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Unfoldings by Michael R. Burch for Vicki Time unfolds ... Your lips were roses. ... petals open, shyly clustering ... I had dreams of other seasons. ... ten thousand colors quiver, blossoming. Night and day ... Dreams burned within me. ... flowers part themselves, and then they close ... You were lovely; I was lonely. ... a ****** yields herself, but no one knows. Now time goes on ... I have not seen you. ... within ringed whorls, secrets are exchanged ... A fire rages; no one sees it. ... a blossom spreads its flutes to catch the rain. Seasons flow ... A dream is dying. ... within parched clusters, life is taking form ... You were honest; I was angry. ... petals fling themselves before the storm. Time is slowing ... I am older. ... blossoms wither, closing one last time ... I'd love to see you and to touch you. ... a flower crumbles, crinkling, worn and dry. Time contracts ... I cannot touch you. ... a solitary flower cries for warmth ... Life goes on as dreams lose meaning. ... the seeds are scattered, lost within a storm. Keywords/Tagss: love, roses, petals, unfolding, lips, spring, ****** dreams, time, seasons, storms, summer, drought Moore or Less by Michael R. Burch for Richard Moore Less is more — in a dress, I suppose, and in intimate clothes like crotchless hose. But now Moore is less due to death’s subtraction and I must confess: I hate such redaction! The following translation is the speech of the Sibyl to Aeneas, after he has implored her to help him find his beloved father in the Afterlife, found in the sixth book of the Aeneid ... The Descent into the Underworld by Virgil loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch The Sibyl began to speak: “God-blooded Trojan, son of Anchises, descending into the Underworld’s easy since Death’s dark door stands eternally unbarred. But to retrace one’s steps and return to the surface: that’s the conundrum, that’s the catch! Godsons have done it, the chosen few whom welcoming Jupiter favored and whose virtue merited heaven. However, even the Blessed find headway’s hard: immense woods barricade boggy bottomland where the Cocytus glides with its dark coils. But if you insist on ferrying the Styx twice and twice traversing Tartarus, if Love demands you indulge in such madness, listen closely to how you must proceed...” Anna Akhmatova was a great Russian poet, and a personal favorite of mine... The evening light is broad and yellow by Anna Akhmatova loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch The evening light is broad and yellow; it glides in on an April rain. You arrived years late, yet I’m glad you came. Please sit down here, beside me, receive me with welcoming eyes. Here is my blue notebook with my childhood poems inside. Forgive me if I lived in sorrow, spent too little time rejoicing in the sun. Forgive, forgive, me, if I mistook others for you, when you were the One. Our Sweet Ecologist by Michael R. Burch Our sweet ecologist — what will she do with the ants and the cockroaches, bedbugs and lice when they want to live in her pants? bachelorhoodwinked by michael r. burch u are charming & disarming, but mostly alarming since all my resolve dissolved! u are chic as a sheikh’s harem girl in the sheets but my castle’s no longer my own and my kingdom’s been overthrown! The Bachelor Spectacular by Michael R. Burch One heart? Tossed aside. The other? A bride’s. In all his great wisdom, the bachelor decides. Eeenie, mean-ie, mine-y, mo’, one gal must stay and one must go. If she hollers? That’s the show! No heart can handle such despair! But hearts get broken, hearts repair. Next season? The treasoned will rule the air. Originally published by Light The Unspectacular Bachelor by Michael R. Burch The bachelor is back, he’s black, and some fair-skinned gals sure want him in the sack! And, yes, he’s a whole lot smarter than the previous knights of that peculiar garter. We can hear the white supremacists stewing: What the hell are the screenwriters doing? They know love requires a nice white spark, and this apprentice is far too dark! Updated Advice to Amorous Bachelors by Michael R. Burch At six-thirty, feeling flirty, I put on the hurdy-gurdy ... But Ms. Purdy, all alert-y, kicked me where I’m sore and hurty. The moral of my story? To avoid a fate as gory, flirt with gals a bit more whore-y! Cut Out the Bachelor Nonsense! There's a bun in auntie's oven; now soon you'll have a cousin! ―Michael R. Burch Time Out by Michael R. Burch Time is running out, no doubt. Time is running out. I don’t know what the LORD’s about, since Time is running out, the Lout!, and leaving me with gas and gout. I don’t know what the LORD’s about; still, it does no good to grouse or pout, since Time is merely running out, like quail before a native scout. ’Twill do no good to shout or flout: Time’s running out, I have no doubt, though who knows what the LORD’s about? No need for faith or even doubt, since Time is merely running out, like water from a rusty spout or mucous from a leaky snout. Yes, Time is merely running out, and yet I feel inclined to pout and truth be told, sometimes to doubt just what the hell the LORD’s about. Tr(end)y by Michael R. Burch Ain’t it funny how trendy becomes so dead-endy? Lava lamps and bell bottoms soon became “never bought ‘ems.” While that teenage tattoo soon’ll have wrinkles too. This was my first-ever dabble dactyl, my variation of the double dactyl. Donald Dabble Dactyl #1 by Michael R. Burch Piggledy-Wiggledy Ronald McDonald cursed Donald Trump, his least favorite clown: "Why should I try to be funny as Donald? He gets all the laughs claiming upside is down!" Donald Dabble Dactyls must begin with "Piggledy-Wiggledy" in homage to The Donald's oinkerishness and his 'do. References to clowns, gold-plated toilets and/or diapers are a plus but not required. Donald Dabble Dactyl #2 by Michael R. Burch Wond’ringly, blund’ringly Ronald McDonald asked, “Who the hell is this strange orange clown?” “Why should I try to be funny as Donnie? He gets all the laughs from marks who should frown!” I see that I violated my prime directive, so "never mind." Donald Dabble Dactyl #3 by Michael R. Burch Piggledy-Wiggledy 45th president, or erstwhile manse resident, perched on a throne of gold-plated porcelain matching his orange “tan,” bombing Iran from his twittery phone? Cowpoke by Michael R. Burch, circa age 16 Sleep, old man ... your day has long since passed. The endless plains, cool midnight rains and changeless ragged cows alone remain of what once was. You cannot know just how the Change will **** the windswept plains that you so loved ... and so sleep now, O yes, sleep now ... before you see just how the Change will come. Sleep, old man ... your dreams are not our dreams. The Rio Grande, stark silver sand and every obscure brand of steed and cow are sure to pass away as you do now. I believe this poem was written around the same time as “Blue Cowboy,” perhaps on the same day. That was probably sometime around 1974, at age 16 or thereabouts. Blue Cowboy by Michael R. Burch, circa age 16 He slumps against the pommel, a lonely, heartsick boy— his horse his sole companion, his gun his only toy —and bitterly regretting he ever came so far, forsaking all home's comforts to sleep beneath the stars, he sighs. He thinks about the lover who awaits his kiss no more till a tear anoints his lashes, lit by uncaring stars. He reaches to his aching breast, withdraws a golden lock, and kisses it in silence as empty as his thoughts while the wind sighs. Blue cowboy, ride that lonesome ridge between the earth and distant stars. Do not fall; the fiends of hell would leap to feast upon your heart. Blue cowboy, sift the burnt-out sand for a drop of water warm and brown. Dream of streams like silver seams even as you gulp it down. Blue cowboy, sing defiant songs to hide the weakness in your soul. Blue cowboy, ride that lonesome ridge and wish that you were going home as the stars sigh. Chixiao (“The Owl”) by Duke Zhou loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Owl! You've stolen my offspring, Don't shatter my nest! When with labors of love I nurtured my fledglings. Before the skies darkened And the dark rains fell, I gathered mulberry twigs To thatch my nest, Yet scoundrels now dare Impugn my enterprise. With fingers chafed rough By the reeds I plucked And the straw I threshed, I now write these words, Too hoarse to speak: I am homeless! My wings are withered, My tail torn away, My home toppled And tossed into the rain, My cry a distressed peep. The Song of Roland by Michael R. Burch, circa age 16 "for spring in retreat" Rain down, strange murmurous water... no, summer is not yet nigh. Cease your complaining, for May is, calling December a lie, still rocking the high white sky. Sleep now, summer hours... too soon your time shall come. Softly straining, the raining spring begs, "Let me run one more hour beneath the sun, for soon I shall be gone." Lie down, weary Roland, for summer is not yet nigh. Remember a pyre of stars blazing higher upon night’s immense dark sky unsettling as her eyes, unregretful, even as you died... Lie down, weary Roland, for summer is not yet nigh. I believe I wrote “The Song of Roland” around age 16. That Not-So-Mellow Fellow, Othello by Michael R. Burch Not sure ’bout that fellow, Othello, was he a “hero” or merely **** yellow? He killed his poor wife over a handkerchief! Thus Iago proved his heart Jello. Time Out! by Michael R. Burch Time is at war with my body! am i Time’s most diligent hobby? for there’s never Time out from my low-t and gout and my once-brilliant mind has grown stodgy! Waiting Game by Michael R. Burch Nothing much to live for, yet no good reason to die: life became a waiting game... Rain from a clear blue sky. Nipples' Ripples by Michael R. Burch Men are scared of ******* that’s why they can’t be seen. For if they were, we’d go to war as in the days of Troy, I ween. Untitled Epigrams Teach me to love: to fly beyond sterile Mars to percolating Venus. —Michael R. Burch The LIV is LIVid: livid with blood, and full of egos larger than continents. —Michael R. Burch Evil is as evil does. Evil never needs a cause. Evil loves amoral “laws,” laughs and licks its blood-red claws while kids are patched together with gauze. — Michael R. Burch Poets laud Justice’s high principles. Trump just gropes her raw genitals. —Michael R. Burch That Mella Fella by Michael R. Burch John Mella was the longtime editor of Light Quarterly. There once was a fella named Mella, who, if you weren’t funny, would tell ya. But he was cool, clever, nice, gave some splendid advice, and if you did well, he would sell ya. Shakespeare had his patrons and publishers; John Mella was one of my favorites in the early going, along with Jean Mellichamp Milliken of The Lyric. Chip Off the Block by Michael R. Burch for Jeremy In the fusion of poetry and drama, Shakespeare rules! Jeremy’s a ham: a chip off the block, like his father and mother. Part poet? Part ham? Better run for cover! Now he’s Benedick — most comical of lovers! NOTE: Jeremy’s father is a poet and his mother is an actress; hence the fusion, or confusion, as the case may be. Keywords/Tags: Shakespeare, poetry, drama, poet, light verse, humor, life, death, love, Mars, Venus, Othello, Iago, Duke Zhou, Owl, homeless, cowboy, bachelor, Richard Moore, Anna Akhmatova
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Apr 16, 2020
Apr 16, 2020 at 1:24 AM UTC
Unfoldings
Unfoldings by Michael R. Burch for Vicki Time unfolds ... Your lips were roses. ... petals open, shyly clustering ... I had dreams of other seasons. ... ten thousand colors quiver, blossoming. Night and day ... Dreams burned within me. ... flowers part themselves, and then they close ... You were lovely; I was lonely. ... a ****** yields herself, but no one knows. Now time goes on ... I have not seen you. ... within ringed whorls, secrets are exchanged ... A fire rages; no one sees it. ... a blossom spreads its flutes to catch the rain. Seasons flow ... A dream is dying. ... within parched clusters, life is taking form ... You were honest; I was angry. ... petals fling themselves before the storm. Time is slowing ... I am older. ... blossoms wither, closing one last time ... I'd love to see you and to touch you. ... a flower crumbles, crinkling, worn and dry. Time contracts ... I cannot touch you. ... a solitary flower cries for warmth ... Life goes on as dreams lose meaning. ... the seeds are scattered, lost within a storm. Keywords/Tagss: love, roses, petals, unfolding, lips, spring, ****** dreams, time, seasons, storms, summer, drought Moore or Less by Michael R. Burch for Richard Moore Less is more — in a dress, I suppose, and in intimate clothes like crotchless hose. But now Moore is less due to death’s subtraction and I must confess: I hate such redaction! The following translation is the speech of the Sibyl to Aeneas, after he has implored her to help him find his beloved father in the Afterlife, found in the sixth book of the Aeneid ... The Descent into the Underworld by Virgil loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch The Sibyl began to speak: “God-blooded Trojan, son of Anchises, descending into the Underworld’s easy since Death’s dark door stands eternally unbarred. But to retrace one’s steps and return to the surface: that’s the conundrum, that’s the catch! Godsons have done it, the chosen few whom welcoming Jupiter favored and whose virtue merited heaven. However, even the Blessed find headway’s hard: immense woods barricade boggy bottomland where the Cocytus glides with its dark coils. But if you insist on ferrying the Styx twice and twice traversing Tartarus, if Love demands you indulge in such madness, listen closely to how you must proceed...” Anna Akhmatova was a great Russian poet, and a personal favorite of mine... The evening light is broad and yellow by Anna Akhmatova loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch The evening light is broad and yellow; it glides in on an April rain. You arrived years late, yet I’m glad you came. Please sit down here, beside me, receive me with welcoming eyes. Here is my blue notebook with my childhood poems inside. Forgive me if I lived in sorrow, spent too little time rejoicing in the sun. Forgive, forgive, me, if I mistook others for you, when you were the One. Our Sweet Ecologist by Michael R. Burch Our sweet ecologist — what will she do with the ants and the cockroaches, bedbugs and lice when they want to live in her pants? bachelorhoodwinked by michael r. burch u are charming & disarming, but mostly alarming since all my resolve dissolved! u are chic as a sheikh’s harem girl in the sheets but my castle’s no longer my own and my kingdom’s been overthrown! The Bachelor Spectacular by Michael R. Burch One heart? Tossed aside. The other? A bride’s. In all his great wisdom, the bachelor decides. Eeenie, mean-ie, mine-y, mo’, one gal must stay and one must go. If she hollers? That’s the show! No heart can handle such despair! But hearts get broken, hearts repair. Next season? The treasoned will rule the air. Originally published by Light The Unspectacular Bachelor by Michael R. Burch The bachelor is back, he’s black, and some fair-skinned gals sure want him in the sack! And, yes, he’s a whole lot smarter than the previous knights of that peculiar garter. We can hear the white supremacists stewing: What the hell are the screenwriters doing? They know love requires a nice white spark, and this apprentice is far too dark! Updated Advice to Amorous Bachelors by Michael R. Burch At six-thirty, feeling flirty, I put on the hurdy-gurdy ... But Ms. Purdy, all alert-y, kicked me where I’m sore and hurty. The moral of my story? To avoid a fate as gory, flirt with gals a bit more whore-y! Cut Out the Bachelor Nonsense! There's a bun in auntie's oven; now soon you'll have a cousin! ―Michael R. Burch Time Out by Michael R. Burch Time is running out, no doubt. Time is running out. I don’t know what the LORD’s about, since Time is running out, the Lout!, and leaving me with gas and gout. I don’t know what the LORD’s about; still, it does no good to grouse or pout, since Time is merely running out, like quail before a native scout. ’Twill do no good to shout or flout: Time’s running out, I have no doubt, though who knows what the LORD’s about? No need for faith or even doubt, since Time is merely running out, like water from a rusty spout or mucous from a leaky snout. Yes, Time is merely running out, and yet I feel inclined to pout and truth be told, sometimes to doubt just what the hell the LORD’s about. Tr(end)y by Michael R. Burch Ain’t it funny how trendy becomes so dead-endy? Lava lamps and bell bottoms soon became “never bought ‘ems.” While that teenage tattoo soon’ll have wrinkles too. This was my first-ever dabble dactyl, my variation of the double dactyl. Donald Dabble Dactyl #1 by Michael R. Burch Piggledy-Wiggledy Ronald McDonald cursed Donald Trump, his least favorite clown: "Why should I try to be funny as Donald? He gets all the laughs claiming upside is down!" Donald Dabble Dactyls must begin with "Piggledy-Wiggledy" in homage to The Donald's oinkerishness and his 'do. References to clowns, gold-plated toilets and/or diapers are a plus but not required. Donald Dabble Dactyl #2 by Michael R. Burch Wond’ringly, blund’ringly Ronald McDonald asked, “Who the hell is this strange orange clown?” “Why should I try to be funny as Donnie? He gets all the laughs from marks who should frown!” I see that I violated my prime directive, so "never mind." Donald Dabble Dactyl #3 by Michael R. Burch Piggledy-Wiggledy 45th president, or erstwhile manse resident, perched on a throne of gold-plated porcelain matching his orange “tan,” bombing Iran from his twittery phone? Cowpoke by Michael R. Burch, circa age 16 Sleep, old man ... your day has long since passed. The endless plains, cool midnight rains and changeless ragged cows alone remain of what once was. You cannot know just how the Change will **** the windswept plains that you so loved ... and so sleep now, O yes, sleep now ... before you see just how the Change will come. Sleep, old man ... your dreams are not our dreams. The Rio Grande, stark silver sand and every obscure brand of steed and cow are sure to pass away as you do now. I believe this poem was written around the same time as “Blue Cowboy,” perhaps on the same day. That was probably sometime around 1974, at age 16 or thereabouts. Blue Cowboy by Michael R. Burch, circa age 16 He slumps against the pommel, a lonely, heartsick boy— his horse his sole companion, his gun his only toy —and bitterly regretting he ever came so far, forsaking all home's comforts to sleep beneath the stars, he sighs. He thinks about the lover who awaits his kiss no more till a tear anoints his lashes, lit by uncaring stars. He reaches to his aching breast, withdraws a golden lock, and kisses it in silence as empty as his thoughts while the wind sighs. Blue cowboy, ride that lonesome ridge between the earth and distant stars. Do not fall; the fiends of hell would leap to feast upon your heart. Blue cowboy, sift the burnt-out sand for a drop of water warm and brown. Dream of streams like silver seams even as you gulp it down. Blue cowboy, sing defiant songs to hide the weakness in your soul. Blue cowboy, ride that lonesome ridge and wish that you were going home as the stars sigh. Chixiao (“The Owl”) by Duke Zhou loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Owl! You've stolen my offspring, Don't shatter my nest! When with labors of love I nurtured my fledglings. Before the skies darkened And the dark rains fell, I gathered mulberry twigs To thatch my nest, Yet scoundrels now dare Impugn my enterprise. With fingers chafed rough By the reeds I plucked And the straw I threshed, I now write these words, Too hoarse to speak: I am homeless! My wings are withered, My tail torn away, My home toppled And tossed into the rain, My cry a distressed peep. The Song of Roland by Michael R. Burch, circa age 16 "for spring in retreat" Rain down, strange murmurous water... no, summer is not yet nigh. Cease your complaining, for May is, calling December a lie, still rocking the high white sky. Sleep now, summer hours... too soon your time shall come. Softly straining, the raining spring begs, "Let me run one more hour beneath the sun, for soon I shall be gone." Lie down, weary Roland, for summer is not yet nigh. Remember a pyre of stars blazing higher upon night’s immense dark sky unsettling as her eyes, unregretful, even as you died... Lie down, weary Roland, for summer is not yet nigh. I believe I wrote “The Song of Roland” around age 16. That Not-So-Mellow Fellow, Othello by Michael R. Burch Not sure ’bout that fellow, Othello, was he a “hero” or merely **** yellow? He killed his poor wife over a handkerchief! Thus Iago proved his heart Jello. Time Out! by Michael R. Burch Time is at war with my body! am i Time’s most diligent hobby? for there’s never Time out from my low-t and gout and my once-brilliant mind has grown stodgy! Waiting Game by Michael R. Burch Nothing much to live for, yet no good reason to die: life became a waiting game... Rain from a clear blue sky. Nipples' Ripples by Michael R. Burch Men are scared of ******* that’s why they can’t be seen. For if they were, we’d go to war as in the days of Troy, I ween. Untitled Epigrams Teach me to love: to fly beyond sterile Mars to percolating Venus. —Michael R. Burch The LIV is LIVid: livid with blood, and full of egos larger than continents. —Michael R. Burch Evil is as evil does. Evil never needs a cause. Evil loves amoral “laws,” laughs and licks its blood-red claws while kids are patched together with gauze. — Michael R. Burch Poets laud Justice’s high principles. Trump just gropes her raw genitals. —Michael R. Burch That Mella Fella by Michael R. Burch John Mella was the longtime editor of Light Quarterly. There once was a fella named Mella, who, if you weren’t funny, would tell ya. But he was cool, clever, nice, gave some splendid advice, and if you did well, he would sell ya. Shakespeare had his patrons and publishers; John Mella was one of my favorites in the early going, along with Jean Mellichamp Milliken of The Lyric. Chip Off the Block by Michael R. Burch for Jeremy In the fusion of poetry and drama, Shakespeare rules! Jeremy’s a ham: a chip off the block, like his father and mother. Part poet? Part ham? Better run for cover! Now he’s Benedick — most comical of lovers! NOTE: Jeremy’s father is a poet and his mother is an actress; hence the fusion, or confusion, as the case may be. Keywords/Tags: Shakespeare, poetry, drama, poet, light verse, humor, life, death, love, Mars, Venus, Othello, Iago, Duke Zhou, Owl, homeless, cowboy, bachelor, Richard Moore, Anna Akhmatova
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62/M/Nashville, Tennessee
Apr 16, 2020
Apr 16, 2020 at 1:24 AM UTC
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