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chance-bishop
There's no denying, I would be lying, if I said I wasn't in love It just goes to show that you never know what happens when push comes to shove. There's no true answer, hate spreads like cancer; I won't say that I think it's right But nothing will last and some things end fast and love dies like switching a light. There's no denying, I wasn't trying, I don't think that I'd call it fair That awful sunrise you tore out my eyes — you taught me what it meant to care. Thought you'd drained me dry, I couldn't say why; saw myself as only a void I felt them that dawn, and then they were gone, love's remnants you'd finally destroyed. There's no denying, spent some time crying, once I learned it truly was dead I know you wept too, I felt it anew: within me compassion had fled. Yes I could have tried before our love died with some hope of finding a cure It's almost a crime, and yet by that time our motives were no longer pure. There's no denying, I would be lying, if I said I wasn't to blame I am still haunted by what you wanted, but my life is only a game. I was part wild, part little child; my love was so grounded in trust You drifted away, then finally one day you crumbled my pride into dust. There's no denying, I wasn't trying, my apathy guided me through My myriad fears throughout all our years had taken a back seat to you. So what a surprise fell from those blue skies, put to death my ignorant dream — Like some insane hoax, the cruelest of jokes, and rooted in low self-esteem. There's no denying and no defying your base urges and your senses I gave you a ring, asked only one thing, and lowered all my defenses. Like some lovesick dog, I walked in a fog; in your heart no light of love shone. Now hurt and afraid, I've gravely repaid the wages of being alone. There's no denying, I wasn't spying, I was in no way suspicious I couldn't conceive, in no way believe you could ever be that vicious. Perhaps in your heart, that cold twisted part, those urges were too long denied There's nothing to say, no point anyway — I feel cold and empty inside. There's no denying, we are all dying, we move toward our graves with each breath We go with a debt of pain and regret to the court that we know as death. I gave you your space, let you set the pace; me alone in our double bed You wanted it all, the rise and the fall; now your hands are maculate red. There's no denying, I think of dying, more than I consider my life Taunted and hunted, every part stunted, I'm no man to take on a wife. At least I was torn before I was born; a bad jar, but quite a fine start — Twisted and scarred and calloused and hardened for further assaults on my heart.
0
Mar 6, 2010
Mar 6, 2010 at 5:07 AM UTC
No Denying
There's no denying, I would be lying, if I said I wasn't in love It just goes to show that you never know what happens when push comes to shove. There's no true answer, hate spreads like cancer; I won't say that I think it's right But nothing will last and some things end fast and love dies like switching a light. There's no denying, I wasn't trying, I don't think that I'd call it fair That awful sunrise you tore out my eyes — you taught me what it meant to care. Thought you'd drained me dry, I couldn't say why; saw myself as only a void I felt them that dawn, and then they were gone, love's remnants you'd finally destroyed. There's no denying, spent some time crying, once I learned it truly was dead I know you wept too, I felt it anew: within me compassion had fled. Yes I could have tried before our love died with some hope of finding a cure It's almost a crime, and yet by that time our motives were no longer pure. There's no denying, I would be lying, if I said I wasn't to blame I am still haunted by what you wanted, but my life is only a game. I was part wild, part little child; my love was so grounded in trust You drifted away, then finally one day you crumbled my pride into dust. There's no denying, I wasn't trying, my apathy guided me through My myriad fears throughout all our years had taken a back seat to you. So what a surprise fell from those blue skies, put to death my ignorant dream — Like some insane hoax, the cruelest of jokes, and rooted in low self-esteem. There's no denying and no defying your base urges and your senses I gave you a ring, asked only one thing, and lowered all my defenses. Like some lovesick dog, I walked in a fog; in your heart no light of love shone. Now hurt and afraid, I've gravely repaid the wages of being alone. There's no denying, I wasn't spying, I was in no way suspicious I couldn't conceive, in no way believe you could ever be that vicious. Perhaps in your heart, that cold twisted part, those urges were too long denied There's nothing to say, no point anyway — I feel cold and empty inside. There's no denying, we are all dying, we move toward our graves with each breath We go with a debt of pain and regret to the court that we know as death. I gave you your space, let you set the pace; me alone in our double bed You wanted it all, the rise and the fall; now your hands are maculate red. There's no denying, I think of dying, more than I consider my life Taunted and hunted, every part stunted, I'm no man to take on a wife. At least I was torn before I was born; a bad jar, but quite a fine start — Twisted and scarred and calloused and hardened for further assaults on my heart.
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36
Said Mr. Wigeon to Mr. Pigeon,"Why do you live in town?There's people there, and sir, the air —The air, my friend, is brown!"Said Mr. Pigeon to Mr. Wigeon,"From people's crumbs I grow fat;The climate of your marsh I find too harsh —I live in town, and that's that!"
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Mar 2, 2010
Mar 2, 2010 at 4:11 PM UTC
Mr. Wigeon & Mr. Pigeon
Do I set your heart ablaze? Does guilt burn you like fire? Am I talking to the wall? Am I preaching to the choir? I can touch the sky but I fly too low What's the answer to the koan? I don't know And when they finally find me Lying cold in a gutter A lifetime of regret from now Will you say "He reminds me Of someone or another, And what was his name, anyhow?" Or will one genuine tear Gracefully fall from your eye As you think of what we were then And will you still be sincere Or is it all just a lie When you wish for what might have been? I can touch the sky but I fly too low What's the answer to the koan? I don't know
0
Mar 2, 2010
Mar 2, 2010 at 4:08 PM UTC
The Answer
If you want to **** me, that's quite all right by me Just tell me where you'll be gone I don't know about you, but I know it's true I'd rise up again come the dawn If you want to play boss, fine, that's your loss If you hang me out to dry If you don't want my moss, I'll find you a cheap cross And you can leave me only the sky But I want you to know, it matters not where you go I'll rise up and see you again To bring you the sun, the moon and promises of fun And ignore your army of dead men You tell me to get out of town, and tear off the crown Over which I never had a claim Treat me like a waxen voodoo doll full of tacks, and I'll keep you just the same
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Feb 14, 2010
Feb 14, 2010 at 1:55 PM UTC
If You Want To **** Me
Sit down my friends, come hear this true story It's interesting, but it's also gory One fine day in eighteen seventy-four Alferd Packer, who just loved to explore With five friends, he began a three-month tour 'Cross the Rockies, but don't ask me what for Six men walked for seventy-five miles But the voyage just was not all smiles For you see, when the group finally came back Five of the men the party now did lack At the end of those cold seventy-five Alferd Packer alone finished alive When asked why, he didn't know what to say His memory seemed to change day to day But at last he settled on one version Of what happened on that long excursion The police decided this one was true And it's this one that I'll now tell to you One hiker, it seemed, whose name had been Bell Just went insane, but why no one could tell Packer claimed that Bell had killed all the rest Of the hikers, and that packer was next So ole Packer, he said, "I tried my best To stop him; but I fought back with such zest Shannon Bell died, but it's just common sense When I say, I killed him in self-defense" Then Alferd, he was left with five dead men What could he do? It was getting cold then So Alferd, to warm up that freezing hell Took the body and he devoured Bell For dessert he then ate his other four Dead companions; but hey — what are friends for? When finished, he caused a sensation By arriving at the tour's destination When Alferd had ended his gruesome tale The local cops threw him quickly in jail Where he served over seventeen long years But if his fate fills your eyes now with tears I'll reveal here, he was released alive Died a free man, the age of sixty-five
0
Feb 14, 2010
Feb 14, 2010 at 1:54 PM UTC
The Ballad Of Alferd Packer
Sit down my friends, come hear this true story It's interesting, but it's also gory One fine day in eighteen seventy-four Alferd Packer, who just loved to explore With five friends, he began a three-month tour 'Cross the Rockies, but don't ask me what for Six men walked for seventy-five miles But the voyage just was not all smiles For you see, when the group finally came back Five of the men the party now did lack At the end of those cold seventy-five Alferd Packer alone finished alive When asked why, he didn't know what to say His memory seemed to change day to day But at last he settled on one version Of what happened on that long excursion The police decided this one was true And it's this one that I'll now tell to you One hiker, it seemed, whose name had been Bell Just went insane, but why no one could tell Packer claimed that Bell had killed all the rest Of the hikers, and that packer was next So ole Packer, he said, "I tried my best To stop him; but I fought back with such zest Shannon Bell died, but it's just common sense When I say, I killed him in self-defense" Then Alferd, he was left with five dead men What could he do? It was getting cold then So Alferd, to warm up that freezing hell Took the body and he devoured Bell For dessert he then ate his other four Dead companions; but hey — what are friends for? When finished, he caused a sensation By arriving at the tour's destination When Alferd had ended his gruesome tale The local cops threw him quickly in jail Where he served over seventeen long years But if his fate fills your eyes now with tears I'll reveal here, he was released alive Died a free man, the age of sixty-five
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40
Will we meet again through the blood-rimmed eyes of ghosts Or in some stranger’s stomach Or will we lay side by side, paralyzed By the biting burn of freezing metal On our respective slabs Where bursts of breath no longer cloud the chilled air between us? Will you be the nails that puncture me And will I be your cross as well? Or will I be the rock that you push uphill Until I mischievously slip from your exhausted fingers And roll to the safety of the valley bellow Cradled like a hug between looming hills?
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Jan 24, 2010
Jan 24, 2010 at 6:43 AM UTC
Will We
Lying cold and prone in corpescent repose Stripped bare of all earthly clothes No flattering gown or suitcoat fine Nor soul from sightless eyes does shine All cajolery and wisdom long since fled Biles and humours and all machinery dead The fresco of person in living years painted With frowsty breath and ideas blood-tainted Has, in joining this burgeoning army, crumbled As cheek-rouge faded, the persona humbled: Under wakeful eyes the snail is known by its shell But the naked and the dead know each other well.
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Jan 24, 2010
Jan 24, 2010 at 6:35 AM UTC
The Naked And the Dead
On the moor dwells Bonnie Jennie On the cliffs she flies alone; And her beauty is of such force 'Twill turn any man to stone. The fairness of her wond'rous face Has made men blind, crazed, or sick; And the fleeting chill of her touch Has frozen them to the quick. And in the land a soldier dwells, As straight as ary on the moor; "And I must touch Jennie's hand," he says, "Just once, ere I breathe no more." Would you forsake your house and home, Forsake your good friends three? "I'd forsake it all for Jennie's touch, I'd swim through the wine-dark sea." Would you forsake all you know, And forsake your station here? "For Bonnie Jennie's thrilling touch, I'd go with no twinge of fear." But Bonnie Jennie beckons now, She beckons with shiv’ring hand! "Then I must leave you in the mist, And say farewell to my native land." He starts, and moves, and reaches out To caress that impossible face; But Bonnie Jennie flutters back, And darts from place to place. And the Bonnie Jennie is away, Pulled back like a kite on a string; And he is left with naught but mist, And can hear not a blessed thing. And try as he might, he cannot recall The features of her he has seen; He is tormented by his missing thoughts But does not know what they mean.
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Jan 24, 2010
Jan 24, 2010 at 6:31 AM UTC
Bonnie Jennie
Where's the sense in a-hurryin'? Aye, what's the fuss, says I — Them that worried their lives to death Are the same that others are buryin'. Them that relaxes and lays on a cot Are peaceful, and mild, and kind; You can't say the same for the hurriers — Suffice it to say, they are not. Them that are frantic, and worry, Only cause more gentle folks stress; To their grave is where they hurry, But I take my time, more or less.
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Jan 24, 2010
Jan 24, 2010 at 6:30 AM UTC
Lies