Poetry

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  • Joseph K
    Banned
    • Oct 2017
    • 7765

    Originally posted by greenilex View Post
    How about this from March forty years ago:

    Strange how Spring devours the hemispheres
    And inch by roaring inch puts paid to dark;
    Strange how the dawn which broke so near to tears
    And wished the nightingale was but the lark
    Washes the sky for flowers that still will come.
    Silently, stealthily, like the Assyrian king
    In purple, gold and crimson
    Rides every tiny thing
    With cohorts of cabbages
    Spikes of pale asphodel
    And little flags of harebell
    Nodding in a ring.
    Nice... did you write this?

    Comment

    • greenilex
      Full Member
      • Nov 2010
      • 1626

      I have to acknowledge it though it feels like someone else’s...

      Comment

      • Joseph K
        Banned
        • Oct 2017
        • 7765

        The Claque

        the clucking claque clap crap clap-trap
        the fucking flock flap for forfending flak

        Comment

        • johncorrigan
          Full Member
          • Nov 2010
          • 10358

          Heard this on Radio 4 last week with accompanying soundtrack.

          Wet Evening in April

          The birds sang in the wet trees
          And as I listened to them it was a hundred years from now
          And I was dead and someone else was listening to them.
          But I was glad I had recorded for him the melancholy.

          Patrick Kavanagh

          Comment

          • ferneyhoughgeliebte
            Gone fishin'
            • Sep 2011
            • 30163

            Alice in Wonderland would understand
            A little Queen of Hearts like you.
            But in my book it said: Off with his head!
            And that's exactly what you'd do.

            Indeed, I lost my head completely when
            On the river one summer's day
            All in the golden afternoon
            We glided far away.

            Oh, Alice, how I loved you.

            The fairy cakes you made, the lemonade,
            The funny stories that I told:
            How Tweedle-Dum and Dee could not agree,
            And Father William who was very old,
            Mad Hatter on a spree, Doormouse dunked in the tea.
            All of that day to me was gold.

            We let the silent sand run though our hands,
            The setting sun became a glow,
            I recall, down the long years between.
            Where did my Queen of Hearts go?

            Alice in Wonderland,
            Where are you now, my love?


            Spike Milligan (b 16-04-1918) - a repeat of #493, I know - but a special exception made for this anniversary.
            [FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]

            Comment

            • Tevot
              Full Member
              • Nov 2010
              • 1011

              How you became a poet's a mystery! / Where did you get your talent from? / I say: I had two uncles, Joe and Harry - / one was a stammerer, the other dumb.

              - 'Heredity', Tony Harrison

              Comment

              • johncorrigan
                Full Member
                • Nov 2010
                • 10358

                Keeping Quiet


                Now we will count to twelve
                and we will all keep still.

                For once on the face of the earth,
                let’s not speak in any language;
                let’s stop for one second,
                and not move our arms so much.

                It would be an exotic moment
                without rush, without engines;
                we would all be together
                in a sudden strangeness.

                Fisherman in the cold sea
                would not harm whales
                and the man gathering salt
                would not look at his hurt hands.

                Those who prepare green wars,
                wars with gas, wars with fire,
                victories with no survivors,
                would put on clean clothes
                and walk about with their brothers
                in the shade, doing nothing.

                What I want should not be confused
                with total inactivity.
                Life is what it is about;
                I want no truck with death.

                If we were not so single-minded
                about keeping our lives moving,
                and for once could do nothing,
                perhaps a huge silence
                might interrupt this sadness
                of never understanding ourselves
                and of threatening ourselves with death.
                Perhaps the earth can teach us
                as when everything seems dead
                and later proves to be alive.

                Now I’ll count up to twelve
                and you keep quiet and I will go.

                Pablo Neruda

                Comment

                • Joseph K
                  Banned
                  • Oct 2017
                  • 7765

                  Pharmacy Lady

                  My overflowing passion, a desire
                  that’s boundless, yet again has found a source
                  whose beauty’s such that I must take recourse
                  to notions so sublime, my heart afire
                  like the empyrean so sounds the lyre
                  we pluck and strum on each other, perforce
                  producing chords of tender intercourse
                  I savour her exquisite taste, admire
                  this paragon of womankind. But this
                  is just a dream, she’ll never be my mate.
                  I asked her out but the question was parried –
                  expressing how I feel would be amiss,
                  I know that she would not reciprocate –
                  I’ll add her to the list of ‘should have married’!

                  Comment

                  • johncorrigan
                    Full Member
                    • Nov 2010
                    • 10358

                    A book of Leonard Cohen's late poetry has just been released. This one was printed in the Guardian at the weekend - 'Happens to the Heart'

                    Comment

                    • johncorrigan
                      Full Member
                      • Nov 2010
                      • 10358

                      Happiness by Raymond Carver

                      So early it’s still almost dark out.
                      I’m near the window with coffee,
                      and the usual early morning stuff
                      that passes for thought.
                      When I see the boy and his friend
                      walking up the road
                      to deliver the newspaper.
                      They wear caps and sweaters,
                      and one boy has a bag over his shoulder.
                      They are so happy
                      they aren’t saying anything, these boys.
                      I think if they could, they would take
                      each other’s arm.
                      It’s early in the morning,
                      and they are doing this thing together.
                      They come on, slowly.
                      The sky is taking on light,
                      though the moon still hangs pale over the water.
                      Such beauty that for a minute
                      death and ambition, even love,
                      doesn’t enter into this.
                      Happiness. It comes on
                      unexpectedly. And goes beyond, really,
                      any early morning talk about it.

                      Comment

                      • Padraig
                        Full Member
                        • Feb 2013
                        • 4236

                        Originally posted by johncorrigan View Post
                        Happiness by Raymond Carver

                        ...Happiness. It comes on
                        unexpectedly. And goes beyond, really,
                        any early morning talk about it.
                        Warm remembrance of boyhood friendship? Lovely poem John. I do remember reading it before.

                        Ever read this one?

                        Ode

                        We are the music-makers
                        And we are the dreamers of dreams,
                        Wandering by long sea-breakers,
                        And sitting by desolate streams; -
                        World-losers and world-forsakers,
                        On whom the pale moon gleams:
                        Yet we are the movers and shakers
                        Of the world for ever, it seems.

                        With wonderful deathless ditties
                        We build up the world's great cities,
                        And out of a fabulous story
                        We fashion an empire's glory:
                        One man with a dream, at pleasure,
                        Shall go forth and conquer a crown;
                        And three with a new song's measure
                        Can trample an empire down.

                        We, in the ages lying
                        In the buried past of the earth,
                        Built Nineveh with our sighing,
                        And Babel itself with our mirth;
                        And o'erthrew them with prophesying,
                        To the old of the new world's worth;
                        For each age is a dream that is dying,
                        Or one that is coming to birth.

                        Arthur O'Shaughnessy 1844-1881

                        Comment

                        • Padraig
                          Full Member
                          • Feb 2013
                          • 4236

                          Yesterday I glimpsed an elderly lady - an old woman - in a purple coat.

                          Jenny Joseph reads her poem 'Warning', Britain's most popular post-war poem, according to poll conducted by the BBC in 1996. Born in 1932, Jenny Joseph first...

                          Comment

                          • Padraig
                            Full Member
                            • Feb 2013
                            • 4236

                            A suspicion of John Synge.

                            1. Beg-Innish

                            Bring Kateen-beug and Maurya Jude
                            To dance in Beg-Innish,
                            And when the lads (they're in Dunquin)
                            Have sold their crabs and fish,
                            Wave fawny shawls and call them in,
                            And call the little girls who spin,
                            And seven weavers from Dunquin,
                            To dance in Beg-Innish.

                            I'll play you jigs, and Maurice Kean,
                            Where nets are laid to dry,
                            I've silken strings would draw a dance
                            From girls are lame or shy;
                            Four strings I've brought from Spain and France
                            To make your long men skip and prance,
                            Till stars look out to see the dance
                            Where nets are laid to dry.

                            We'll have no priest or peeler in
                            To dance in Beg-Innish;
                            But we'll have drink from M'riarty Jim
                            Rowed round while gannets fish,
                            A keg with porter to the brim,
                            That every lad may have his whim,
                            Till we up sails with M'riarty Jim
                            And sail from Beg-Innish.

                            2. The Curse

                            To a sister of an enemy of the author's who disapproved of 'The Playboy'


                            Lord, confound this surly sister.
                            Blight her brow with blotch and blister,
                            Cramp her larynx, lung, and liver,
                            In her guts a galling give her.
                            Let her live to earn her dinners
                            In Mountjoy with seedy sinners:
                            Lord, this judgment quickly bring,
                            And I'm your servant, J.M.Synge.

                            Comment

                            • Padraig
                              Full Member
                              • Feb 2013
                              • 4236

                              John Synge lies here.

                              On an Anniversary

                              With Fifteen-ninety or Sixteen-sixteen
                              We end Cervantes, Marot, Nashe or Green:
                              Then Sixteen-thirteen till two score and nine,
                              Is Crashaw's niche, that honey-lipped divine.
                              And so when all my little work is done
                              They'll say I came in Eighteen-seventy-one,
                              And died in Dublin...What year will they write
                              For my poor passage to the stall of Night?


                              To the Oaks of Glencree

                              My arms are round you, and I lean
                              Against you, while the lark
                              Sings over us, and golden lights, and green
                              Shadows are on your bark.

                              There'll come a season when you'll stretch
                              Black boards to cover me:
                              Then in Mount Jerome I will lie, poor wretch,
                              With worms eternally.


                              A Question


                              I asked if I got sick and died, would you
                              With my black funeral go walking too,
                              If you'd stand close to hear them talk or pray
                              While I'm let down in that steep bank of clay,

                              And, No, you said, for if you saw a crew
                              Of living idiots, pressing round that new
                              Oak coffin - they alive, I dead beneath
                              That board, - you'd rave and rend them with your teeth.

                              John Millington Synge 1871 - 1909

                              Comment

                              • johncorrigan
                                Full Member
                                • Nov 2010
                                • 10358

                                This week we have been celebrating Hamish Henderson in the town of his birth, Blairgowrie in Perthshire. Hamish was, among other things, a great folklorist collecting songs and stories from across Scotland, a pivotal figure in the folk revival of the 50s, but also a poet. Here's one of his poems written after his time in the North African Campaign in WW2.

                                NINTH ELEGY

                                Fort Capuzzo
                                For there will come a day
                                when the Lord will say
                                -- Close Order!


                                One evening, breaking a jeep journey at Capuzzo
                                I noticed a soldier as he entered the cemetery
                                and stood looking at the grave of a fallen enemy.
                                Then I understood the meaning of the hard word 'pietas'
                                (a word unfamiliar to the newsreel commentator
                                as well as to the pimp, the informer and the traitor).
                                His thought was like this. - Here's another 'Good Jerry'!
                                Poor mucker. Just eighteen. Must be hard-up for man-power.
                                Or else he volunteered, silly bastard. That's the fatal,
                                the-fatal mistake. Never volunteer for nothing.
                                I wonder how he died? Just as well it was him, though,
                                and not one of our chaps. . .Yes, the only good Jerry,
                                as they say, is your sort, chum.
                                Cheerio, you poor bastard.
                                Don't be late on parade when the Lord calls 'Close Order'.
                                Keep waiting for the angels. Keep listening for Reveille.

                                Hamish Henderson
                                I heard it recited today by folklorist and student of Hamish's, Margaret Bennett, followed by 'Thug Oirinn Oro'.
                                Provided to YouTube by Virgin Music GroupThug Oirinn Oro · Margaret BennettA' The Bairns O AdamReleased on: 2003-01-01Writer, Composer: Hamish HendersonAuto-...

                                So moving!

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