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Poetry Corner

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  • Re: Poetry Corner

    The Rose Tree


    'O WORDS are lightly spoken,'
    Said Pearse to Connolly,
    'Maybe a breath of politic words
    Has withered our Rose Tree;
    Or maybe but a wind that blows
    Across the bitter sea.'

    "It needs to be but watered,'
    James Connolly replied,
    "To make the green come out again
    And spread on every side,
    And shake the blossom from the bud
    To be the garden's pride.'

    "But where can we draw water,'
    Said Pearse to Connolly,
    "When all the wells are parched away?
    O plain as plain can be
    There's nothing but our own red blood
    Can make a right Rose Tree.'

    -- William Butler Yeats
    Last edited by freakyfreaky; 06-18-2009, 08:13 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

      up into the silence green

      up into the silence the green
      silence with a white earth in it

      you will(kiss me)go

      out into the morning the young
      morning with a warm world in it

      (kiss me)you will go

      on into the sunlight the fine
      sunlight with a firm day in it

      you will go(kiss me

      down into your memory and
      a memory and memory

      i)kiss me,(will go)

      -- ee cummings
      Last edited by freakyfreaky; 06-13-2009, 01:43 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

        They that have power to hurt and will do none,
        That do not do the thing they most do show,
        Who, moving others, are themselves as stone,
        Unmoved, cold, and to temptation slow,
        They rightly do inherit heaven's graces
        And husband nature's riches from expense;
        They are the lords and owners of their faces,
        Others but stewards of their excellence.
        The summer's flower is to the summer sweet,
        Though to itself it only live and die,
        But if that flower with base infection meet,
        The basest weed outbraves his dignity:
        For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds;
        Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds.

        William Shakespeare

        Comment


        • Re: Poetry Corner

          I go among your body as among the world,
          your belly the sunlit center of the city,
          your breasts two churches where are celebrated
          the great parallel mysteries of the blood,
          the looks of my eyes cover you like ivy,
          you are a city by the sea assaulted,
          you are a rampart by the light divided
          into two halves, distinct, color of peaches,
          and you are saltiness, you are rocks and birds
          beneath the edict of concentrated noon

          and dressed in the coloring of my desires
          you go as naked as my thoughts go naked,
          I go among your eyes as I swim water,
          the tigers come to these eyes to drink their dreams,
          the hummingbird is burning among these flames,
          I go upon your forehead as on the moon,
          like cloud I go among your imagining
          journey your belly as I journey your dream,

          your loins are harvest, a field of waves and singing,
          your loins are crystal and your loins are water,
          your lips, your hair, the looks you give me, they
          all night shower down like rain, and all day long
          you open up my breast with your fingers of water,
          you close my eyelids with your mouth of water,
          raining upon my bones, and in my breast
          the roots of water drive deep a liquid tree,

          I travel through your waist as through a river,
          I voyage your body as through a grove going,
          as by a footpath going up a mountain
          and suddenly coming upon a steep ravine
          I go the straitened way of your keen thoughts
          break through to daylight upon your white forehead
          and there my spirit flings itself down, is shattered
          now I collect my fragments one by one
          and go on, bodiless, searching, in the dark....

          you take on the likeness of a tree, a cloud,
          you are all birds and now you are a star,
          now you resemble the sharp edge of a sword
          and now the executioner's bowl of blood,
          the encroaching ivy that over grows and then
          roots out the soul and divides it from itself,

          * Sun Stone (selected fragment)

          Octavio Paz, Mexican Poet

          Comment


          • Re: Poetry Corner

            Tower Of Light

            O tower of light, sad beauty
            that magnified necklaces and statues in the sea,
            calcareous eye, insignia of the vast waters, cry
            of the mourning petrel, tooth of the sea, wife
            of the Oceanian wind, O separate rose
            from the long stem of the t-rampled bush
            that the depths, converted into archipelago,
            O natural star, green diadem,
            alone in your lonesome dynasty,
            still unattainable, elusive, desolate
            like one drop, like one grape, like the sea.

            -- Pablo Neruda

            Ode to a Large Tuna in the Market

            Among the market greens,
            a bullet
            from the ocean
            depths,
            a swimming
            projectile,
            I saw you,
            dead.

            All around you
            were lettuces,
            sea foam
            of the earth,
            carrots,
            grapes,
            but
            of the ocean
            truth,
            of the unknown,
            of the
            unfathomable
            shadow, the
            depths
            of the sea,
            the abyss,
            only you had survived,
            a pitch-black, varnished
            witness
            to deepest night.

            Only you, well-aimed
            dark bullet
            from the abyss,
            mangled
            at one tip,
            but constantly
            reborn,
            at anchor in the current,
            winged fins
            windmilling
            in the swift
            flight
            of
            the
            marine
            shadow,
            a mourning arrow,
            dart of the sea,
            olive, oily fish.
            I saw you dead,
            a deceased king
            of my own ocean,
            green
            assault, silver
            submarine fir,
            seed
            of seaquakes,
            now
            only dead remains,
            yet
            in all the market
            yours
            was the only
            purposeful form
            amid
            the bewildering rout
            of nature;
            amid the fragile greens
            you were
            a solitary ship,
            armed
            among the vegetables
            fin and prow black and oiled,
            as if you were still
            the vessel of the wind,
            the one and only
            pure
            ocean
            machine:
            unflawed, navigating
            the waters of death.

            -- Pablo Neruda

            Nothing But Death

            There are cemeteries that are lonely,
            graves full of bones that do not make a sound,
            the heart moving through a tunnel,
            in it darkness, darkness, darkness,
            like a shipwreck we die going into ourselves,
            as though we were drowning inside our hearts,
            as though we lived falling out of the skin into the soul.

            And there are corpses,
            feet made of cold and sticky clay,
            death is inside the bones,
            like a barking where there are no dogs,
            coming out from bells somewhere, from graves somewhere,
            growing in the damp air like tears of rain.

            Sometimes I see alone
            coffins under sail,
            embarking with the pale dead, with women that have dead hair,
            with bakers who are as white as angels,
            and pensive young girls married to notary publics,
            caskets sailing up the vertical river of the dead,
            the river of dark purple,
            moving upstream with sails filled out by the sound of death,
            filled by the sound of death which is silence.

            Death arrives among all that sound
            like a shoe with no foot in it, like a suit with no man in it,
            comes and knocks, using a ring with no stone in it, with no
            finger in it,
            comes and shouts with no mouth, with no tongue, with no
            throat.
            Nevertheless its steps can be heard
            and its clothing makes a hushed sound, like a tree.

            I'm not sure, I understand only a little, I can hardly see,
            but it seems to me that its singing has the color of damp violets,
            of violets that are at home in the earth,
            because the face of death is green,
            and the look death gives is green,
            with the penetrating dampness of a violet leaf
            and the somber color of embittered winter.

            But death also goes through the world dressed as a broom,
            lapping the floor, looking for dead bodies,
            death is inside the broom,
            the broom is the tongue of death looking for corpses,
            it is the needle of death looking for thread.

            Death is inside the folding cots:
            it spends its life sleeping on the slow mattresses,
            in the black blankets, and suddenly breathes out:
            it blows out a mournful sound that swells the sheets,
            and the beds go sailing toward a port
            where death is waiting, dressed like an admiral.


            Translated by Robert Bly

            -- Pablo Neruda

            Ode to the Sea

            Here surrounding the island,
            There's sea.
            But what sea?
            It's always overflowing.
            Says yes,
            Then no,
            Then no again,
            And no,
            Says yes
            In blue
            In sea spray
            Raging,
            Says no
            And no again.
            It can't be still.
            It stammers
            My name is sea.

            It slaps the rocks
            And when they aren't convinced,
            Strokes them
            And soaks them
            And smothers them with kisses.

            With seven green tongues
            Of seven green dogs
            Or seven green tigers
            Or seven green seas,
            Beating its chest,
            Stammering its name,

            Oh Sea,
            This is your name.
            Oh comrade ocean,
            Don't waste time
            Or water
            Getting so upset
            Help us instead.
            We are meager fishermen,
            Men from the shore
            Who are hungry and cold
            And you're our foe.
            Don't beat so hard,
            Don't shout so loud,
            Open your green coffers,
            Place gifts of silver in our hands.
            Give us this day our daily fish.

            -- Luis Bacalov & Pablo Neruda

            Pablo liked to write in green because he thought it was the color of hope.
            Last edited by freakyfreaky; 06-15-2009, 08:24 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

              Romance Sonambulo

              Green, how I want you green.
              Green wind. Green branches.
              The ship out on the sea
              and the horse on the mountain.
              With the shade around her waist
              she dreams on her balcony,
              green flesh, her hair green,
              with eyes of cold silver.
              Green, how I want you green.
              Under the gypsy moon,
              all things are watching her
              and she cannot see them.

              Green, how I want you green.
              Big hoarfrost stars
              come with the fish of shadow
              that opens the road of dawn.
              The fig tree rubs its wind
              with the sandpaper of its branches,
              and the forest, cunning cat,
              bristles its brittle fibers.
              But who will come? And from where?
              She is still on her balcony
              green flesh, her hair green,
              dreaming in the bitter sea.

              --My friend, I want to trade
              my horse for her house,
              my saddle for her mirror,
              my knife for her blanket.
              My friend, I come bleeding
              from the gates of Cabra.
              --If it were possible, my boy,
              I'd help you fix that trade.
              But now I am not I,
              nor is my house now my house.
              --My friend, I want to die
              decently in my bed.
              Of iron, if that's possible,
              with blankets of fine chambray.
              Don't you see the wound I have
              from my chest up to my throat?
              --Your white shirt has grown
              thirsy dark brown roses.
              Your blood oozes and flees a
              round the corners of your sash.
              But now I am not I,
              nor is my house now my house.
              --Let me climb up, at least,
              up to the high balconies;
              Let me climb up! Let me,
              up to the green balconies.
              Railings of the moon
              through which the water rumbles.

              Now the two friends climb up,
              up to the high balconies.
              Leaving a trail of blood.
              Leaving a trail of teardrops.
              Tin bell vines
              were trembling on the roofs.
              A thousand crystal tambourines
              struck at the dawn light.

              Green, how I want you green,
              green wind, green branches.
              The two friends climbed up.
              The stiff wind left
              in their mouths, a strange taste
              of bile, of mint, and of basil
              My friend, where is she--tell me--
              where is your bitter girl?
              How many times she waited for you!
              How many times would she wait for you,
              cool face, black hair,
              on this green balcony!
              Over the mouth of the cistern
              the gypsy girl was swinging,
              green flesh, her hair green,
              with eyes of cold silver.
              An icicle of moon
              holds her up above the water.
              The night became intimate
              like a little plaza.
              Drunken "Guardias Civiles"
              were pounding on the door.
              Green, how I want you green.
              Green wind. Green branches.
              The ship out on the sea.
              And the horse on the mountain.


              ------------


              Verde que te quiero verde.
              Verde viento. Verdes ramas.
              El barco sobre la mar
              y el caballo en la montaña.
              Con la sombra en la cintura
              ella sueña en su baranda,
              verde carne, pelo verde,
              con ojos de fría plata.
              Verde que te quiero verde.
              Bajo la luna gitana,
              las cosas la están mirando
              y ella no puede mirarlas.
              Verde que te quiero verde.
              Grandes estrellas de escarcha
              vienen con el pez de sombra
              que abre el camino del alba.
              La higuera frota su viento
              con la lija de sus ramas,
              y el monte, gato garduño,
              eriza sus pitas agrias.
              ¿Pero quién vendra? ¿Y por dónde...?
              Ella sigue en su baranda,
              Verde came, pelo verde,
              soñando en la mar amarga.
              --Compadre, quiero cambiar
              mi caballo por su casa,
              mi montura por su espejo,
              mi cuchillo per su manta.
              Compadre, vengo sangrando,
              desde los puertos de Cabra.
              --Si yo pudiera, mocito,
              este trato se cerraba.
              Pero yo ya no soy yo,
              ni mi casa es ya mi casa.
              --Compadre, quiero morir
              decentemente en mi cama.
              De acero, si puede ser,
              con las sábanas de holanda.
              ¿No ves la herida que tengo
              desde el pecho a la garganta?
              --Trescientas rosas morenas
              lleva tu pechera blanca.
              Tu sangre rezuma y huele
              alrededor de tu faja.
              Pero yo ya no soy yo,
              ni mi casa es ya mi casa.
              --Dejadme subir al menos
              hasta las altas barandas;
              ¡dejadme subir!, dejadme,
              hasta las verdes barandas.
              Barandales de la luna
              por donde retumba el agua.
              Ya suben los dos compadres
              hacia las altas barandas.
              Dejando un rastro de sangre.
              Dejando un rastro de lágrimas.
              Temblaban en los tejados
              farolillos de hojalata.
              Mil panderos de cristal
              herían la madrugada.
              Verde que te quiero verde,
              verde viento, verdes ramas.
              Los dos compadres subieron.
              El largo viento dejaba
              en la boca un raro gusto
              de hiel, de menta y de albahaca.
              ¡Compadre! ¿Donde está, díme?
              ¿Donde está tu niña amarga?
              ¡Cuántas veces te esperó!
              ¡Cuántas veces te esperara,
              cara fresca, negro pelo,
              en esta verde baranda!
              Sobre el rostro del aljibe
              se mecía la gitana.
              Verde carne, pelo verde,
              con ojos de fría plata.
              Un carámbano de luna
              la sostiene sobre el agua.
              La noche se puso íntima
              como una pequeña plaza.
              Guardias civiles borrachos
              en la puerta golpeaban.
              Verde que te qinero verde.
              Verde viento. Verdes ramas.
              El barco sobre la mar.
              Y el caballo en la montaña.

              Translated by William Logan

              -- Federico Garcia Lorca
              Last edited by freakyfreaky; 06-15-2009, 08:33 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

                Ode to a Long Hot Summer (6/17/09)

                Hot lust in the summertime
                Much rapture on the grass
                But no matter which season
                comes or goes
                may you be between the legs
                of a fine, young lass.

                -- freakyfreaky
                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

                  DELICIOUS words, the life of wanton wit,
                  That doth inspire our souls with sweet content,
                  Why hath your father Hermes thought it fit,
                  Mine eyes should surfeit by my heart's consent ?
                  Full twenty summers have I fading seen,
                  And twenty Floras in their golden guise :
                  Yet never view'd I such a pleasant Greene,
                  As this whose garnish'd gleads compared, devise.
                  Of all the flowers a Lilly (1) once I lov'd,
                  Whose labouring beauty branch'd itself abroad;
                  But now old age his glory hath remov'd,
                  And greener objects are mine eyes abroad.
                  No country to the downs of Arcadie,
                  Where Aganippe's ever springing wells
                  Do moist the meads with bubbling melody,
                  And makes me muse what more in Delos dwells.
                  There feeds our Menaphon's celestial Muse,
                  There makes his pipe his pastoral report :
                  Which strained now a note above his use,
                  Foretels he'll ne'er come chaunt of Thoae's sport.
                  Read, all that list, and read till you mislike,
                  To condemn who can, so Envy be not judge:
                  No, read who can, swell more higher, lest it shriek;
                  Robin, thou hast done well, care not who grudge!

                  -- HENRY UPCHER (2)

                  1 JOHN LILLY, a popular, but pedantic writer of that day.
                  2 I believe there are no other relics of this writer known.

                  -- Greene, Robert. GREENE'S ARCADIA; OR, CAMILLA'S ALARUM TO SLUMBER
                  EUPHUES IN HIS MELANCHOLY CELL AT SILEXEDRA, A new edition, p. xxiii
                  (6th Edit. 1814)
                  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

                    Issaquah September (6/20/09)

                    Indian land
                    Snoqualmie summer
                    Hop harvest
                    Frontier post
                    Old train town
                    Immigrant inlet

                    The engines stopped running
                    but the ghosts remain
                    cattlemen, lubmerjacks, coal miners, wildcats
                    tells stories
                    of their glory
                    on the smoke
                    of wood burned,
                    saloon stoked,
                    supper fires

                    Leaves yield
                    yellow upon
                    autumn's approach
                    the gingko
                    stills stands
                    artifact sentinel

                    wind whistles wildly
                    through the highland wilderness
                    rivers roll roaringly
                    out yonder
                    whitewater falls
                    elk grazing gracefully
                    over cloud shadowed meadows
                    this Issaquah September

                    -- freakyfreaky
                    Last edited by freakyfreaky; 06-20-2009, 10:31 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

                      Whether to be a
                      great cagey perfumed
                      beast
                      dying under the
                      sweet patronage
                      of Kings
                      & exist like luxuriant
                      flowers beneath the
                      emblems of their
                      Strange empire
                      or by mere insouciant
                      faith
                      slap them, call their cards
                      spit on fate & cast hell
                      to flames in usury

                      by dying, nobly
                      we could exist like
                      innocent trolls
                      propagate our revels
                      & give the finger to the
                      gods in our private
                      bedrooms

                      let's rather, maybe,
                      perhaps,
                      get f-ucking out in
                      the open, & by
                      swelling, jubilantly
                      Magnificently, end them.

                      - Morrison, Jim. Wilderness, vol. 1, p. 127

                      Euripides

                      When I am President
                      subways will be quieter. I'll hire the
                      unemployed to wax the rails, and trains will
                      sound like ice moving over ice. And
                      conductors will no longer blare "Watch the
                      closing doors!", because noone ever watches
                      the closing doors. There's nothing to see
                      about closing doors. Instead, conductors
                      will read from Euripides. If you travel the
                      whole length of the E train, you'll hear
                      the whole Medea. Euripides is
                      the best guide to human life, because
                      he is sad, yet brave.
                      The same sad bravery I will bring to
                      the Presidency -- a stance dormant since Lincoln.
                      "We are doomed, perhaps," I will announce. "The
                      sun is breaking through the sky to slay us with
                      cancer, because we were
                      foolishly indulgent with whipped cream.
                      But we must set our course aright."
                      And all the women in the nation
                      will weep, and the men will have a tear in their
                      eye that can't quite descend,
                      and the people will cry to repentance:
                      "Repentance! Repentance!"
                      And I will blind myself with a
                      canopener and wander the
                      streets and prophesy
                      and plant an oak tree, and beneath this tree
                      a woman will sit 7 years, and then she'll rise and
                      save us from the sun
                      and the cancer will leave our faces
                      and we'll sing a new song
                      which will resemble the music of Euripides
                      that has been lost for centuries. And the
                      conductors will sing
                      that, as we ride on waxed rails, like
                      ice over ice.

                      -- Sparrow. "Euripides", I Always Vote for Sparrow for President (1992).

                      Fear of a black planet? http://www.imeem.com/wackywavinginfl...ere-president/
                      Last edited by freakyfreaky; 06-21-2009, 08:27 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

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