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Poetry Corner

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  • Re: Poetry Corner

    In your eyes, there is a yearning to please,
    You desire favouring, as though it were your life's blood

    But where do you stand, why you are shaking?
    I guess your majestic self portrayal...
    can thrive only on canvas

    Love you call it?
    This condemning of your own tears to fall?
    Your jealous wish for them to someday,
    Carry me to the abyss with you?

    An opportunity to bore your teeth into others,
    You call charity
    It is no wonder why I want you,
    To leave me alone

    Comment


    • Re: Poetry Corner

      Started off as pleasant, interesting
      Seemed like you could read my mind
      Offer novel ideas and feelings

      I think you took a turn when...
      You turned this into construction work
      A friendship built on concrete and asphalt

      As an underachiever of a fool's trade
      The cranky, angsty, childish side came out in you
      You pressed for appreciation

      Annoyed, I walked away
      Now alone, will you learn to appreciate,
      The broken record you played for me?

      Will you grow up,
      Or find solace in your mother's lap?

      Comment


      • Re: Poetry Corner

        Originally posted by Sero View Post
        A vast plain ocean.

        A wife, a mother, a legacy.
        nice Sero.

        Comment


        • Re: Poetry Corner

          Originally posted by jgk3 View Post
          nice Sero.
          Lol Thanks

          Comment


          • Re: Poetry Corner

            I'm Explaining a Few Things

            You are going to ask: and where are the lilacs?
            and the poppy-petalled metaphysics?
            and the rain repeatedly spattering
            its words and drilling them full
            of apertures and birds?
            I'll tell you all the news.

            I lived in a suburb,
            a suburb of Madrid, with bells,
            and clocks, and trees.

            From there you could look out
            over Castille's dry face:
            a leather ocean.
            My house was called
            the house of flowers, because in every cranny
            geraniums burst: it was
            a good-looking house
            with its dogs and children.
            Remember, Raul?
            Eh, Rafel? Federico, do you remember
            from under the ground
            my balconies on which
            the light of June drowned flowers in your mouth?
            Brother, my brother!
            Everything
            loud with big voices, the salt of merchandises,
            pile-ups of palpitating bread,
            the stalls of my suburb of Arguelles with its statue
            like a drained inkwell in a swirl of hake:
            oil flowed into spoons,
            a deep baying
            of feet and hands swelled in the streets,
            metres, litres, the sharp
            measure of life,
            stacked-up fish,
            the texture of roofs with a cold sun in which
            the weather vane falters,
            the fine, frenzied ivory of potatoes,
            wave on wave of tomatoes rolling down the sea.

            And one morning all that was burning,
            one morning the bonfires
            leapt out of the earth
            devouring human beings --
            and from then on fire,
            gunpowder from then on,
            and from then on blood.
            Bandits with planes and Moors,
            bandits with finger-rings and duchesses,
            bandits with black friars spattering blessings
            came through the sky to kill children
            and the blood of children ran through the streets
            without fuss, like children's blood.

            Jackals that the jackals would despise,
            stones that the dry thistle would bite on and spit out,
            vipers that the vipers would abominate!

            Face to face with you I have seen the blood
            of Spain tower like a tide
            to drown you in one wave
            of pride and knives!

            Treacherous
            generals:
            see my dead house,
            look at broken Spain :
            from every house burning metal flows
            instead of flowers,
            from every socket of Spain
            Spain emerges
            and from every dead child a rifle with eyes,
            and from every crime bullets are born
            which will one day find
            the bull's eye of your hearts.

            And you'll ask: why doesn't his poetry
            speak of dreams and leaves
            and the great volcanoes of his native land?

            Come and see the blood in the streets.
            Come and see
            The blood in the streets.
            Come and see the blood
            In the streets!

            Pablo Neruda
            I think this is one of the most powerful expressions of what is wrong about war.

            Comment


            • Re: Poetry Corner

              Untitled - 05/1987

              When the blue sun
              meets the yellow sky
              then tomorrow
              will become yesterday
              and my sorrow
              changes back to glee
              like an arrow
              I'll make my way
              and fight the turbulence
              I met today
              Ride the wind
              for what it is
              till I find
              my resting place
              there I'll grow
              into a tree
              spread my leaves
              and cover thee
              when I die
              take me to the sea
              so my mother
              can take care of me
              a piece of wood
              i'll ride the waves
              and feel the rays
              this blue sun-shining day
              Between childhood, boyhood,
              adolescence
              & manhood (maturity) there
              should be sharp lines drawn w/
              Tests, deaths, feats, rites
              stories, songs & judgements

              - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

              Comment


              • Re: Poetry Corner

                Kinda political for poetry... it ain't no love song

                Close to Home

                It makes me sick to my stomach
                I can't stand it anymore
                What kind of coward throws a bomb
                On top of buildings in a war
                Killing scores of innocent women
                And the children that they bore

                Their hands are red with blood
                Their faces flush white
                Their fingers on the trigger
                Firing missles in mid flight
                They talk about the peace
                But there is no peace in sight

                I can't imagine the terror
                In the eyes of a mother
                Who just lost one of her children
                And can't bear to lose another
                Her heart torn to pieces
                Clings on to her only other

                They lie to our faces
                Their words no sense or rhyme
                Those who have done wrong
                Will pay for their crime
                The truth can't be hidden
                It always comes out in time

                They can't justify the cause
                Since its for money, gold and oil
                They tell you its for other reasons
                And blame it on religious soil
                Their fate will be pure hell
                Burning to the point of boil

                My heart is filled with sorrow
                For all of those who died
                And the suffering of their family
                All of those who cried
                As Armenians it hits close to home
                Our people suffered the Genocide
                Last edited by KanadaHye; 02-11-2009, 05:30 PM.
                "Nobody can give you freedom. Nobody can give you equality or justice or anything. If you're a man, you take it." ~Malcolm X

                Comment


                • Re: Poetry Corner

                  Revealation off Highway One-Eleven (08/27/93)

                  On the night
                  I found the truth
                  The moon broke through
                  the clouds
                  of an ominous summer
                  storm
                  as did Moses
                  part the sea

                  and the lady
                  she universal
                  magnificent
                  welcomed me
                  with arms
                  candle light
                  so that I
                  may see

                  and the tears
                  of God
                  fell down
                  on me.
                  Last edited by freakyfreaky; 03-08-2009, 10:40 AM.
                  Between childhood, boyhood,
                  adolescence
                  & manhood (maturity) there
                  should be sharp lines drawn w/
                  Tests, deaths, feats, rites
                  stories, songs & judgements

                  - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

                  Comment


                  • Re: Poetry Corner

                    Trained Monkey

                    I'm a trained monkey. You don't see many of us anymore,
                    though the streets of the larger cities were once filled with us.
                    Who is to say why we have nearly passed, like several of my
                    cousin species of the jungle and rain forest, into extinction?
                    Some say we are no more than a fad and like all fads were
                    bound to pass, that is no longer charming to see uss as
                    our masters grind out music from an old and far-off country.
                    But I am a living, breathing thing, and find it abusive to be so
                    labeled.
                    I would have you know that I am a part of a prestigious line
                    of trained monkeys. My grandpapa worked in the movies from
                    the time he was taken from his own mother's breast. He was
                    the one who swirled at his master's feet, as he played a
                    mournful dirge in an exquisite dance of foreboding, as Law-
                    rence Tierny (playing the gangster John Dillinger) walked to
                    that final movie with the traitorous women in red. My own
                    mother appeared often on the stage in what has come to be
                    called the Golden Age of Television, before she was sold by
                    her trainer, a scoundrel and drunkard, to a life in the streets,
                    dancing, as I still dance, for the coins of children and the
                    good working people returning from their lunch breaks. We
                    worked together through my early years . . . oh truly, it was
                    the most wonderful time of my life.
                    I recall with the greatest detail the way she would lovingly
                    swat me across the head as I scuffled across her path on the
                    pavement, the way she would teach me, with such patience,
                    the secrets of certain acrobatic stunts which some experts
                    would have you believe are inherent characteristics to our spe-
                    cies. (Believe me, they are not inherent, but very much ac-
                    quired skills . . . for example, have you ever seen a relative of
                    mine, among the trees and trellises of his natural jungle envi-
                    ronment, do somersaults on the seat of a bicycle as his mama
                    pedals from the chrome guard above the back wheel?) More
                    than any of this, I remember the touch of her small, pink fin-
                    gers as she groomed me at night, tugging my ear with her
                    tight lips, and, once again, the loving swat, signaling she was
                    finished, that I should sleep.

                    - Carroll, Jim. The Book of Nods, pg. 1 (1986).
                    Between childhood, boyhood,
                    adolescence
                    & manhood (maturity) there
                    should be sharp lines drawn w/
                    Tests, deaths, feats, rites
                    stories, songs & judgements

                    - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

                    Comment


                    • Re: Poetry Corner

                      "Back on Times Square, Dreaming of Times Square"

                      Let some sad trumpeter stand
                      on the empty streets at dawn
                      and blow a silver chorus to the
                      buildings of Times Square,
                      memorial of ten years, at 5AM, with
                      the thin white moon just
                      visible
                      above the green & grooking McGraw
                      Hill offices

                      a cop walks by, but he's invisible
                      with his music

                      The Globe Hotel, Garver lay in
                      grey beds there and hunched his
                      back and cleaned his needles--
                      where I lay many nights on the nod
                      from his leftover bloody cottons
                      and dreamed of Blake's voice talking--
                      I was lonely,
                      Garver's dead in Mexico two years,
                      hotel's vanished into a parking lot
                      And I'm back here--sitting on the streets
                      again--

                      The movies took our language, the
                      great red signs
                      A DOUBLE BILL OF GASSERS
                      Teen Age Nightmare
                      Hooligans of the Moon

                      But we were never nightmare
                      hooligans but seekers of
                      the blond nose for Truth

                      Some old men are still alive, but
                      the old Junkies are gone--

                      We are a legend, invisible but
                      legendary, as prophesied

                      New York, July 1958

                      - Ginsberg, Allen. Reality Sandwiches, p.70 (1963).
                      Between childhood, boyhood,
                      adolescence
                      & manhood (maturity) there
                      should be sharp lines drawn w/
                      Tests, deaths, feats, rites
                      stories, songs & judgements

                      - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 22

                      Comment

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