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| Poetry Please start one thread for your own poetry and just add to it! |
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#1 |
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Member
How Do You Identify?:
honeysuckle venom Preferred Pronoun?:
a pistol and a sugar cane Relationship Status:
I promise to aid and abet Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: in between poems where ceilings are floors and joe ghost floats achromatic toward day
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Thanked 735 Times in 228 Posts
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Mama,
he’s not like the other coroners. Took me upstairs and showed me his coelacanth. Sutured the last of the suitors at sunup. Straddled the strata, solved for salve. Same river begging to be taken back. Prayed effigy, efficacy, something to sign for. Bodies? Flutter fodder. Fit start to endgame. Last rites, riots, stage left in a whisper, best left beheaded, behest left unsung. Secured the parameters, opened the aperture, cut me a switch and learned luck a new trick. Wind turned tail, broke stride and won over, air on the side of the nacreous acreage, my far cry.
__________________
Class, race, sexuality, gender and all other categories by which we categorize and dismiss each other need to be excavated from the inside. - Dorothy Allison
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#2 |
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Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
Complex but Tender Preferred Pronoun?:
~Ma`am~ Relationship Status:
Shotgun Rider Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Following the red road
Posts: 4,519
Thanks: 9,304
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Rep Power: 21474856 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Cruelty and Love
by: D. H. Lawrence (1885-1930) What large, dark hands are those at the window Lifted, grasping the golden light Which weaves its way through the creeper leaves To my heart's delight? Ah, only the leaves! But in the west, In the west I see a redness come Over the evening's burning breast-- --'Tis the wound of love goes home! The woodbine creeps abroad Calling low to her lover: The sun-lit flirt who all the day Has poised above her lips in play And stolen kisses, shallow and gay Of pollen, now has gone away --She woos the moth with her sweet, low word, And when above her his broad wings hover Then her bright breast she will uncover And yield her honey-drop to her lover. Into the yellow, evening glow Saunters a man from the farm below, Leans, and looks in at the low-built shed Where hangs the swallow's marriage bed. The bird lies warm against the wall. She glances quick her startled eyes Towards him, then she turns away Her small head, making warm display Of red upon the throat. His terrors sway Her out of the nest's warm, busy ball, Whose plaintive cry is heard as she flies In one blue stoop from out the sties Into the evening's empty hall. Oh, water-hen, beside the rushes Hide your quaint, unfading blushes, Still your quick tail, and lie as dead, Till the distance folds over his ominous tread. The rabbit presses back her ears, Turns back her liquid, anguished eyes And crouches low: then with wild spring Spurts from the terror of his oncoming To be choked back, the wire ring Her frantic effort throttling: Piteous brown ball of quivering fears! Ah soon in his large, hard hands she dies, And swings all loose to the swing of his walk, Yet calm and kindly are his eyes And ready to open in brown surprise Should I not answer to his talk Or should he my tears surmise. I hear his hand on the latch, and rise from my chair Watching the door open: he flashes bare His strong teeth in a smile, and flashes his eyes In a smile like triumph upon me; then careless-wise He flings the rabbit soft on the table board And comes toward me: ah, the uplifted sword Of his hand against my bosom, and oh, the broad Blade of his hand that raises my face to applaud His coming: he raises up my face to him And caresses my mouth with his fingers, which still smell grim Of the rabbit's fur! God, I am caught in a snare! I know not what fine wire is round my throat, I only know I let him finger there My pulse of life, letting him nose like a stoat Who sniffs with joy before he drinks the blood: And down his mouth comes to my mouth, and down His dark bright eyes descend like a fiery hood Upon my mind: his mouth meets mine, and a flood Of sweet fire sweeps across me, so I drown Within him, die, and find death good.
__________________
“For it was not into my ear you whispered, but into my heart.
It was not my lips you kissed, but my soul.” Judy Garland |
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#3 |
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Member
How Do You Identify?:
honeysuckle venom Preferred Pronoun?:
a pistol and a sugar cane Relationship Status:
I promise to aid and abet Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: in between poems where ceilings are floors and joe ghost floats achromatic toward day
Posts: 514
Thanks: 229
Thanked 735 Times in 228 Posts
Rep Power: 503699 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
If you’re inside me at the hockey game,
you’re inside the arena when the winning goal’s scored and octopi thrown onto the ice. A Detroit thing, as in Cambodia, they don’t play hockey or call it Cambodian food, it’s just food, but if you’re inside me and I go to Angkor Wat, you see how tourism destroys the past. This love of ours has done little for you thus far in this poem. If you’re inside me when I write a letter urging my senator to vote against the death penalty, you’re ineffectual in your outrage too. But it feels good, doesn’t it, when I can’t decide if I need a four or five inch bolt, to be the voice inside me saying, does it matter, as I am the voice inside you saying, I am the voice inside you, the voice beside your voice inside you, the voice holding the hand of that voice, which is anatomically impossible though romantically essential. If you are inside me I am lucky: I am lucky: therefore you are inside me: that’s called a proof. I’m serious: I don’t know what good the death penalty does. “Cruel and inhuman” sounds like a law firm. You sound like everything to me.
__________________
Class, race, sexuality, gender and all other categories by which we categorize and dismiss each other need to be excavated from the inside. - Dorothy Allison
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#4 |
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Member
How Do You Identify?:
honeysuckle venom Preferred Pronoun?:
a pistol and a sugar cane Relationship Status:
I promise to aid and abet Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: in between poems where ceilings are floors and joe ghost floats achromatic toward day
Posts: 514
Thanks: 229
Thanked 735 Times in 228 Posts
Rep Power: 503699 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
The way the tits of lemon meringue whorled
in the window that day looked at first like breasts, then more like paws of my grandfather's clubfoot Siamese. I want to believe that, after he died, the cat didn't gnaw off his face. I've heard it happens. I'd like to ask the pastry chef if his vision of whipped egg whites and sugar meant he saw, in a dream, that mangled paw pressed to my grandfather's chest. I know my grandfather died alone, with the TV on. I need to know he kept his face that day, in the green armchair, that the channel he chose as his heart slowed was not televangelism, but a bird documentary: dark-eyed juncos jilting the magnolias, fiercer than angels flying south. I need to know the show's voice-over was pitched in the gauzy timbre of lullaby--low and Latinate, Byzantine. Because hearing, during death, is the last faculty to go. And so, his last moments were filled with the wing beat of juncos, and a calm, omniscient voice: Fringilla nigra, ventre albo--black finch, with a white belly. Languid in heat, the meringue breasts cave a little, almost inscrutably burnt brown at the side-seams, and at the tips. I lick my lips, though I won't enter. I'm afraid like Christ they'd turn to flesh in my mouth.
__________________
Class, race, sexuality, gender and all other categories by which we categorize and dismiss each other need to be excavated from the inside. - Dorothy Allison
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#5 |
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Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
GNC, not Trans, REAL. TIME. ONLY. Preferred Pronoun?:
REAL. TIME. ONLY. Relationship Status:
REAL. TIME. ONLY. Join Date: Apr 2010
Location: In a good life.
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Mindful
Every day I see or I hear something that more or less kills me with delight, that leaves me like a needle in the haystack of light. It is what I was born for--- to look, to listen to lose myself inside this soft world--- to instruct myself over and over in joy, and acclamation. Nor am I talking about the exceptional, the fearful, the dreadful, the very extravagant--- but of the ordinary, the common, the very drab, the daily presentations. Oh, good scholar, I say to myself, how can you help but grow wise with such teachings as these--- the untrimmable light of the world, the ocean's shine, the prayers that are made out of grass? by Mary Oliver Greco |
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#6 |
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Senior Member
How Do You Identify?:
Complex but Tender Preferred Pronoun?:
~Ma`am~ Relationship Status:
Shotgun Rider Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: Following the red road
Posts: 4,519
Thanks: 9,304
Thanked 12,904 Times in 3,466 Posts
Rep Power: 21474856 ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
A Match With A The Moon WEARY already, weary miles to-night I walked for bed: and so, to get some ease, I dogged the flying moon with similes. And like a wisp she doubled on my sight In ponds; and caught in tree-tops like a kite; And in a globe of film all liquorish Swam full-faced like a silly silver fish;— Last like a bubble shot the welkin's height Where my road turned, and got behind me, and sent My wizened shadow craning round at me, And jeered, “So, step the measure,—one two three!” And if I faced on her, looked innocent. But just at parting, halfway down a dell, She kissed me for good-night. So you'll not tell. Dante Gabriel Rossetti
__________________
“For it was not into my ear you whispered, but into my heart.
It was not my lips you kissed, but my soul.” Judy Garland |
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