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Poetry Corner

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  • Re: Poetry Corner

    Song on May Morning

    Now the bright morning-star, Day’s harbinger,
    Comes dancing from the East, and leads with her
    The flowery May, who from her green lap throws
    The yellow cowslip and the pale primrose.
    Hail, bounteous May, that dost inspire
    Mirth, and youth, and warm desire!
    Woods and groves are of thy dressing;
    Hill and dale doth boast thy blessing.
    Thus we salute thee with our early song,
    And welcome thee, and wish thee long.

    --John Milton

    Stans Puer ad Mensam

    Attend my words, my gentle knave,
    And you shall learn from me
    How boys at dinner may behave
    With due propriety.

    Guard well your hands: two things have been
    Unfitly used by some;
    The trencher for a tambourine,
    The table for a drum.

    We could not lead a pleasant life,
    And 'twould be finished soon,
    If peas were eaten with the knife,
    And gravy with the spoon.

    Eat slowly: only men in rags
    And gluttons old in sin
    Mistake themselves for carpet bags
    And tumble victuals in.

    The privy pinch, the whispered tease,
    The wild, unseemly yell --
    When children do such things as these,
    We say, "It is not well."

    Endure your mother's timely stare,
    Your father's righteous ire,
    And do not wriggle on your chair
    Like flannel in the fire.

    Be silent: you may chatter loud
    When you are fully grown,
    Surrounded by a silent crowd
    Of children of your own.

    If you should suddenly feel bored
    And much inclined to yawning,
    Your little hand will best afford
    A modest useful awning.

    Think highly of the Cat: and yet
    You need not therefore think
    That portly strangers like your pet
    To share their meat and drink.

    The end of dinner comes ere long
    When, once more full and free,
    You cheerfully may bide the gong
    That calls you to your tea.

    --Sir Walter Raleigh
    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

      Asleep.

      As far from pity as complaint,
      As cool to speech as stone,
      As numb to revelation
      As if my trade were bone.

      As far from time as history,
      As near yourself to-day
      As children to the rainbow's scarf,
      Or sunset's yellow play

      To eyelids in the sepulchre.
      How still the dancer lies,
      While color's revelations break,
      And blaze the butterflies!


      Emily xxxxinson,
      (1830 – 1886)

      Comment


      • Re: Poetry Corner

        The Sleep of a Dark Angel

        The Sleep of a Dark Angel

        Lay down next to me
        Hold my hand and close your eyes
        And fall into deep sleep
        Try to never wake up again
        Embrace your eternal dreams
        And they will hide you from reality
        So far away…
        To never let the pain touch your soul
        Sleep my fallen angel
        Sleep, sleep forever
        Your silent cry that I hear every night , I have felt your loneliness
        And the soft tears you have wept and hide inside your broken heart
        Let them fall,
        Let them drown inside my cold soul
        To taste your fears
        Feeling grace so deep inside you
        So deep that you are lost in the dark
        And yet again you surrender to shadows
        And you let yourself fall in their embrace and you still let their cold venom touch your soul
        Close your eyes and sleep my fallen angel
        Sleep, sleep forever in darkness
        To forget all the memories that you kept in your pure heart
        I can still see in your eyes the sorrow,
        Sorrow you have never defeated
        So my little angel,
        Close your eyes and let my touch cover all your wounds
        Hush my fallen angel, sleep, sleep forever
        Last edited by Anush; 05-10-2009, 11:12 AM. Reason: spelling

        Comment


        • Re: Poetry Corner

          Anush good poetry, but you will never be advanced like freakyfreaky.
          Positive vibes, positive taught

          Comment


          • Re: Poetry Corner

            Then the cooks brought forth a table of gold, and Zal was seated beside the Shah and all the nobles according to their rank, and they ate flesh and drank wine together. Then when the mantle of night was fallen over the earth Zal sprang upon his steed and scoured the land in the unrest of his spirit, for his heart was full of thoughts and his mouth of words. But when morning was come he presented himself before the Shah in audience. And his speech and mien found favour in the eyes of the Shah, and he called unto him his Wise Men and bade them question the stars of this matter. Three days and three nights did the Mubids search the heavens without ceasing, and on the fourth they came before the Shah and spake. And they said unto him-


            "Hail to thee, hero of the golden girdle, for we bring unto thee glad tidings. The son of Saum and the daughter of Mihrab shall be a glorious pair, and from their union shall spring a son like to a war-elephant, and he shall subdue all men by his sword and raise the glory of Iran even unto the skies. And he shall uproot the wicked from the earth so that there shall be no room for them. Segsars and Mazinderan shall feel the weight of his mace, and he shall bring much woe upon Turan, but Iran shall be loaded with prosperity at his hands. And he will give back sleep to the unhappy, and close the doors of discord, and bar the paths of wrong-doing. The kingdom will rejoice while he lives; Roum, Ind, and Iran will grave his name upon their seals."
            When the Shah had heard this he charged the Mubids that they keep secret that which they had revealed unto him. And he called for Zal that he might question him and test his wisdom. And the Wise Men and the Mubids were seated in a circle, and they put these questions to the son of Saum.

            And the first opened his mouth and said-


            "Twelve trees, well grown and green,
            Fair and lofty, have I seen;
            Each has sprung with vigorous sprout,
            Sending thirty branches out;
            Wax no more, nor wane, they can
            In the kingdom of Iran."

            And Zal pondered a while and then answered and said-


            'Twelve moons in the year, and each I praise
            As a new-made king on a new throne's blaze:
            Each comes to an end in thirty days."

            Then the second Mubid questioned him and said-


            "Thou whose head is high in air,
            Rede me now of coursers twain;
            Both are noble, swift to speed;
            Black as storms in the night one steed,
            The other crystal, white and fair,
            They race for ever and haste in vain,
            Towards a goal they never gain."

            And Zal thought again yet a while and answered-


            "Two shining horses, one black, one white.
            That run for ever in rapid flight;
            The one is the day, the other the night,
            That count the throbs of the heavens height,
            Like the hunted prey from the following chase
            They flee, yet neither wins the race."

            Then the third Mubid questioned him and said-


            "Thirty knights before the king
            Pass along. Regard the thing
            Closely; one is gone. Again
            Look- the thirty are in train."

            And Zal answered and spake-


            "Thirty knights of whom the train
            Is full, then fails, then fills again,
            Know, each moon is reckoned thus,
            So willed by God who governs us,
            And thy word is true of the faint moon's wane,
            Now failing in darkness, now shining plain."

            Then the fourth Mubid questioned him and said-


            "See a green garden full of springs;
            A strong man with a sickle keen
            Enters, and reaps both dry and green;
            No word thine utmost anguish wrings."

            And Zal bethought him and replied-


            "Thy word was of a garden green,
            A reaper with a sickle keen,
            Who cuts alike the fresh and the dry
            Nor heedeth prayer nor any cry:
            Time is the reaper, we the grass;
            Pity nor fear his spirit has,
            But old and young he reaps alike.
            No rank can stay his sickle's strike,
            No love, but he will leave it lorn,
            For to this end all men are born.
            Birth opes to all the gate of Life,
            Death shuts it down on love and strife,
            And Fate, that counts the breath of man,
            Measures to each a reckoned span."

            Then the fifth Mubid questioned him and said-


            "Look how two lofty cypresses
            Spring up, like reeds, from stormy seas,
            There builds a bird his dwelling-place;
            Upon the one all night he stays,
            But swift, with the dawn, across he flies;
            The abandoned tree dries up and dies,
            While that whereon he sets his feet
            Breathes odours out, surpassing sweet.
            The one is dead for ever and aye,
            The other lives and blooms alway."

            Then Zal yet again bethought him before he said-


            "Hear of the sea-born cypresses,
            Where builds a bird, and rests, and flees.
            From the Ram to the Scales the earth o'erpowers,
            Shadows obscure of the night that lowers,
            But when the Scales' sign it must quit,
            Darkness and gloom o'ermaster it;
            The sides of heaven thy fable shows
            Whence grief to man or blessing flows,
            The sun like a bird flies to and fro,
            Weal with him bringing, but leaving woe."

            Then the sixth Mubid questioned him, and it was the last question that he asked, and he deemed it the hardest of all to answer. And all men hung upon his words and listened to the answer of Zal. And the Mubid said-


            "Builded on a rock I found
            A town. Men left the gate and chose
            A thicket on the level ground.
            Soon their soaring mansions rose
            Lifting roofs that reach the moon,
            Some men slaves, some kings, became,
            Of their earlier city soon
            The memory died in all. Its name
            None breathed. But hark! an earthquake; down,
            Lost in the chasm lies the land-
            Now long they for their rock-built town,
            Enduring things they understand.
            Seek in thy soul the truth of this;
            This before kings proclaim, I was,
            If rightly thou the riddle rede,
            Black earth to musk thou hast changed indeed."

            And Zal pondered this riddle but a little while, and then opened his mouth and said-


            "The eternal, final world is shown
            By image of a rock-built town;
            The thicket is our passing life,
            A place of pleasure and of pain,
            A world of dreams and eager strife,
            A time for labour, and loss, and gain;
            This counts thy heart-beats, at its will
            Prolongs their pulse or makes it still.
            But winds and earthquake rouse: a cry
            Goes up of bitterness and woe,
            Now we must leave our homes below
            And climb the rocky fastness high.
            Another reaps our fruit of pain,
            That yet to another leaves his gain;
            So was it aye, must so remain.
            Well for us if our name endure,
            Though we shall pass, beloved and pure,
            For all the evil man hath done,
            Stalks, when he dies, in the sight of the sun;
            When dust is strown on breast and head,
            Then desolation reigns with dread."

            -- Abolqasem Ferdowsi, Shahmaneh, ch.4, "Zal and Rubadeh"

            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

              Originally posted by PepsiAddict View Post
              Anush good poetry, but you will never be advanced like freakyfreaky.

              Compliments with criticism... so sweet...

              Comment


              • Re: Poetry Corner

                Originally posted by Anush View Post
                Compliments with criticism... so sweet...
                Heh I know, isn't it.
                Positive vibes, positive taught

                Comment


                • Re: Poetry Corner

                  Restless

                  You wake up & the clouds are grey
                  And you have no idea what to say
                  You take a look outside
                  And you see rain coming from the clouds upright
                  You want to go back to bed
                  But you have work..isn't that WHACK!


                  Now thats poetry LOL LOL.
                  Positive vibes, positive taught

                  Comment


                  • Re: Poetry Corner

                    To Omar Khayyam

                    Omar, within thy scented garden-close,
                    When passed with eventide
                    The starward incense of the waning rose—
                    Too precious to abide
                    After the glad and golden death of spring—
                    Omar, thou heardest then,
                    Above the world of men,
                    The mournful rumor of an iron wing,
                    The sough and sigh of desolating years,
                    Whereof the wind is as the winds that blow
                    Out of a lonesome land of night and snow
                    Where timeless winter weeps with frozen tears;
                    And in thy bodeful ears
                    The brief and tiny lisp
                    Of petals curled and crisp,
                    Fallen at eve in Persia's mellow clime,
                    Was mingled with the mighty sound of time.

                    Omar, thou knewest well
                    How the fair days are sorrowful and strange
                    With time's inexorable mystery
                    And terror ineluctable of change:
                    Upon thine eyes the bleak and bitter spell
                    Of vision, thou didst see,
                    As in a magic glass,
                    The moulded mists and painted shadows pass—
                    The ghostly pomps we name reality;
                    And, lo, the level field,
                    With broken fane and throne
                    And dust of old, unfabled cities sown,
                    In unremembering years was made to yield,
                    From out the shards of Power,
                    The pillars frail and small
                    That lift for capital
                    The blood-like bubble of the poppy-flower;
                    And crowns were crumbled for the airy gold
                    The crocus and the daffodil should hold
                    As inalienable dower.
                    Before thy gaze the sad unvaried green
                    The cypresses like robes funereal wear,
                    Was woven on the gradual looms of air
                    From threadbare silk and tattered sendaline
                    That clothed some ancient queen;
                    And from the spoilt vermilion of her mouth
                    The myrtles rose, and from her ruined hair
                    And eyes that held the summer's ardent drouth
                    In blown, disrooted bowers;
                    And amber limbs and breast
                    Through ancient nights by sleepless love oppressed,
                    Or by the iron flight of loveless hours.

                    Knowing the weary wisdom of the years,
                    The empty truth of tears;
                    The suns of June that with some great excess
                    Of ardor slay the unabiding rose;
                    And grey-haired winter, wan and fervorless,
                    For whom no flower grows;
                    Seeing the paradisal bloom that pales
                    On orient snows untrod
                    In magic morns that grant,
                    Across a land of common green and grey,
                    The disenchanted day;
                    Knowing the gulf-deep veils
                    And walls of adamant
                    That ward the darkling verities of God—
                    Knowing these things, ah, surely thou wert wise
                    To kiss on ardent breast and avid mouth
                    Some girl whose eyes
                    Were golden with the sun-belovèd south—
                    To pluck the rose and drain the rose-red wine
                    In gardens half-divine;
                    Before the broken cup
                    Be filled and covered up
                    In dusty seas of everlasting drouth.

                    -- Clark Ashton Smith

                    "The deep green garden, its walls plastered with mud, faced the river with the village behind it."

                    -- Parsipur, Sharnush. Women Without Men (A Novel of Modern Iran), p.1 (1989).
                    Last edited by freakyfreaky; 05-18-2009, 09:36 PM.
                    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

                      Originally posted by freakyfreaky View Post
                      To Omar Khayyam

                      Omar, within thy scented garden-close,
                      When passed with eventide
                      The starward incense of the waning rose—
                      Too precious to abide
                      After the glad and golden death of spring—
                      Omar, thou heardest then,
                      Above the world of men,
                      The mournful rumor of an iron wing,
                      The sough and sigh of desolating years,
                      Whereof the wind is as the winds that blow
                      Out of a lonesome land of night and snow
                      Where timeless winter weeps with frozen tears;
                      And in thy bodeful ears
                      The brief and tiny lisp
                      Of petals curled and crisp,
                      Fallen at eve in Persia's mellow clime,
                      Was mingled with the mighty sound of time.

                      Omar, thou knewest well
                      How the fair days are sorrowful and strange
                      With time's inexorable mystery
                      And terror ineluctable of change:
                      Upon thine eyes the bleak and bitter spell
                      Of vision, thou didst see,
                      As in a magic glass,
                      The moulded mists and painted shadows pass—
                      The ghostly pomps we name reality;
                      And, lo, the level field,
                      With broken fane and throne
                      And dust of old, unfabled cities sown,
                      In unremembering years was made to yield,
                      From out the shards of Power,
                      The pillars frail and small
                      That lift for capital
                      The blood-like bubble of the poppy-flower;
                      And crowns were crumbled for the airy gold
                      The crocus and the daffodil should hold
                      As inalienable dower.
                      Before thy gaze the sad unvaried green
                      The cypresses like robes funereal wear,
                      Was woven on the gradual looms of air
                      From threadbare silk and tattered sendaline
                      That clothed some ancient queen;
                      And from the spoilt vermilion of her mouth
                      The myrtles rose, and from her ruined hair
                      And eyes that held the summer's ardent drouth
                      In blown, disrooted bowers;
                      And amber limbs and breast
                      Through ancient nights by sleepless love oppressed,
                      Or by the iron flight of loveless hours.

                      Knowing the weary wisdom of the years,
                      The empty truth of tears;
                      The suns of June that with some great excess
                      Of ardor slay the unabiding rose;
                      And grey-haired winter, wan and fervorless,
                      For whom no flower grows;
                      Seeing the paradisal bloom that pales
                      On orient snows untrod
                      In magic morns that grant,
                      Across a land of common green and grey,
                      The disenchanted day;
                      Knowing the gulf-deep veils
                      And walls of adamant
                      That ward the darkling verities of God—
                      Knowing these things, ah, surely thou wert wise
                      To kiss on ardent breast and avid mouth
                      Some girl whose eyes
                      Were golden with the sun-belovèd south—
                      To pluck the rose and drain the rose-red wine
                      In gardens half-divine;
                      Before the broken cup
                      Be filled and covered up
                      In dusty seas of everlasting drouth.

                      -- Clark Ashton Smith

                      "The deep green garden, its walls plastered with mud, faced the river with the village behind it."

                      -- Parsipur, Sharnush. Women Without Men (A Novel of Modern Iran), p.1 (1989).
                      You never dissapoint me.
                      Positive vibes, positive taught

                      Comment

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