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#herdmentality
'Every competition - is not A struggle to win over others But a battle over one's own insecurities To overcome a perception of exclusion'
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Jan 31, 2020
Jan 31, 2020 at 1:38 AM UTC
The Outsider's Lament
#For we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ,     in them that are saved, and in them that perish:     To the one we are the savour of death unto death;     and to the other the savour of life unto life.                                             [II Corinthians 2:15, 16] I take an ember from the pyre and consecrate this smoldering fire: a glowing coal on which to burn an aromatic thought, and earn a crown, perhaps… or a stampede: mad hooves to make a poet bleed. An ode to the dull-wit herd’s defensors: self-appointed poetic censors. Where would we be without the squeal, their rolling eyes, their bovine zeal? Quick to enforce what’s orthodox – (upon their coward souls a pox) swift to castigate dissent their peeved opinions swift to vent – lest people think that poetry should harbor strength or liberty… They offer up their condemnation spiced with righteous indignation: “Racist, sexist, bigoted too!” (which means they disagree with you) Their catch-all battle-cry for trouble: “INTOLERANT !”  (They are intolerable.) “It’s narrow-minded, mean-spirited, hateful.” Such input ought to make us grateful. Theirs the reactionary faction: poetic thought-police in action. To stand opposed, reviled by such may indicate perhaps, a touch of true and living inspiration causing unsympathetic vibration. If wit in rhyme has touched a nerve for bold opinion, dissident verve, then let their frowns be crowns of laurel rather than further cause for quarrel. Accusation by the herd is compliment enough. Preferred to empty praise for vapid lines from toilers in depleted mines. Cows are fattened for the feast. They have a space to moo at least – then comes the reckoning at the end. But a Poet’s curse is to defend inviolate, his chanted word against the corn-fed lowing herd. When they, in turn,  inflict their verse no vengeance dare we take, nor curse. But calmly, let us pour upon them words that build into an anthem strengthened by scorn, a song of change to goad their dullness, and derange their poetaster fantasy exposed as moral bankruptcy symptomatic of a dying nation set against lyrical liberation. I pray my words may rise to heaven free of rancor, void of leaven a fragrant smoke of life to life ascending God-ward through the strife. (But let them rot, a charnel breath to dying souls as death to death.)
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Sep 10, 2015
Sep 10, 2015 at 9:48 PM UTC
Incensed
#For we are unto God a sweet savour of Christ,     in them that are saved, and in them that perish:     To the one we are the savour of death unto death;     and to the other the savour of life unto life.                                             [II Corinthians 2:15, 16] I take an ember from the pyre and consecrate this smoldering fire: a glowing coal on which to burn an aromatic thought, and earn a crown, perhaps… or a stampede: mad hooves to make a poet bleed. An ode to the dull-wit herd’s defensors: self-appointed poetic censors. Where would we be without the squeal, their rolling eyes, their bovine zeal? Quick to enforce what’s orthodox – (upon their coward souls a pox) swift to castigate dissent their peeved opinions swift to vent – lest people think that poetry should harbor strength or liberty… They offer up their condemnation spiced with righteous indignation: “Racist, sexist, bigoted too!” (which means they disagree with you) Their catch-all battle-cry for trouble: “INTOLERANT !”  (They are intolerable.) “It’s narrow-minded, mean-spirited, hateful.” Such input ought to make us grateful. Theirs the reactionary faction: poetic thought-police in action. To stand opposed, reviled by such may indicate perhaps, a touch of true and living inspiration causing unsympathetic vibration. If wit in rhyme has touched a nerve for bold opinion, dissident verve, then let their frowns be crowns of laurel rather than further cause for quarrel. Accusation by the herd is compliment enough. Preferred to empty praise for vapid lines from toilers in depleted mines. Cows are fattened for the feast. They have a space to moo at least – then comes the reckoning at the end. But a Poet’s curse is to defend inviolate, his chanted word against the corn-fed lowing herd. When they, in turn,  inflict their verse no vengeance dare we take, nor curse. But calmly, let us pour upon them words that build into an anthem strengthened by scorn, a song of change to goad their dullness, and derange their poetaster fantasy exposed as moral bankruptcy symptomatic of a dying nation set against lyrical liberation. I pray my words may rise to heaven free of rancor, void of leaven a fragrant smoke of life to life ascending God-ward through the strife. (But let them rot, a charnel breath to dying souls as death to death.)
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