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En Santa Gadea de Burgos
do juran los hijosdalgo,
allí toma juramento
el Cid al rey castellano,
sobre un cerrojo de hierro
y una ballesta de palo.
Las juras eran tan recias
que al buen rey ponen espanto.

-Villanos te maten, rey,
villanos, que no hidalgos;
abarcas traigan calzadas,
que no zapatos con lazo;
traigan capas aguaderas,
no capuces ni tabardos;
con camisones de estopa,
no de holanda ni labrados;
cabalguen en sendas burras,
que no en mulas ni en caballos,
las riendas traigan de cuerda,
no de cueros fogueados;
mátente por las aradas,
no en camino ni en poblado;
con cuchillos cachicuernos,
no con puñales dorados;
sáquente el corazón vivo,
por el derecho costado,
si no dices la verdad
de lo que te es preguntado:
si tú fuiste o consentiste
en la muerte de tu hermano.

Las juras eran tan fuertes
que el rey no las ha otorgado.
Allí habló un caballero
de los suyos más privado:
-Haced la jura, buen rey,
no tengáis de eso cuidado,
que nunca fue rey traidor,
ni Papa descomulgado.
Jura entonces el buen rey
que en tal nunca se ha hallado.
Después habla contra el Cid
malamente y enojado:
-Mucho me aprietas, Rodrigo,
Cid, muy mal me has conjurado,
mas si hoy me tomas la jura,
después besarás mi mano.
-Aqueso será, buen rey,
como fuer galardonado,
porque allá en cualquier tierra
dan sueldo a los hijosdalgo.
-¡Vete de mis tierras, Cid,
mal caballero probado,
y no me entres más en ellas,
desde este día en un año!
-Que me place -dijo el Cid-.
que me place de buen grado,
por ser la primera cosa
que mandas en tu reinado.
Tú me destierras por uno
yo me destierro por cuatro.

Ya se partía el buen Cid
sin al rey besar la mano;
ya se parte de sus tierras,
de Vivar y sus palacios:
las puertas deja cerradas,
los alamudes echados,
las cadenas deja llenas
de podencos y de galgos;
sólo lleva sus halcones,
los pollos y los mudados.
Con el iban los trescientos
caballeros hijosdalgo;
los unos iban a mula
y los otros a caballo;
todos llevan lanza en puño,
con el hierro acicalado,
y llevan sendas adargas
con borlas de colorado.
Por una ribera arriba
al Cid van acompañando;
acompañándolo iban
mientras él iba cazando.
My boy Eli, poet extrordinaire, punked the jura today.  He made a lot of sense so the pigs had a fit and squeeled off....rolled his windows up like a "punk *** ***** cop".  Dumb ****** rookie looking for sapos and a snitch...STOP!

Eli was just looking out for his fellow man....also his cousin, blood in part of the Garcia Cervantes, clan...he needs the help. He needs his family with millions of dollars to take the initiative and help their own people.

But since they've ignored their responsibilities, Eli was hoping the police, would step up...."protect and serve" the public's interest but **** those putos who only protect and serve their own...... ***** *** *****. **** THE COPS! **** THE PIGS! WHATCHOO GOT?
**** the police.....187 on an undercover cop...pinche jura...PO PO,' *******.. los chupa,.  Maricas hijueputa malparidos
Bruce Levine Aug 2018
Upper East Side
The Hamptons
Aspen, Colorado
The plastic people
Follow each other
Moving in herds
Like cattle to the
Slaughter

Drifting
Floating
Shifting focus
From one charity event
To another
Whatever’s trendy
Whatever’s fashionable
Whatever’s happ’ning
Whatever’s the need
Tainted new artists
Society’s rejects
The film-maker who fits in with
The flavor of the month
The disease or the cause
That captures the moment
Stigmas overlooked
Deformities relieved
By one hyper exertion
By one pseudo good deed

Changing bedrooms
Changing partners
New alliances
Noblesse oblige

Mrs. Astor’s
Four hundred
Reinvented forever
Reinvented with fervor
On the edge
Of hypocrisy
Keeping up with the Jones’s
Maintaining the houses
Paris, Rome, Cote du Jura
Malibu, Palm Beach
Couture fashion
Madison, Rodeo
Worth avenues united
Avenues of the liege

Location, location, location
The right address unspoken
Dinner in the right places
Sporting events to be seen
Three martini luncheons
Halcion evenings
Business is business
Where money’s retrieved

Look to plastic people
For fashionable guidance
No matter the moment
No matter the need
Remember to catch them
While jetting to Santa Barbara
Saint Maarten, San Troupe
San Marco, warp speed
They live in their milieu
Can’t function outside it
Can’t follow a shadow
That others believe

It’s easy to find them
They leave behind footprints
But barely a mem’ry
Or singular creed
Other than finding
The latest in fashion
The latest persona
Or new plastic breed
En santa Águeda de Burgos,   do juran los hijosdalgo,
le toman jura a Alfonso   por la muerte de su hermano;
tomábasela el buen Cid,   ese buen Cid castellano,
sobre un cerrojo de hierro   y una ballesta de palo
y con unos evangelios   y un crucifijo en la mano.
Las palabras son tan fuertes   que al buen rey ponen espanto;
-Villanos te maten, Alonso,   villanos, que no hidalgos,
de las Asturias de Oviedo,   que no sean castellanos;
mátente con aguijadas,   no con lanzas ni con dardos;
con cuchillos cachicuernos,   no con puñales dorados;
abarcas traigan calzadas,   que no zapatos con lazo;
capas traigan aguaderas,   no de contray ni frisado;
con camisones de estopa,   no de holanda ni labrados;
caballeros vengan en burras,   que no en mulas ni en caballos;
frenos traigan de cordel,   que no cueros fogueados.
Mátente por las aradas,   que no en villas ni en poblado,
sáquente el corazón   por el siniestro costado;
si no dijeres la verdad   de lo que te fuere preguntando,
si fuiste, o consentiste   en la muerte de tu hermano.
Las juras eran tan fuertes   que el rey no las ha otorgado.
Allí habló un caballero   que del rey es más privado:
-Haced la jura, buen rey,   no tengáis de eso cuidado,
que nunca fue rey traidor,   ni papa descomulgado.
Jurado había el rey   que en tal nunca se ha hallado;
pero allí hablara el rey   malamente y enojado:
-Muy mal me conjuras, Cid,   Cid, muy mal me has conjurado,
mas hoy me tomas la jura,   mañana me besarás la mano.
-Por besar mano de rey   no me tengo por honrado,
porque la besó mi padre   me tengo por afrentado.
-Vete de mis tierras, Cid,   mal caballero probado,
y no vengas más a ellas   dende este día en un año.
-Pláceme, dijo el buen Cid,   pláceme, dijo, de grado,
por ser la primera cosa   que mandas en tu reinado.
Tú me destierras por uno,   yo me destierro por cuatro.
Ya se parte el buen Cid,   sin al rey besar la mano,
con trescientos caballeros,   todos eran hijosdalgo;
todos son hombres mancebos,   ninguno no había cano;
todos llevan lanza en puño   y el hierro acicalado,
y llevan sendas adargas   con borlas de colorado.
Mas no le faltó al buen Cid   adonde asentar su campo.
Nigel Morgan Jan 2013
(after a watercolour by Mary Fedden OBE RA)
 
It is early morning, a Tuesday in June. It is May’s birthday. She likes to get up early on her birthday and join her husband on the beach. He has been up since five, fiddling about, making tea, reading a little, avoiding his desk. May thinks, when she watches him dress with a half an eye open feigning sleep, he looks so distinguished with his silver, nearly white hair and that beard (her suggestion). And today I am forty-five and he is . . . old enough to be my father. But he is my companion, my love, my watcher who stalks me still with his gaze of admiration, which I never tire of when we are alone, but I am sometimes embarrassed by when we are in company. He knows this, but he can’t help himself. He says he loves to watch me cross a room, stand still against a window, reach for a vase on a shelf, sit at my work table, intent.
 
May sees him far down the beach as she walks with purpose through the dunes that separate their cottage from the beach. Her short boots glisten with the heavy dew. She has pulled on her work dress over her striped nightshirt, a dress she wove in a grey Jura their first long winter. There he is in his stupid cap his grandson gave him when he acquired the boat. He’s carrying a fishing net to collect creatures from the rock pools further down the beach. She remembers when this ‘interest’ began. He had read to her one night a long extract from *Father and Son
by Edmund Gosse. It was a kind of threnody to a state that once existed, a veritable Garden of Eden, destroyed in two generations by a mid-Victorian passion for sea-shore collecting. ‘These rock-basins’ Gosse had written, ’fringed by corallines, filled with still water almost as pellucid as the upper air itself, thronged with beautiful sensitive forms of life, - they exist no longer, they are all profaned, and emptied and vulgarized. The fairy paradise has been violated, the exquisite product of the centuries of natural selection has been crushed under the rough paw of well-meaning curiosity.'
 
She loved to hear him read, knowing that he loved to read to her. The joy on his face sometimes; it was worth enduring all the strange things he found to read (she fell asleep so often as he read) just for those occasions when she felt pinned to her seat, grappled to her bed like Gulliver, wishing it would never stop, such words, his dear voice. How long had it been now?
 
He didn’t walk to meet her. He let her walk to him. He stood there waiting. When she drew close he stretched out his arms and arranged her body in front of him, walked back a little and smiled his admiring smile. There were almost tears in his eyes, as there so often were when he had no words. She knew on his desk there would be a poem, and like the poet Ted Hughes (who neither of them could deal with), a birthday letter waiting to be given to her at breakfast, with gifts she knew he had worried over.
 
She stood quite still and let the fresh September wind gather her now quite long hair and turning away from him, let it stream behind her. He had turned too, realising in saying nothing he had said too much. He remembered another birthday on a different shore, a day when she had surrounded him, captured him, loved him with a passion that had now tempered, was the stuff of his writing that now had found its way into a 100 Love Poems to Read before you Die. He had long since refused to speak these out loud, refused to be visible anymore, would not be interviewed; it was now the novel, the long, long journey of a novel, the months, years even (In Praise of Rust took three agonising years).
 
And now, standing in this sun-glinting bay, ignoring the lighthouse, May thought of Mrs Ramsey and that summer party on Skye, those earnest young men, those artistic young women, and her commanding husband who would not look at the lighthouse, who would not countenance a visit.
 
Her husband, strange to think this because she never felt herself his wife, never commanded anything. He made decisions, and then laid things gently aside. It was enough for him to have been decisive. What she did with that was up to her. He wanted her to be free, always free from any command. When they married, to him it was like the silent grace they ‘said’ at each meal. She knew it had meant so much to him: the silence of that moment. He had read to her the morning of their marriage a text from William Penn – she had remembered one phrase  ‘Between a man and his wife nothing ought to rule but love . . .’ And he yet had never commanded her. He seemed to admire her being her own self. She was not his. They were the dearest friends, weren’t they? He expected nothing from her (he had said this so often), no commitment, no promise; just gentleness, a peaceful nature, an understanding that he loved her with a passion she would never understand because she knew he did not understand it himself.
Santiago Jan 2015
Pa mi kompa el conejo c loco
Mi canton donde yo me quedo
Ese no puedo tengo que irme lejos
A mi familia solos los dejo me voy
Les doy el piso anda bien caliente
El mundo les miente ya no sienten
Que estan haciendo no entiendo
Tu ya sabes donde quiera defiendo
Sin miedo listo pa cualquier ****
En mi puesto te espero pronto
No creas que soy un pinchi tonto
Preparado para el gran disparo
Rumbando en el caro por debajo
Mi familia esta en peligro
La neta te digo la verdad yo te sigo
Solo te pido el rescate del nido
Salgo vivo enfrentando la muerte
Los dos angeles de la muerte
Aqui no vive la suerte solo verte
A la fuga da un chingo decoraje
Reportandome al jale de la calle
Chale estoy en el infierno
A falsos los acuesto a balazos
Con el cuerno los tiendo grave
Es mi vida la que estoy viviendo
La ley de dios hasta el fin defiendo
No es un cuento y ningun invento
Te lo presento con rapides o lento
Mis palabras te hacen calaberas
Maderas amarandolo con cuerdas
Para que siempre te lo recuerdas
Tus ojos verdes y camisa muerdes
La jura terkos ese pinchis puerkos
Quedaste atrapado ya no suelto
Encargo para el vuelo a las nubes
Hasta arriba en los cielos te subes
Y te tumbo desde arriba bebida
Mamila tu callida sin paracallidas
Te dije imposible que sobrevivas
Sigues chingando la torre te acabo
Con una madrisa y al fin sonrisa
Soy un chingon no un mamon
Pinchi rajon cabron me rapo pelon
Pon tu cabeza te la hago melon

— The End —