history of The charming hearts and sunspot minds Of poets churning for years. What a climate they have built! It rains and shines on the same side of the street, Even late at night. Sometimes Noon is dark and rivers Run up to the corner cops To ask directions! Chains of miracles tie The frothing mad middle down KEeping it Hogtied by magic, prevented From renewing the mediocre! Keep it up, you golden elves, Sequoias of the long tongue, nova-crafters! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 13 Aug 10 - 02:20 PM Hey Amos. Back in Kentucky when I was a kid, I saw plenty of them truck-eating ferns.:>) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 13 Aug 10 - 06:32 PM However you wriggle When speaking of people, There's little that's stable Or even quite true. Affection is fickle, And fairness is feeble. With both, if we're able, We might make it thru. (Was once going to be the end of a song.) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 26 Aug 10 - 01:19 PM The Wyoming Transplant She met him in college the scion of a blueblood Boston clan and loved him for his dry humor and moist skin What he saw in her was a kind of elemental force a straight forward disingenuous directness and the way her eyes lit up in laughter After graduation they wed and he took her East to a big house on the Squanacook where the water lay placid and green like a late-summer pond in a Rock Springs feedlot and the hills, cool and green in Spring hedged the sky to a steamy patch in Summer After a year or so, even the relentless high plains wind seemed like a happy remembrance She climbed big hills in ridiculous hope of seeing the distant purple and yellow of the faraway Wind River Range Once, a Ford pickup with golden cowboy plates lay just ahead at a Boston traffic signal and as she passed, laughing, called out "take me home!" to the startled driver whose brown rutted skin creased in a grin After the divorce, she stayed on from habit growing pale and weak in the wet winters and soggy summers Until, at age 56, and leaving two grown children behind She sold out, loaded what was left and moved to a double-wide on a dry, rutted arroyo in the wide country East of Rawlins and in that raw and sandy soil that defied her attempts at a rose garden she herself took root at last and flowered, thin and bright as Indian Paintbrush |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 26 Aug 10 - 01:33 PM Oh, Leej! Beautiful and can I ever relate! Exactly the way I felt out East, at times. Some of your best lines in that one!! Rog will enjoy hearing it, tonight. Thanks for sharing. luvyakat |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 01 Sep 10 - 09:56 AM The Morrigan's Song A soldier boy came home today. His camelbak lightly jouncing against his body as he walks into the arms of his young bride. She weeps into his chest, tears of relief and joy. He holds her, he kisses her, he laughs with her, but his outward gaeity never quite stretches into his eyes, always wary, always watching. They never losing the hard, damned stare, have squandered the essence that made him young. His youthfulness was burned away in gunpowder smoke, in blood, and the screams that wake him from his post traumatic dreams, his bedsheets fermenting with the night sweats. She senses the alteration in his spirit, that he is no longer the unseasoned man who knelt beside her before the altar on the day their union was blessed before God. He is no longer the boy who marched to the beat of the Morrigan's song. A soldier boy came home today. After months wasting away in a military hospital, relearning how to walk, how to function , how to become a contributor of a capitalistic society. He feels the ghost pains of the arm and leg abandoned on the side of some desert highway, unnamed casualties of an IED explosion in the mutilated carcass of a military escort. His artificial titanium government issue prosthetics dully capture the arms of the summer sunlight, as he jerkily steps across the black pavement, the damp heat seemingly liquifying the distant tarmac with the caress of the Georgia sun. His rolling stuttering gait carries him home, away from the Morrigan's song. A soldier boy came home today. His ebony casket draped in the red white and blue colours of his chosen nation's flag. His sobbing mother , near to collapsing, her quaking hands clutching a sodden tissue smeared with black mascara, dampened with tears. His stunned father stares at the pall with red fringed eyes. His wife sits on a folding chair, her face streaking with make up stained tears. Each drop a memory of their brief years together. She winces at the rifle volleys fired over his body, honouring the soul of a young man, though scared beyond anything he ever felt before, flung himself into the Morrigan's extended arms amidst the battle frenzy of rifle shots and hand grenades. The honour guard to heaven, in their smart dark blue dress uniforms, hand her the triangularly folded flag, which she grasps to her quaking bosom, the tear drops soiling the cotton fabric. She gazes up for a moment to spy a raven inspecting the proceedings, his beak open, cawing the farewell note of the Morrigan's song. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 01 Sep 10 - 05:12 PM An Artist's Devoted Touch Ribbons of curling burgundy hair Dangles before her countenance Obscuring the auburn freckles Splashing her cheeks, buoyant kisses Lavished the Northwestern sun. Shrouded behind this portiere Of ringlets stained by a sanguine sunset Reclines a shuttered eye, where Four glossy lashes protrude through Specifying the location of her vision. The aquamarine illuminating aurora That is the allure of her spirit, The effeminate ethereal charm Ensared by an artist's devoted touch. A tenuous fragment of a smile Emerges from the tightly woven Flesh coloured lips, as if perceiving She'll be fastened behind a glass pane Confined in a dusky wooden cage, Her glamour beguiling generations tomorrow. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Sep 10 - 10:59 PM SingerThere is no choice but To sing where you stand; That is where you sing from. The words must be clear, but Otherwise are unimportant If only they are true enough. The notes should be well-chosen for the place from which you are singing. Beyond this, you need only stand there, where you sing from. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 15 Sep 10 - 11:31 PM The Explainer passes judgement On your case. Over his left shoulder he Is whispered to by A host of notions, like angels. Armed with these whispers The Explainer concludes That you will die. Not for crimes that you have done But for requiring Explanations. Although it is in your power To erase the court, Sentence, charges, and all, You--in your holiness--refrain And march with dignity To an inexplicable end. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 16 Sep 10 - 05:16 PM inanimate inaminute |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 08 Oct 10 - 03:22 PM National Poetry Day: unlock the mathematical secrets of verse Science and poetry were once closer than they are now, writes Steve Jones in response to National Poetry Day. By Steve Jones Published: 12:00PM BST 05 Oct 2010 "Thursday is National Poetry Day, a fact that once would have been of much interest to scientists. In the 1700s several poems appeared that passed on a scientific message. The best known is The Loves of the Plants, by Erasmus Darwin, who in 1791 set out in verse an account of the sexual habits of the vegetable world. He used heroic couplets, in which the rhyme pattern is AA, BB, CC and so on (for the sensitive plant, for example, he wrote that "Weak with nice sense the chaste Mimosa stands,/ From each rude touch withdraws her timid hands;/ Oft as light clouds o'erpass the summer glade,/ Alarm'd she trembles at the moving shade"). Byron, a rather better poet, liked the form ABABABCC and in his epic Don Juan even manages to squeeze in a mention of Newton ("And this is the sole mortal who could grapple/ Since Adam, with a fall or with an apple.") Overblown as Erasmus Darwin's verses might seem nowadays, the point of poetry was pattern; to use a strict structure of rhythm and rhyme as a framework for words of passion or pedantry that would become fixed in a reader's brain. Robert Frost put it neatly when he wrote that "Poetry without rules is like tennis without a net". Poetry, in other words, is mathematics. It is close to a particular branch of the subject known as combinatorics, the study of permutations – of how one can arrange particular groups of objects, numbers or letters according to stated laws. As early as 200 BC, writers on Sanskrit poetry asked how many ways it is possible to arrange various sets of long and short syllables, the building blocks of Sanskrit verse. A syllable is short, with one beat, or long, with two. In how many ways can a metre of four syllables be constructed? Four shorts or four longs have just one pattern for each, while for three shorts and a long, or three longs and a short, there are four (SSSL, SSLS, SLSS, and LSSS, for example). For two of each kind of syllable, there are six possibilities. Do the sum for metres of one, two, three, four and more and a mathematical pattern emerges. It is Pascal's Triangle, the pyramid of numbers in which the series in the next line is given by adding together adjacent pairs in the line above to generate 1, 1 1, 1 2 1, 1 3 3 1, 1 4 6 4 1, and so on. As in a great poem, hidden within that elegant structure are deeper truths that touch on apparently unrelated things; on fractal patterns, on the theory of numbers, on primes, and of complexities too deep to be accessible to mere mortals untrained in the mathematical art. One useful property is that Pascal makes it possible to ask in how many ways it is possible to arrange a group of objects, be they footballers in a league, or lines in a poem...." From the UK Telegraph |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Nov 10 - 12:21 PM Part of the Answer What is success? Grasping at icicles, Harvesting the drips, Eating gold. Aren't beans more substantial? You look at each others' store of chocolate, with envy. Who could possibly eat so much? There aren't enough days in the year to wear all those clothes even once. Don't you have anything to love? Nothing to treasure? Nothing to hold in your hands, or your arms, Or even stroke with your fingertips? Nothing so comfortable to wear that it molds to your body from long use? Eiseley |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Nov 10 - 12:22 PM Poverty! Come sit down here on this box. I'll give you some thoughts, and my attention. I'll stay up late and write a letter, one you can hold in your hands and feel the paper crinkle against your fingers. It's the attention that really matters. To how many people in your life did you really pay attention? Did you really never see that golden light streaming onto the concrete through the turning leaves? How do you think you'll recognize it now? When the shell is gone, you'll be hollow inside. So sit outside in the sun or the rain. Then at least you'll be filled with light and water. And something planted in your soil can grow. Eiseley |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Nov 10 - 12:23 PM From: Eiseley Date: 15 Nov 10 - 10:43 PM Meditation Open a door into a quiet, changing room. Sometimes it has no roof, no walls. Sometimes it is dark and still, dusky light with a comfortable couch. Still other times it is simply a window with a raindrop trailing down, following almost but not quite the tracks of countless other drops, And the quiet of the room behind the window. Who is there, sharing that vast, enclosing, freeing space? There is a presence, benign. Malignancy can't find the door, doesn't even know to look. But if he did, the way would be indistinguishable in his dark corridor. But for you, the outline shines with a silver light. Step inside. Everything is waiting for you. Lining the walls are the placidly smiling Buddhas, their eyes twinkling with delight and welcome. But don't be shy. They're in their own rooms, after all. This is the in-between space where everyone and no one is. One is waiting, ready to let you see through his eyes. You can feel it, can't you--- The acceptance, the peace, the air like breathable music? Veiled though you are, and shrouded in blind mortality, Here is the space between. Come, wander and rest, There's a door on this side, too. Eiseley |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Nov 10 - 12:23 PM Creativity What is it? Longing mixed with involuntary music, Upwelling from the heart of things, Unfinished, hidden, partially obscured. Why is there no resolution? It takes a kind of perseverance Beyond just the regular flitting from thing to thing. Stop. Dig deep into the recesses. Find the glittering prize and bring it out into the light. It's worth showing to the world. Things shouldn't remain hidden. That smacks of ingratitude. It doesn't matter if you can't do it all. At least do some, And do it well. Don't leave one treasure covered in muck Because you're so anxious to find the next. These things take time. And in the end there will be jewels enough, Sparkling in starlight. Eiseley |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Nov 10 - 12:24 PM Words of the Sculptor We will now discuss Death, That changing of one thing into another, A reality beyond which we cannot see, Stuck as we are in the undaunted hereness of now. We work upon substance As firm as marble, as fragile as porcelain. Don't go into the next room. There is nothing inside--- No floor. Take this chisel. Make your scratches on the rock. Let the people coming in later wonder what you meant By your wild profusion of grapes. In a little while you can go stand At the door of the floorless room And toss in a shard. But don't expect to hear it clatter at the bottom. The one I threw is falling yet. Eiseley |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Nov 10 - 04:50 PM The above poems graciously contributed by Mudcatter poet Eiseley. A stellar addition to our glowing galaxy. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 16 Nov 10 - 05:06 PM WOW!! Thank you! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Leadfingers Date: 16 Nov 10 - 05:28 PM 400 |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 19 Nov 10 - 06:21 PM The Chain He lifted the bottle to pour as she flicked a crumb from her dress He could just walk out that door and be finished with the god damned mess with nothing here to adore no hunger left to be blessed just anguished rumination and a longing deep in his chest chained to something he abhored it's her...or no one...he confessed He couldn't have loved her more and she couldn't have thought of him less |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: kendall Date: 19 Nov 10 - 07:29 PM Old Love Three years we lived as one, I, the Master, she the Mistress, She did my bidding, answered my call- Enveloped me through the long nights, Gave my days purpose. A being apart, yet part of my being. I met her as a boy, left her as a man. Time passed, calendars turn, Ten years, twenty, twenty five, We met once more, She is bedraggled, unkempt, uncared for, A bag lady, the smell of age about her. I remain in her presence silently for a minute, Then, as I turn to leave, I know, She doesn't remember me. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: McGrath of Harlow Date: 19 Nov 10 - 07:36 PM Here's a ballade I constructed for a thread below the line about this week's royal wedding announcement (with a couple of minor changes): The Times were hard, the portents all were grave Little to hope for, everything to fear, Then from his door rushed out a smiling Dave, 'A Royal Wedding will take place next year Rejoice good people - brush aside a tear - Forget your troubles on this happy day.' One thing at least, we were not born to wear These chains of gold, as wealthiest of slaves. Once more proceeds the pantomime we crave, The transformation scene we all can share, All play a part, ours is to cheer and wave. The curtain rises, see the happy pair. Charming Prince Will and Katherine the fair, For our delight, as always is the way, Don once again, while thousands stand and cheer, The chains of gold, as wealthiest of slaves. It seems to me the lady must be brave. The precedent indeed is passing drear: A fairy tale where fortune could not save An ending that was messy and unclear. But turn your mind from that unhappy shade A crown awaits, and hanging for you there, The chains of gold, as wealthiest of slaves. Prince, and Princess-to-be, your fate is clear, A life laid out from cradle to the grave. Do what you will, you cannot choose but bear Your chains of gold, the wealthiest of slaves. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: kendall Date: 20 Nov 10 - 07:25 AM For some reason the last line in Old Love didn't print. It should end with: What ship remembers her old Skipper? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Poo Date: 20 Nov 10 - 08:19 AM i needed a poo but gambled on wee a bonus brown fell passed my knee i broke my nose swooping to catch it on the lip of the bog just beside the faucet a deep red streak ran down the drain and upon the floor an unfortunate stain. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 20 Nov 10 - 12:44 PM That's beautiful, Captain Morse. And poo, what can be said about your little nugget? Truly, it belongs in the crapper.;>) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 19 Dec 10 - 06:52 PM My son just sent me a neat link to recordings of readings of RUMI. Thought some of you might enjoy them. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 21 Dec 10 - 11:07 PM For Joan It was with a tear strained phone call, Screeching it's insistant banshee song The kind you answer, knowing, feeling The worrisome trepidation of farewell, That I was told your spirit had gone, Though I felt you depart the night before In a moment of sudden vacant despondency In sharp contrast to the joy and laughter I experienced in the company of those I love Just a bare few minutes previously As your phantom deserted the frailty The sickness of your corporeal body For one free of sorrow and agony Joining a presence greater than ours. Then, we accompanied the weeping choir Singing wails of our loss, dear and empty As the memories of the cursory hours, Each one a grain of sand, trickling Through the desperate grasping fingers, As if they were faded photographs Flipping through a dust stained album Such as that time you..... Or that time when we.... The recollections of hearing the song, The music of your impassioned soul. The air hummed from your essence Has ebbed to an indistinct murmur Attenuated by the sounds of the wind Bearing you away. It is that strain Your tune, that will be missed until The day comes when we harmonise Together once more, raising our voices Chanting the Dreaming to the shadowed sky. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 12 Mar 11 - 12:26 AM Sing backwards;double clutch and reverse. Reversing the words to songs Verse on verse Opens one hundred gates Into ten hundred worlds. Music follows. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 12 Mar 11 - 02:19 AM In fresh and tranquil valley, as I lay beside the meandering stream, My eyelids gently met and there I slipped into a dream. I dreamt of better days, of days of sunshine, sea and sand, Of trees, of bushes, flowers and hues that beautify the land. Long glasses full of lemonade or vanilla ice cream and fruit, Aunties apple dumplings, with custard, chewy arrowroot. Picking those wild strawberries and some crunchy hazelnuts, Catching hands on blackberry thorns and getting several cuts. Climbing trees, oft falling out, not breaking any bones, Trying to skim the water with those nicely flattened stones. Hearing mummy shouting "Come on kids it's time for tea" Mouths began to salivate wondering what it would be. Sadly the dream ends abruptly as a bird begins to sing, I lie in the sun contemplating what the rest of the day will bring. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 10 May 11 - 10:21 AM Not sure when I wrote this, but it does not apply nowadays:-) the sky is black and the stars don't shine And your partner is out of sight. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amergin Date: 15 May 11 - 03:42 AM I posted this before not too long ago...but I'll go ahead and put it here, where it is suppose to be: A Kiss of Farewell It was all completely stated with a brief kiss, Warm moist lips upon cold, pale flesh, The tangy stench of death's corruption Infiltrating the atmosphere, embracing the husk You departed but a short time before. It was a kiss, infused with the memories Cursory flashes of moments, miniature one act plays Continually presenting you by my side, Trading anecdotes, mirth, and lamentations. It was a kiss, that said all I could bring myself to say, And all that genuinely demanded to be divulged, As it spoke of love, and the selfish reasoning Entreating you to remain, to abandon your path, To the arms of those who went before, Just to grace us with more fleeting seconds Of your comforting physical presence. But it was a brief kiss that stated it best, Moist warm lips greeting cold cadaver, Vacant of the specter it once sheltered, Whispering words of parting endearment: Slán abhaille, safe journey home. nt |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: The other Hank Date: 15 May 11 - 08:23 PM SONNET NUMBER THREE The Singer The singer begins with starting breath, The birth an abstract silhouette. Both beginnings in perfect balance, A butterfly with fake falcon talons Help buttress up a mis-placed peace. New lessons learned upon release, Soft beauty granted floating by, Still germane indeed if it catch the eye And open up a whole new world. The song sits aware, no time remaining. Cold console flickers once the switch is thrown. Pressure building without constant draining, Explosions valid from the force alone. Explosions need be sweet to contradict Pale pithy pathos we self-inflict. For no heated malice can endure for long, Betwixt the singer, and the singer's song. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 May 11 - 11:49 AM Suck up, because your soul is lying. Cower, cow, flinch and puddle there At the edge of your black-out curtain. It would be nice to know You are bullet-proof, immortal Having nothing and being all, Unable to lose. This conviction, although true, Is untenable on common ground. So take it in Suck up, because Your soul is lying. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Jun 11 - 01:58 PM
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Jun 11 - 07:44 PM We are the riders on the horizon, where the dawn curves down We are pursuing the far horizon again, disappearing from your sight. Our dust and faint outlines fade from your sight As you stand, starting another dreary day and Wishing you could disappear with us Riders across a different horizon. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 05 Jun 11 - 08:29 PM I hope those are not reflections of how you are feeling, Amos? You are too young for all that, eh? |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 05 Jun 11 - 10:55 PM No, dearie, not me. But I have to at least let the dark side have a voice in order to expose it. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 06 Jun 11 - 01:35 AM great stuff a |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: CapriUni Date: 03 Jul 11 - 02:35 AM Between the crevices of daily tasks My thoughts slip, far too easily, away As silver fish that dart 'tween blades of grass From sunlit streams to rivers deep in caves. They gather there, to ask Aunt Jenny Wren About the Suffragettes. And Pete? That book. In patient tones, they carefully explain To Shakespeare how a modern camera works. And with my thoughts, the minutes slip away, I do not finish all the things I ought, And suddenly, I've reached the End of Day, Returning home from being lost in thought. It's quite a realization-- once again: Surrounded by Imaginary Friends. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Georgiansilver Date: 03 Jul 11 - 03:36 AM Poetry page on facebook which I started some time ago. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Jul 11 - 12:56 PM
Trees too, by design. A specialist did it, thinking Of lessons inherited. A different sort of mind complied And drove the blade hunger, The leaf demand. The roots figured it out Without lesson Inheriting instead, fire A.H. Jessup |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 16 Jul 11 - 01:13 PM Why Poets are Sung I am of the mind that a good poem Is an exploding escape That says, at least on occasion, The tight bars may stretch, even melt, and The prisoners dance free just For a while. The sheriff refuses To discuss things Beyond his jurisdiction. Still, on occasion, His prisoners dance, Keeping their names secret from him. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 09 Aug 11 - 04:27 PM The soul is a temptress and loves to look at beautiful forms and the eye is the guide of the heart. The heart commissions its guide to go and look to see what is there and when the eye informs it of a beautiful image it shudders out of love and desire for it. Frequently such inter-relations tire and wear down both the heart and the eye as is said: When you sent your eye as a guide for your heart one day, the object of sight fatigued you For you saw one over whom you had no power Neither a portion or in totality, instead you had to be patient ~ Imam Ibn ul Qayyim al Jawziyyah |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 09 Aug 11 - 06:10 PM For Morgan and Luna In the Idylls of the Summer Was a boy and trusty dog. They wiled away the hours In the backyard on a log. The red of hair of one Matched the other's shaggy coat Their love was true, complete, This poem their "Mama's" note! kat lafrance |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 10 Aug 11 - 12:42 AM Good stuff, Amos. Dancing prisoners, hey?:>) and Katlaughing...what can I say but awwwwwww...!:>) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 10 Aug 11 - 09:40 AM Fire. Fire. Fire. Waking up surrounded by it Clears the mind and makes the problem simple. First, to get out. Then to get the fire out. Then, some sleep. Then to awake Surrounded by fire. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 08 Nov 11 - 05:39 PM Bodies in CorrosionThe body's corrosion and the reef's building Are death drawn in gravity. Neither the stars nor the living heart Erase the lines of new dying, or old. Under the currents, the new heart, thrilling To explosion and considerate suavity Finds every meeting a reason to depart. Even the tides are cold, Against the soul's explosion. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Joe_F Date: 15 Nov 11 - 08:04 PM Now, in praise and hope of thee, I lift this cup from thy dark sea, and if I spew thy salt on light, I trust thy mercy and thy might To make a fitting guest of me. (1960s) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Will Power Date: 16 Nov 11 - 03:00 PM Fishing It isn't catching It's fishing Doubt Uncertainty Hope Promise Suspending negativity Willing suspension of disbelief The Uncertainty Principal A hook and the fish's mouth Seldom occupy the same space and time Zen of fish Zen of no fish You fish better when you're hungry Hoping for the Big One is foolish I remember Ireland Lake Little tarns full of golden-cutthroat hybrids You could catch them on a piece of tin foil and a treble hook About the size of a large sardine but tasted Pretty damned good Cooking them in foil saves weight Caught a brookie on my first cast at Shadow Lake Caught a sixteen-incher at Lake Aloha Had to cut him in pieces to fry him up Swear by those yellow rooster-tails Hiked alone into the Yolla Bolly Wilderness Pitched my tent in a meadow At the base of a cliff A small plane flew over And bombed the tent with tiny trout The pilot was having a bad day I filled my pot with tiny fish and threw them in the water That evening I Had to move my tent because of the yellow jackets Feasting on the fish Fish out of water Don't live too long A kind hiker gave me several panther martins Using a spinning reel on a fly rod I could cast the length of the lake 75 by 70 yards No wonder the pilot missed What I took out about equaled what I put in Trolling is easy But productive Get the right speed Get the right depth Use the right lure Rubber snubber on lead core line Four of five colors Knock em dead Trout and kokonee Catch those stupid hatchery trout Trolling in the rain at Huntington Lake I caught pneumonia Fishing in the rain Do fish catch pneumonia when it rains? Salmon fishing is cold Used three-pound iron drop-off weights With spring-loaded sliding retainers Catch a shaker Lose the weight Fingers freezing when you put a new weight oj Standing outside in a freezing drizzle In a new down jacket That would smell forever of fish The first time I hooked a yellowfin My knot broke My heart broke too Chalk it up to experience The next one held Tied a good Palomar knot The deckhand snagged it with a gaff And dropped it! "Free-spool!" he yelled "It's in Free-spool" I guess he liked the drama Or wanted a bigger tip I hooked a big dorado He jumped I swear fifteen feet And grinned as he threw the hook Fishing for tuna I snagged something like a Volkswagen Broke my 40 pound test like a spider-web "What was that!" "Probably a big-eye!" said the deckhand Deckhands know everything Just ask them They'll tell you I don't kill Golden Trout anymore They are way too beautiful In Pebble Creak you could catch a cutthroat Nearly every cast Stupid Yellowstone fish Got broken off on eight-pound test That got my attention Trolling in Edison Lake at sundown Something as big as my leg hit the floating rapalla The rod bent like a bow And the lure flew by my face Just missed catching me Brown trout's revenge If fish could laugh He was smiling If you catch them You clean them The Tao of fishing Birth Death Redemption Faith Hope Resignation Sunsets rainbows fog forest-fires deer sweat Frogs snakes big beaver swimming by your leg unafraid Butter melting in the pan no salt Cold Beer in the rocks Tie it down good The worst day fishing beats the best day working Piscatorial karma Transubstantiation Wishes into Fishes I will make you a fisher of men |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Dec 11 - 12:44 PM Just add water, boil, And a wireless link to Everyone, everywhere, For instant, mad existing. Somewhere the center Breathes slowly Over lost thoughts like Water over forgotten stones. Nothing is more persistent. San Diego |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Raedwulf Date: 18 Dec 11 - 02:50 PM Coo! Is this still going? Here's a couple of things I wrote almost exactly 12 months ago, then... The fire's hearth is filthy; the window boards are missing; The bookshelves are not ready; some skirting boards not kissing The walls quite as they should be. The chimney breast, its plaster, Another coat of paint? Would not be a disaster. Around the door there's plaster and paint that shouldn't be there. Not there? A door that should be! The painted walls still quite bare. Don't ask about the dining room (unless you'll give assistance) The kitchen, a saga all its own, whose ending's in the distance! And yet... The house remains unfinished, the front room still half-furnished, But here I sit on sofa new; of solid oak, well burnished. A glass of wine (now beer), a pad, a pencil - I'm a poet! (I'm no such bloody thing at all, I'm a wordsmith and I know it!) But here I sit, scribbling doggerel verse, forging words to fit the space Whilst gazing into the fire's coals, seized by the Muse's grace It's hardly Wordsworth, Keats, I know! You all think I'm demented. But it's cold outside & warm in here & I feel quite... contented. Jack Frost A tapestry in ice, unmeant. (I don't know where the spider hid) Greeted me yesterday morning (There's eggs under a certain lid) Slender, frosted, spiky, soft (Surely all four can't be done?) Graced my window as day was dawning (Cold and misty, without sun) Yesterday was minus six! (But windless, therefore not so cold) Today, plus two. Oh! Plus two more! (Golfers weather, if I may be so bold!) So Jack Frost's drapery was melting (A constant symphony of drip) A world of white, brief turned to colour (But Jack has not yet lost his grip) This night is the longest, Solstice, (And Jack, for now, he still holds sway) Tomorrow's day, though, will grow longer (Spring! And summer! On their way!) So though the world may yet stay cold (Those eggs are in the compost bin) The world still keeps turning, turning (Next year - frosted webs again!) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 18 Dec 11 - 09:37 PM How would you manufacture such a sea Of pictured hurt With rich doubts like deep whales Singing confusion? Born of storms too great, Such pictures-- brineshrimp recollections, and Speculative tides, tide-rips of worry ebbing And sins flowing back. Along the shore the iodine-weed nods And the sands and sea collide. To build such Is the stuff of recalled nightmares When morning grows too hard to deny. San Diego |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 18 Dec 11 - 10:22 PM Amos, I hope your recent poems are not a reflection of personal depression. Well-written, just rather grim.:-) Raedwolf, I love them both, but esp. the second. Perfect for this week. Will Power, I had uncles who would have applauded your fishing poem. Well-done! |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 19 Dec 11 - 08:57 PM Thanks, Kat. No, I don't think so. I feel rather cheerful, actually. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 19 Dec 11 - 09:04 PM Good!:-) |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jan 12 - 05:55 PM Games and StarsOn the man-fat pitch and the iron-green grid There are no gains. Conditions, After all, are not painted on, Lime on grass in clean stripes of boxed fury. Tongues rattle ceaselessly Firing sounds at tiring minds With every turn of the sun And the moon And each of a trillion, trillion stars. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 28 Feb 12 - 05:00 PM
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 28 Feb 12 - 06:38 PM The Cargo Cult Here where the pilgrims walked on knees up the grooved stone ramp to where the Oracle held court, unknotting the twisted threads of the Three Fates Here let us prop up our plastic tablets and invoke the Sacred Prophets of the Market Here where the ancient ones carved Hymns to Apollo who slew the serpent of the gods of chaos Let us clamp on headphones and see if we can dial them up again Here where the initiates courted Life and Death in masks and were cleansed by blood offering Let us commune with our devices and seek council concerning a good Taverna with exceptional dolmades They, who built such structures as these who carved these columns and wrought these marble gods receiving grace and favor from them Are we not the same as they? Are we not due as much? So set up here a cardboard altar extrude an oracle of polystyrene and let's get these blessings bestowed while there's still time for Lunch |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 28 Feb 12 - 08:34 PM LOL, LEJ. Visitor to Delphi, I assume? I know the feeling. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jon Corelis Date: 28 Feb 12 - 10:05 PM Barcelona Now we must part, my sweet Ilona: I must leave for Barcelona, and I must travel there alone, and every day in Barcelon I'll bear a heart that's like a parcel of sorrow that you're not in Barcel; yet though we stay apart so far, you'll still be with me there in Bar, for with love's constant eye I'll see your image every day in B. Jon Corelis Laugh if you will: Comic and Light verse |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: GUEST,Bill D Date: 28 Feb 12 - 10:18 PM Herons Sunset Withered aster Premonitions of disaster. Dark clouds racing- Silent moon- Trying not to rise too soon. Last geese flying Leafless tree- Again, November has to be. written August, 1957- 18 years old just found it in an old notebook- I gave up poetry soon thereafter |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: katlaughing Date: 28 Feb 12 - 11:03 PM That's beautiful, BillD. I think you shouldn't have given it up! Thanks for the new ones, Jon, Amos, and LeeJ. I enjoyed them. |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Lonesome EJ Date: 29 Feb 12 - 12:33 AM Jon, I think you left a verse out Though I languish lonely at the spa I'll see your face in the steam at Ba |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jon Corelis Date: 29 Feb 12 - 09:24 AM Maybe it would have been more challenging to do one letter at a time ... Jon Corelis |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jon Corelis Date: 13 Mar 12 - 10:11 AM Children with guns In the church they worship spiders, on T.V. Christ with a neat goatee foretells the rain. Men drunk on anger oil their blood machines, women ingest the pennies of their dreams, and children with guns dance howling on the entrails of their brothers. At the Union Hall they're slurping poison soup. The flesh rots from their faces. "Who are you?" they ask each others' mirrors. Men scream at machines in isolation, women can't catch their breath, and children with guns take aim at the morning. Jon Corelis Death of a Nation: political poems |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jon Corelis Date: 23 Mar 12 - 12:16 PM Elegy for the Sixties Hope? Nope. Dope. Jon Corelis Need I say more? Epigrams |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jon Corelis Date: 23 Mar 12 - 12:19 PM This page is getting so long it's becoming cumbersome. Maybe the pre-2012 postings could be put in an archive thread? Jon Corelis |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 23 Mar 12 - 05:51 PM Jon: Have you read the MOAB thread? You can open the thread from latest to earliest by clicking on the blue "d", or open it in segments/pages by clicking on the blue asterisk *. A |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Jon Corelis Date: 23 Mar 12 - 06:21 PM Thanks, I always wondered what those things meant. Jon Corelis |
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Ebbie Date: 25 Mar 12 - 11:00 PM Wow. I've spent the last couple of hours reading this thread- and will have to go back more than midway in order to linger. I don't write poetry but KT today told me of this and I urged her to post something she wrote this week. KT, the ball is in your court... |
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
|
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
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 25 Jun 12 - 01:02 PM
|
Subject: RE: Mudcat Poetry Corner From: Amos Date: 27 Jun 12 - 04:15 PM
|
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 |