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Poetry Please start one thread for your own poetry and just add to it! |
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somewhere i have never travelled,gladly beyond
by E. E. Cummings somewhere i have never travelled,gladly beyond any experience,your eyes have their silence: in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me, or which i cannot touch because they are too near your slightest look easily will unclose me though i have closed myself as fingers, you open always petal by petal myself as Spring opens (touching skilfully,mysteriously)her first rose or if your wish be to close me, i and my life will shut very beautifully ,suddenly, as when the heart of this flower imagines the snow carefully everywhere descending; nothing which we are to perceive in this world equals the power of your intense fragility:whose texture compels me with the color of its countries, rendering death and forever with each breathing (i do not know what it is about you that closes and opens;only something in me understands the voice of your eyes is deeper than all roses) nobody,not even the rain,has such small hands |
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#2 |
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Rupert Brooke
The Soldier IF I should die, think only this of me: That there's some corner of a foreign field That is forever England. There shall be In that rich earth a richer dust concealed; A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware, Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam, A body of England's, breathing English air, Washed by the rivers, blest by the suns of home. And think, this heart, all evil shed away, A pulse in the eternal mind, no less Gives somewhere back the thoughts by England given; Her sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day; And laughter, learnt of friends; and gentleness, In hearts at peace, under an English heaven.
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#3 |
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Dust of Snow
by Robert Frost The way a crow Shook down on me The dust of snow From a hemlock tree Has given my heart A change of mood And saved some part Of a day I had rued. |
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#4 |
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The Welder
I am a welder. Not an alchemist. I am interested in the blend of common elements to make a common thing. No magic here. Only the heat of my desire to fuse what I already know exists. Is possible. We plead to each other, we all come from the same rock we all come from the same rock ignoring the fact that we bend at different temperatures that each of us is malleable up to a point. Yes, fusion is possible but only if things get hot enough - all else is temporary adhesion, patching up. It is the intimacy of steel melting into steel, the fire of your individual passion to take hold of ourselves that makes sculpture of your lives, builds buildings. And I am not talking about skyscrapers, merely structures that can support us of trembling. for too long a time the heat of my heavy hands has been smoldering in the pockets of other people's business- they need oxygen to make fire. I am now coming up for air Yes, I am picking up the torch. I am the welder. I understand the capacity of heat to change the shape of things. I am suited to work within the realm of sparks out of control. I am the welder. I am taking the power into my own hands. ~ Cherrie Moraga |
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Sonnet XLV
by Pablo Neruda Don't go far off, not even for a day, because-- because--I don't know how to say it: a day is long and I will be waiting for you, as in an empty station when the trains are parked off somewhere else, asleep. Don't leave me, even for an hour, because then the little drops of anguish will all run together, the smoke that roams looking for a home will drift into me, choking my lost heart. Oh, may your silhouette never dissolve on the beach; may your eyelids never flutter into the empty distance. Don't leave me for a second, my dearest, because in that moment you'll have gone so far I'll wander mazily over all the earth, asking, Will you come back? Will you leave me here, dying? |
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#6 |
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Shake the Superflux!
by David Lehman I like walking on streets as black and wet as this one now, at two in the solemnly musical morning, when everyone else in this town emptied of Lestrygonians and Lotus-eaters is asleep or trying or worrying why they aren't asleep, while unknown to them Ulysses walks into the shabby apartment I live in, humming and feeling happy with the avant-garde weather we're having, the winds (a fugue for flute and oboe) pouring into the windows which I left open although I live on the ground floor and there have been two burglaries on my block already this week, do I quickly take a look to see if the valuables are missing? No, that is I can't, it's an epistemological quandary: what I consider valuable, would they? Who are they, anyway? I'd answer that with speculations based on newspaper accounts if I were Donald E. Westlake, whose novels I'm hooked on, but this first cigarette after twenty-four hours of abstinence tastes so good it makes me want to include it in my catalogue of pleasures designed to hide the ugliness or sweep it away the way the violent overflow of rain over cliffs cleans the sewers and drains of Ithaca whose waterfalls head my list, followed by crudites of carrots and beets, roots and all, with rained-on radishes, too beautiful to eat, and the pure pleasure of talking, talking and not knowing where the talk will lead, but willing to take my chances. Furthermore I shall enumerate some varieties of tulips (Bacchus, Tantalus, Dardanelles) and other flowers with names that have a life of their own (Love Lies Bleeding, Dwarf Blue Bedding, Burning Bush, Torch Lily, Narcissus). Mostly, as I've implied, it's the names of things that count; still, sometimes I wonder and, wondering, find the path of least resistance, the earth's orbit around the sun's delirious clarity. Once you sniff the aphrodisiac of disaster, you know: there's no reason for the anxiety--or for expecting to be free of it; try telling Franz Kafka he has no reason to feel guilty; or so I say to well-meaning mongers of common sense. They way I figure, you start with the names which are keys and then you throw them away and learn to love the locked rooms, with or without corpses inside, riddles to unravel, emptiness to possess, a woman to wake up with a kiss (who is she? no one knows) who begs your forgiveness (for what? you cannot know) and then, in the authoritative tone of one who has weathered the storm of his exile, orders you to put up your hands and beg the rain to continue as if it were in your power. And it is, I feel it with each drop. I am standing outside at the window, looking in on myself writing these words, feeling what wretches feel, just as the doctor ordered. And that's what I plan to do, what the storm I was caught in reminded me to do, to shake the superflux, distribute my appetite, fast without so much as a glass of water, and love each bite I haven't taken. I shall become the romantic poet whose coat of many colors smeared with blood, like a butcher's apron, left in the sacred pit or brought back to my father to confirm my death, confirms my new life instead, an alien prince of dungeons and dreams who sheds the disguise people recognize him by to reveal himself to his true brothers at last in the silence that stuns before joy descends, like rain. |
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#7 |
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The Gift
By David Lehman "He gave her class. She gave him sex." -- Katharine Hepburn on Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers He gave her money. She gave him head. He gave her tips on "aggressive growth" mutual funds. She gave him a red rose and a little statue of eros. He gave her Genesis 2 (21-23). She gave him Genesis 1 (26-28). He gave her a square peg. She gave him a round hole. He gave her Long Beach on a late Sunday in September. She gave him zinnias and cosmos in the plenitude of July. He gave her a camisole and a brooch. She gave him a cover and a break. He gave her Venice, Florida. She gave him Rome, New York. He gave her a false sense of security. She gave him a true sense of uncertainty. He gave her the finger. She gave him what for. He gave her a black eye. She gave him a divorce. He gave her a steak for her black eye. She gave him his money back. He gave her what she had never had before. She gave him what he had had and lost. He gave her nastiness in children. She gave him prudery in adults. He gave her Panic Hill. She gave him Mirror Lake. He gave her an anthology of drum solos. She gave him the rattle of leaves in the wind. Ninth Inning By David Lehman He woke up in New York City on Valentine's Day, Speeding. The body in the booth next to his was still warm, Was gone. He had bought her a sweater, a box of chocolate Said her life wasn't working he looked stricken she said You're all bent out of shape, accusingly, and when he She went from being an Ivy League professor of French To an illustrator for a slick midtown magazine They agreed it was his fault. But for now they needed To sharpen to a point like a pencil the way The Empire State Building does. What I really want to say To you, my love, is a whisper on the rooftop lost in the wind And you turn to me with your rally cap on backwards rooting For a big inning, the bases loaded, our best slugger up And no one out, but it doesn't work that way. Like the time Kirk Gibson hit the homer off Dennis Eckersley to win the game: It doesn't happen like that in fiction. In fiction, we are On a train, listening to a storyteller about to reach the climax Of his tale as the train pulls into Minsk, his stop. That's My stop, he says, stepping off the train, confounding us who Can't get off it. "You can't leave without telling us the end," We say, but he is already on the platform, grinning. "End?" he says. "It was only the beginning." |
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