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gerald-allan-donaldson
gerald-allan-donaldson
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License.
Beneath its angry peering orange light, The sprawling noisome city in the night Reflects upon a setting quarter moon Her shrouded secret-veiling wisps of spume. There plays out on this otherworldy stage A fable tale plain made for any age: There are two planes of interpassing cloud The dark, the light thereon presented proud. The dark at most obscure the moon complete, Less dense are dancers’ masks, deception sweet; The mackerel bank at verge a clear seen bound, No smirch upon her face its line beyond. The light alone’s thin veil hides not her face Aglow with stolen yellow of Sun’s grace, But when the dark appear even and sparse Its lining silver shines in filigree bars. For us below, moons set and rise again; Towards the set of our long day of pain No ache without remembering joyful love, The dark and light together ever thought of.
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Mar 31, 2015
Mar 31, 2015 at 5:41 PM UTC
Lo clouds between
Four friends set out, all young and free, Faith, Hope, Selfless Love and me. Coasts, river banks we found by stream To first set foot on country green, Through the meadows’ flowery plain, Downs, fragrant woodlands soon we gained, Till in a dark and wretched time Foul smirched us with night-black grime The stinking noisy city of towers, Stretched over us its binding powers. Our friend Faith with her smile so sweet Took a bullet in the street. Where wealth’s gold temples over steeple Men with guns who aim at people, Our constant Faith lay cold and dead Who friends us three had always led: The thorns of life had ragged our flesh, She lifted us each time afresh To chase our aims so dearly sworn Before her gaze, so clear up borne. Shame to the creature, not saying man, For hate or for money who laid her down. From the city to a lair Hid remote mid mountains bare Selfless Love and Hope and me Crept, far from that press to be, In a crack a mile down Close controlling her domain Reigned absolute a gross old girl The wicked witch of all the world. Hope and Selfless Love and me Abject subjects we took her fee. Our mothers’ love, our fathers’ guidance Wasted on our evil living. Slaves of her cruel strict enforcing But Selfless Love himself abhorring Loved her, and upon the altar Stripped and bare he wore her halter, Tight restrained his naked chest Awaited the blade her claim must test. As she took him, Hope and me Had our chance away to flee; A blessed isle lies still afloat, There we went in one small boat. In the morning may both be My strong companion Hope and me. Who us three friends had always held, Despair with tireless arms dispelled. If the waters of the isle Take him from me as we sail If the little boat shall knock On the island’s jutting rock And we swim and he should drown Let us both to death go down, Not upon a beach set me From the danger of the sea, Paradise is Erebon With Faith, Hope, Love gone; all alone.
0
Mar 31, 2015
Mar 31, 2015 at 2:51 PM UTC
The Four Friends
Four friends set out, all young and free, Faith, Hope, Selfless Love and me. Coasts, river banks we found by stream To first set foot on country green, Through the meadows’ flowery plain, Downs, fragrant woodlands soon we gained, Till in a dark and wretched time Foul smirched us with night-black grime The stinking noisy city of towers, Stretched over us its binding powers. Our friend Faith with her smile so sweet Took a bullet in the street. Where wealth’s gold temples over steeple Men with guns who aim at people, Our constant Faith lay cold and dead Who friends us three had always led: The thorns of life had ragged our flesh, She lifted us each time afresh To chase our aims so dearly sworn Before her gaze, so clear up borne. Shame to the creature, not saying man, For hate or for money who laid her down. From the city to a lair Hid remote mid mountains bare Selfless Love and Hope and me Crept, far from that press to be, In a crack a mile down Close controlling her domain Reigned absolute a gross old girl The wicked witch of all the world. Hope and Selfless Love and me Abject subjects we took her fee. Our mothers’ love, our fathers’ guidance Wasted on our evil living. Slaves of her cruel strict enforcing But Selfless Love himself abhorring Loved her, and upon the altar Stripped and bare he wore her halter, Tight restrained his naked chest Awaited the blade her claim must test. As she took him, Hope and me Had our chance away to flee; A blessed isle lies still afloat, There we went in one small boat. In the morning may both be My strong companion Hope and me. Who us three friends had always held, Despair with tireless arms dispelled. If the waters of the isle Take him from me as we sail If the little boat shall knock On the island’s jutting rock And we swim and he should drown Let us both to death go down, Not upon a beach set me From the danger of the sea, Paradise is Erebon With Faith, Hope, Love gone; all alone.
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58
Father and Mother Noah both Sailed away when in wide rushed Tides to tower over the land, To cover the mountains high at hand, Axe-cut planks whereon they plod Made to float on the waters’ top. Song of the Aardvarks In the very heart of us The most essential part of us Is our total love of life To dig in the termite mound alive, Lie in our burrow with bellies full, Scratch and breed at the season’s pull. Front limbs arms like ape or bear Eight little shovels drive deep in there Small mouth only needs to take Termites, with its tubule teeth Distant elephant our nearest kin Freaks of evolution. Song of Mother Noah In this Ark I cradle safe My suckling babies free from scathe Silky kids velvet eared Little woolly moggies dear All shall live. None shall die As the waters rise on high. Song of the Hawks She stoops upon them in her sudden flight The wild mice fleeing at the killing sight, Her talons long and razor sharp Drive in with force to pick them up Meat got, while the sessile male Scarce a third of a bird is of a look pale. Song of the Dove White as a church Or sepulchre Blue sea and sky I rise among To fly abroad If land should lie Where love and peace May flourish free In life thereby. Song of Father Noah on First Releasing the Dove Because of the evil hearts of men Out of the sky God sent the rain The money changers pimps and thieves Wasted in the oceans’ leave, Here I put upon the seas A bird who much more planet sees With tale to tell of land again. Go or come just as you please, Sheltered from the hot Sun’s ray Safe in the Ark the rest shall stay. Song of the Sloth Slow up from lying-down I get To take my weight on idle foot, From a heavy, a deep repose I only stir when to toilet I goes. Song of Father Noah on Next Releasing the Dove My clever bird, far off you fared, The four horizons close compared Returned to us with bitter word Dry land had not yet occurred Song of the ****** All my tendons strong and thin Stretch to drive a lockpiece in Hard labour long to make the lodge Into which to deftly dodge If danger or else winter threats The brook closed off as if with gates. Song of Father Noah on Last Releasing the Dove Olive tree like ancient man Ever twisting with your sister You give us oil for light and pan And meat; Shade, fruit and timber useful – Sage bird, a branch to me you bore, Fly, little god, and come no more. Song of All the Animals on Being Returned to Dry Land Ants to hills, cattle to pasture Birds to trees whatever comes after, The cleaned land populates anew Song of the Whales If a whale come on the land Put it back if ever you can Else think it a death parental Grave, give it respectful funeral.
0
Mar 30, 2015
Mar 30, 2015 at 4:08 PM UTC
Noahs' Flood
Father and Mother Noah both Sailed away when in wide rushed Tides to tower over the land, To cover the mountains high at hand, Axe-cut planks whereon they plod Made to float on the waters’ top. Song of the Aardvarks In the very heart of us The most essential part of us Is our total love of life To dig in the termite mound alive, Lie in our burrow with bellies full, Scratch and breed at the season’s pull. Front limbs arms like ape or bear Eight little shovels drive deep in there Small mouth only needs to take Termites, with its tubule teeth Distant elephant our nearest kin Freaks of evolution. Song of Mother Noah In this Ark I cradle safe My suckling babies free from scathe Silky kids velvet eared Little woolly moggies dear All shall live. None shall die As the waters rise on high. Song of the Hawks She stoops upon them in her sudden flight The wild mice fleeing at the killing sight, Her talons long and razor sharp Drive in with force to pick them up Meat got, while the sessile male Scarce a third of a bird is of a look pale. Song of the Dove White as a church Or sepulchre Blue sea and sky I rise among To fly abroad If land should lie Where love and peace May flourish free In life thereby. Song of Father Noah on First Releasing the Dove Because of the evil hearts of men Out of the sky God sent the rain The money changers pimps and thieves Wasted in the oceans’ leave, Here I put upon the seas A bird who much more planet sees With tale to tell of land again. Go or come just as you please, Sheltered from the hot Sun’s ray Safe in the Ark the rest shall stay. Song of the Sloth Slow up from lying-down I get To take my weight on idle foot, From a heavy, a deep repose I only stir when to toilet I goes. Song of Father Noah on Next Releasing the Dove My clever bird, far off you fared, The four horizons close compared Returned to us with bitter word Dry land had not yet occurred Song of the ****** All my tendons strong and thin Stretch to drive a lockpiece in Hard labour long to make the lodge Into which to deftly dodge If danger or else winter threats The brook closed off as if with gates. Song of Father Noah on Last Releasing the Dove Olive tree like ancient man Ever twisting with your sister You give us oil for light and pan And meat; Shade, fruit and timber useful – Sage bird, a branch to me you bore, Fly, little god, and come no more. Song of All the Animals on Being Returned to Dry Land Ants to hills, cattle to pasture Birds to trees whatever comes after, The cleaned land populates anew Song of the Whales If a whale come on the land Put it back if ever you can Else think it a death parental Grave, give it respectful funeral.
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87
1. The rain is falling on the neighbourhood, Our garden takes its share, and my good hat; Out of the border shelter of its brood A snail creeps in the wet across the path Leaving the soaking flowerbed for the grass Seeking continuation of its good, Slow through the time a timeless quest for food Elaborates the beating of its heart. The creep is me, a wierdo what I am. What am I doing here? I don’t belong here, Enchained upon the dirt, constrained responder Bellyfoot, headfoot mollusc, unmoving clam I try to stir from where I first began, Make in the gulf’s depths one thing new appear. 2. A drought within my throat, an aching head, Stoically for this world’s shock wave I brace. The life which thus far has my spirit fed Despairs, yet faithfully girds itself to face The waste and rapine of this nightmare place Where theft under coercion’s always bred Mass victims all unjustly ***** and fled, Violated to their utmost inner space. What is the soul to do with this its life? Awakened from the nothing of a sleep One time? To local manners keep? Or for some travel, hard to purpose drive By that for longer to at least survive? It’s wet again. The snails are on the creep.
0
Dec 14, 2014
Dec 14, 2014 at 7:00 AM UTC
A Couple of Sonnets of Action (Thanks to Radiohead)
And on he goes like one who rose To walk a sea of spiders’ lace Along the fields, and seems to sense The breath of heaven on his face And now can see a lovely thing To charm his blinking eye: An opening, a sky of blue With cloudlets coasting by! The fragrance of the morning! His sense unto him shows The Earth, and springing from its dew, The grass with sweet winds sighing through, Bushes and trees as yet wet through Borne with the happy air into Both channels of his nose. And to his ears now comes the tale In which all this is said, The treetop finches descant high While on some low spray growing nigh Blackbird both murmurs lowly by And frames the melody’s reply. Eager to bring this to his eye The good man gladly runs, The tunnel opens to the sky, He issues forth at once. All in a woodland clearing The small, unresting bee Visits each offered flower, The breeze each offered tree, The dandelion thrusts forth his head With yellow fire upon it, The trim, demure anemone Her neat, white, modest bonnet, The little winking violet By light unvisited And tiny-fingered stitchworts Their dainty napkins spread, Within the wood the bluebells Their peals of colour ring, He knows the place – Old England. Also the season – Spring. His long, perplexing journey seems No more to vex his head, Like one condemned and now reprieved He leaps for joy instead, And shouting runs and waves his arms With unrestricted mirth, And throws his face down in the grass To kiss the reeking earth. We come from utter darkness And soon return again, Why is it, in this fleeting life Of grief, of loss and pain, The fit of bitter sorrow Outdures the weary Moon While joy and with it comfort Dissolve away so soon? Just as the pecking sparrow At Winter’s scanty scraps May not enjoy his morsel, The short day’s last perhaps For fear the shadow of the hawk His business overlaps. No sooner goes the good man Upon that meadow blest, No sooner is his outstretched back Upon the rich earth pressed Than all his limbs go tense again, His brain can have no rest. Once more into the tunnel He has to make his way…
0
Sep 18, 2014
Sep 18, 2014 at 12:20 PM UTC
70 Lines (from Sir Piers)
And on he goes like one who rose To walk a sea of spiders’ lace Along the fields, and seems to sense The breath of heaven on his face And now can see a lovely thing To charm his blinking eye: An opening, a sky of blue With cloudlets coasting by! The fragrance of the morning! His sense unto him shows The Earth, and springing from its dew, The grass with sweet winds sighing through, Bushes and trees as yet wet through Borne with the happy air into Both channels of his nose. And to his ears now comes the tale In which all this is said, The treetop finches descant high While on some low spray growing nigh Blackbird both murmurs lowly by And frames the melody’s reply. Eager to bring this to his eye The good man gladly runs, The tunnel opens to the sky, He issues forth at once. All in a woodland clearing The small, unresting bee Visits each offered flower, The breeze each offered tree, The dandelion thrusts forth his head With yellow fire upon it, The trim, demure anemone Her neat, white, modest bonnet, The little winking violet By light unvisited And tiny-fingered stitchworts Their dainty napkins spread, Within the wood the bluebells Their peals of colour ring, He knows the place – Old England. Also the season – Spring. His long, perplexing journey seems No more to vex his head, Like one condemned and now reprieved He leaps for joy instead, And shouting runs and waves his arms With unrestricted mirth, And throws his face down in the grass To kiss the reeking earth. We come from utter darkness And soon return again, Why is it, in this fleeting life Of grief, of loss and pain, The fit of bitter sorrow Outdures the weary Moon While joy and with it comfort Dissolve away so soon? Just as the pecking sparrow At Winter’s scanty scraps May not enjoy his morsel, The short day’s last perhaps For fear the shadow of the hawk His business overlaps. No sooner goes the good man Upon that meadow blest, No sooner is his outstretched back Upon the rich earth pressed Than all his limbs go tense again, His brain can have no rest. Once more into the tunnel He has to make his way…
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71
My Lady dances. Angel bands From Heaven’s balconies looking in Admire legs, feet, neck, head, arms, hands With torso slim. My Lady sings; the doors of Heaven Now unbolted, gaping wide Permit escape the song celestial Of inside.
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Sep 18, 2014
Sep 18, 2014 at 8:32 AM UTC
My Lady Dances
Wretched Catulle, stop the stupid folly And learn lost what you see is gone, Aflame were once for you white suns When you used to go where the girl invited – Beloved by me as shall again be none - Herself, with whom were many joys embodied Which you did lust for, nor did she refuse, Aflame for sure for you white suns! Now she says no; what else but follow suit? Nor chase what runs from you, nor live a wretch, But make your mind be stubborn, strong, and stick it out! Goodbye the girl! Catullus still shall stick it out! Nor will he ask for you nor say your name unasked, You will be sorry when no-one says your name. Go, **** What life have you got left? Who now will come to you? Who see your beauty? Who will you now love? Whose will you be? Your kiss of passion whose? The bitten lip? But you, Catulle, your future’s coming! Stick it out!
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Sep 18, 2014
Sep 18, 2014 at 7:07 AM UTC
Imitation of Catullus VIII
My dog will spread her vile mess On grass of different bent and place, On sea, Now by its mirror large illuminesced For me.
0
Sep 16, 2014
Sep 16, 2014 at 2:58 PM UTC
The Garden: Farewell
Your nooks of shade, your paths half-seen, Places secret in between Whose border wears its coat of green To see Where God’s light flickers on the scene: I can have my stillest being So free. By day, my little patch of light, My patch of dark at night, Honeysuckles, roses quiet, Bright Sun, At eve will scent the darkness quite In one.
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Sep 16, 2014
Sep 16, 2014 at 2:57 PM UTC
The Garden: Greeting
I’ll love my sweetest Ipsitilla My delish, my pretty hare! Tell me to come to you round about lunchtime. And if you command it, I’m there at your bidding. Let none bar the house’s doorstep And make not your pleasure then to go out, But stay at home, ready for us To do it nine times in one long **** Alright, if you ask, I’ll obey on the spot: Once having dined, I’ll flop supine Poking out of my tunic as well as my cloak.
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Sep 13, 2014
Sep 13, 2014 at 6:34 AM UTC
Imitation of Catullus XXXII