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#oscar
I sat beneath a withered tree, A little swallow on the rock beside, Eyes gloomy and wings ducked, Whispered with a silent reflection, I am not made for the world. The swallow noticed me, With a little effort said to me, Hey, human you are so fragile, So fragile, to avoid us, Even the tree shed because of you. Listen, dear swallow of sky, Why do you rest here ? Deepened in despair and grief, What has happened? Put off the weight your little wings carry. I have seen the miseries, swallow said, This earth curtains it, With all the might but at last, It is revealed after a hunt, All the heartbroken gems and jewels. The swallow continued in sorrow, This globe is going in ruins, You can even notice it, All because of what you’ve done, That only you can restore it. Notice the nature, the seas, The skies, the grounds, The society, the energies you live in, All will vanish one day, Not now, but someday. Tell me human, Are you all black hearted ? Or am I black eyed ? All I have seen this far, Coincidences or consequences? I replied calmly and gently, With all tears in my eyes, Dear swallow, fly from here, In all the years I have aged, Is not even close to reply you, Fly back to ‘The Happy Prince’, He is ready to answer you.
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Jan 18
Jan 18, 2026 at 1:02 PM UTC
The Sad Swallow
One Christmas I was looking around for presents I seen these imitation Oscars in a shop window I thought that'd make a good present Sure everybody would love to get an Oscar So I bought a few, one for each person not wanting to leave anyone out I even bought one for myself I  was very proud of my Oscar, my lovely shiny golden man (probably made of plastic) One day a few months later my niece came around She was  always on at me to declutter my house To get rid of things I seen her looking around and then looking over at my Oscar I jumped to my feet quick and grabbed my Oscar and said "You can take all the rest of the ***** but you ain't getting my Oscar" Then I told her I wanted her to take a picture of me holding my Oscar And that after I'd died I wanted her to publish it as my memorial picture, me there holding my Oscar People looking at it would say "Jaysus! Look! The ****** got an Oscar for his life's performance"
0
Dec 17, 2025
Dec 17, 2025 at 7:39 PM UTC
The Oscars are wild
The day he walked in that door was the day he was destined to die. He lay his foot inside the door and the other one concurrently came out. He transposed his clothes but they ceased to cover his body. The scarlet coat was left hanging in the closet with his soul. Indicted with crimes that he must not have been penalized for. And bashed by society with their spiteful words like arrows. Met his lover but was parted by the injudicious laws. Left skint and lacerated with the epithet of an outcast. Alien tears fill for him and outcasts pay their homages. No statue of air was this man yet hard labor was all he was given to build it out of stone. His teacher later delineated him as a blot on their tutorship. For he was but a tutor. De Profundis spoke of his anguished journey. Victorian times disagreed with his originality and frolic. He told platonic love was all he was guilty of. Yet, he was charged with crimes. Drowned in cries of shame; and incarcerated to rip him off his passion. Something was dead in him, and what was dead was hope. Hope died first and then gradually died the passion. In exile, his love for writing too deceased. The daemon inside him ceased to inspire. God sent the lord of death The lord of death didn’t move around pompously like him. But came announced, for it had been accepted. The wallpaper moaned upon his untimely death. For it desired to die instead of the then mincing man. He left the earthly plains for the good have fewer days. The good die young as did the revered outcast. Herodotus the father of history unerringly expressed the good ones’ misery. He repudiated to deny his soul and lived nonchalantly. He desired all the fruits of the world so he lived. Exile ruined him and rent his ardor. His meetings with his lover were interdicted by his family. He was pardoned but a century too late. Along with the outcasts that lived in throbbing pain. The outcast deceased when young but lived indefinitely. Infinite existence is promised for the ***** was silver-tongued. He died young and roams the immortal planes. Just like Alan Turing, Bhagat Singh, JFK, and countless more. God wanted them for they wanted to augment their heavens.
0
Nov 3, 2020
Nov 3, 2020 at 11:38 AM UTC
Outcast.
The day he walked in that door was the day he was destined to die. He lay his foot inside the door and the other one concurrently came out. He transposed his clothes but they ceased to cover his body. The scarlet coat was left hanging in the closet with his soul. Indicted with crimes that he must not have been penalized for. And bashed by society with their spiteful words like arrows. Met his lover but was parted by the injudicious laws. Left skint and lacerated with the epithet of an outcast. Alien tears fill for him and outcasts pay their homages. No statue of air was this man yet hard labor was all he was given to build it out of stone. His teacher later delineated him as a blot on their tutorship. For he was but a tutor. De Profundis spoke of his anguished journey. Victorian times disagreed with his originality and frolic. He told platonic love was all he was guilty of. Yet, he was charged with crimes. Drowned in cries of shame; and incarcerated to rip him off his passion. Something was dead in him, and what was dead was hope. Hope died first and then gradually died the passion. In exile, his love for writing too deceased. The daemon inside him ceased to inspire. God sent the lord of death The lord of death didn’t move around pompously like him. But came announced, for it had been accepted. The wallpaper moaned upon his untimely death. For it desired to die instead of the then mincing man. He left the earthly plains for the good have fewer days. The good die young as did the revered outcast. Herodotus the father of history unerringly expressed the good ones’ misery. He repudiated to deny his soul and lived nonchalantly. He desired all the fruits of the world so he lived. Exile ruined him and rent his ardor. His meetings with his lover were interdicted by his family. He was pardoned but a century too late. Along with the outcasts that lived in throbbing pain. The outcast deceased when young but lived indefinitely. Infinite existence is promised for the ***** was silver-tongued. He died young and roams the immortal planes. Just like Alan Turing, Bhagat Singh, JFK, and countless more. God wanted them for they wanted to augment their heavens.
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77
- _" You have no real sense of meter, your rhyming is non-existent and you spell like a brat, following no rules"_ Rules? i didnt know i had to follow any rules, 'cept the ones in my head that represent limitation _"Well, you need to read up on some of the more classic "recognized" poets— Learn the Proper Etiquette !"_ Dood, i have read more than a few lines of that finer moem-age poem-age, and if you want to write about why roses are red on fine sheets of poet paper with a fountain pen in the fashion of Kipling— Cool; i will more likely write about how well Violet _blew_ over the top of a half empty jug of bourbon with a ball point pen that skips more or less in the style of Bukowski— and then someone can say that we had both written poems about Colorful Flowers... © 2020 .
0
Oct 26, 2020
Oct 26, 2020 at 6:58 AM UTC
sans meter
Excerpts from the Journal of Dorian Gray by Michael R. Burch It was not so much dream, as error; I lay and felt the creeping terror of what I had become take hold . . . The moon watched, silent, palest gold; the picture by the mantle watched; the clock upon the mantle talked, in halting voice, of minute things . . . Twelve strokes like lashes and their stings scored anthems to my loneliness, but I have dreamed of what is best, and I have promised to be good . . . Dismembered limbs in vats of wood, foul acids, and a strangled cry! I did not care, I watched him die . . . Each lovely rose has thorns we miss; they ***** our lips, should we once kiss their mangled limbs, or think to clasp their violent beauty. Dream, aghast, the flower of my loveliness, this ageless face (for who could guess?), and I will kiss you when I rise . . . The patterns of our lives comprise strange portraits. Mine, I fear, proved dear indeed . . . Adieu! The knife’s for you. Keywords/Tags: Oscar Wilde, portrait, Dorian Gay, journal, ageless, face, youthful, unchanging, rose, thorns, ***** vat, acid, acids, dismembered limbs, violent beauty, knife
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Apr 3, 2020
Apr 3, 2020 at 3:55 AM UTC
Excerpts from the Journal of Dorian Gray
You searched to the depth of their profiles instead of searching for my soul. You scrolled down endless streams of girls who gave you false dreams while I waited in reality. You showed yourself to a few but never all of yourself to me. I’ll give it to you. I believe in you and your career more than ever now. You really stuck to your role for an entire year. You made all my worries of you not loving me seem like a myth. You tricked me into thinking my feelings of unworthiness didn’t need to exist. You won the Oscar for that one in my eyes. Congratulations you fooled me, you can fool anyone now.
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Mar 30, 2020
Mar 30, 2020 at 8:15 AM UTC
Oscar
Epigrams IV Nun Fun Undone by Michael R. Burch Abbesses’ recesses are not for excesses! *** Hex by Michael R. Burch Love’s full of cute paradoxes (and highly acute poxes). Saving Graces for the Religious Right by Michael R. Burch Life’s saving graces are love, pleasure, laughter (wisdom, it seems, is for the Hereafter). The Whole of Wit by Michael R. Burch for and after Richard Moore If brevity is the soul of wit then brevity and levity are the whole of it. (Published by Shot Glass Journal, Brief Poems, AZquotes, IdleHearts, JarOfQuotes, QuoteFancy, QuoteMaster) Conformists of a feather flock together. —Michael R. Burch Winner of the National Poetry Month Couplet Competition Feathered Fiends by Michael R. Burch Fascists of a feather flock together. Laughter’s Cry by Michael R. Burch Because life is a mystery, we laugh and do not know the half. Because death is a mystery, we cry when one is gone, our numbering thrown awry. If every witty thing that’s said were true, Oscar Wilde, the world would worship You! —Michael R. Burch Multiplication, Tabled for the Religious Right by Michael R. Burch “Be fruitful and multiply”— great advice, for a fruitfly! But for women and men, simple Simons, say, “WHEN!” Not Elves, Exactly by Michael R. Burch Something there is that likes a wall, that likes it spiked and likes it tall, that likes its pikes’ sharp rows of teeth and doesn’t mind its victims’ grief (wherever they come from, far or wide) as long as they fall on the other side. Fierce ancient skalds summoned verse from their guts; today’s genteel poets prefer modern ruts. —Michael R. Burch Long Division by Kim Cherub after Laura Riding Jackson All things become one Through death’s long division And perfect precision. Meal Deal by Michael R. Burch Love is a splendid ideal (at least till it costs us a meal). Vice Grip by Michael R. Burch There’s no need to rant about Al-Qaeda and ISIS. The cruelty of “civilization” suffices: our ordinary vices. Self-ish by Kim Cherub Let’s not pretend we “understand” other elves As long as we remain mysteries to ourselves. Piecemeal by Kim Cherub And so it begins—the ending. The narrowing veins, the soft tissues rending. Your final solution is pending. Lance-Lot by Michael R. Burch Preposterous bird! Inelegant! Absurd! Until the great & mighty heron brandishes his fearsome sword. Fleet Tweet: Apologies to Shakespeare @mikerburch (Michael R. Burch) A tweet by any other name would be as fleet. Fleet Tweet II: Further Apologies to Shakespeare @mikerburch (Michael R. Burch) Remember, doggonit, heroic verse crowns the Shakespearean sonnet! So if you intend to write a couplet, please do it on the doublet! The First Complete Musical Composition Shine, while you live; blaze beyond grief, for life is brief and Time, a thief. —Michael R. Burch, after Seikilos of Euterpes The so-called Seikilos Epitaph is the oldest known surviving complete musical composition which includes musical notation. It is believed to date to the first or second century AD. The epitaph appears to be signed “Seikilos of Euterpes” or dedicated “Seikilos to Euterpe.” Euterpe was the ancient Greek Muse of music. Ars Brevis, Proofreading Longa by Michael R. Burch Poets may labor from sun to sun, but their editor's work is never done. 15 Seconds by Michael R. Burch Our president’s *** life—atrocious! Asian markets are all hocus-pocus. Politics—a shell game. My brief moment of fame flashed by before Oprah could notice. Death by Michael R. Burch Death is the ultimate finality and banality of reality. Translations Shattered by Vera Pavlova loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch I shattered your heart; now I limp through the shards barefoot. Birdsong by Rumi loose translation by Michael R. Burch Birdsong relieves my deepest griefs: now I'm just as ecstatic as they, but with nothing to say! Please universe, rehearse your poetry through me! Raise your words, not their volume. Rain grows flowers, not thunder. —Rumi, translation by Michael R. Burch The imbecile constructs cages for everyone he knows, while the sage (who has to duck his head whenever the moon glows) keeps dispensing keys all night long to the beautiful, rowdy, prison gang. —Hafiz loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch An unbending tree breaks easily. —Lao Tzu, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Little sparks ignite great flames.—Dante, translation by Michael R. Burch Once fanaticism has gangrened brains the incurable malady invariably remains. —Voltaire, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Booksellers laud authors for novel editions as pimps praise their ****** for exotic positions. —Thomas Campion, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch No wind is favorable to the man who lacks direction. —Seneca the Younger, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Hypocrisy may deceive the most perceptive adult, but the dullest child recognizes and is revolted by it, however ingeniously disguised. —Leo Tolstoy translation by Michael R. Burch Just as I select a ship when it's time to travel, or a house when it's time to change residences, even so I will choose when it's time to depart from life. —Seneca, speaking about the right to euthanasia in the first century AD, translation by Michael R. Burch Improve yourself through others' writings, thus attaining more easily what they acquired through great difficulty. —Socrates, translation by Michael R. Burch Fools call wisdom foolishness. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch One true friend is worth ten thousand kin. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch Not to speak one’s mind is slavery. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch I would rather die standing than kneel, a slave. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch Fresh tears are wasted on old griefs. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch Truths are more likely discovered by one man than by nations. —Rene Descartes, translation by Michael R. Burch Cassidy Hutchinson is not only credible, but her courage and poise under fire have been incredible. — Michael R. Burch Native American Proverb loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Before you judge a man for his sins be sure to trudge many moons in his moccasins. Native American Proverb by Crazy Horse, Oglala Lakota Sioux (circa 1840-1877) loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch A man must pursue his Vision as the eagle explores the sky's deepest blues. Native American Proverb loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Let us walk respectfully here among earth's creatures, great and small, remembering, our footsteps light, that one wise God created all. The Least of These... What you do to the refugee you do unto Me! —Jesus Christ, translation/paraphrase by Michael R. Burch The Church Gets the Burch Rod How can the Bible be "infallible" when from Genesis to Revelation slavery is commanded and condoned, but never condemned? —Michael R. Burch If God is good half the Bible is libel. —Michael R. Burch I have my doubts about your God and his "love": If one screams below, what the hell is "Above"? —Michael R. Burch If God has the cattle on a thousand hills, why does he need my tithes to pay his bills? —Michael R. Burch The best tonic for other people's bad ideas is to think for oneself.—Michael R. Burch Hell hath no fury like a fundamentalist whose God condemned him for having "impure thoughts."—Michael R. Burch Religion is the difficult process of choosing the least malevolent invisible friends.—Michael R. Burch Religion is the ****** of the people.—Karl Marx Religion is the dopiate of the sheeple.—Michael R. Burch An ideal that cannot be realized is, in the end, just wishful thinking.—Michael R. Burch God and his "profits" could never agree on any gospel acceptable to an intelligent flea. —Michael R. Burch To fall an inch short of infinity is to fall infinitely short.—Michael R. Burch Most Christians make God seem like the Devil. Atheists and agnostics at least give him the "benefit of the doubt."—Michael R. Burch Hell has been hellishly overdone since Jehovah and his prophets never mentioned it once. —Michael R. Burch (Bible scholars agree: the word "hell" has been removed from the Old Testaments of the more accurate modern Bible translations. And the few New Testament verses that mention "hell" are obvious mistranslations.) If every witty thing that's said were true, Oscar Wilde, the world would worship You! —Michael R. Burch Wayne Gretzky was pure skill poured into skates.—Michael R. Burch You ask me why I love fresh country air? You're not befouling it, mon frère. —Martial, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch 1. You’ll find good poems, but mostly poor and worse, my peers being “diverse” in their verse. 2. Some good poems here, but most not worth a curse: such is the crapshoot of a book of verse. Sunt bona, sunt quaedam mediocria, sunt mala plura quae legis hic: aliter non fit, Auite, liber. He undertook to be a doctor but turned out to be an undertaker. Chirurgus fuerat, nunc est uispillo Diaulus: coepit quo poterat clinicus esse modo. 1. The book you recite from, Fidentinus, was my own, till your butchering made it yours alone. 2. The book you recite from I once called my own, but you read it so badly, it’s now yours alone. 3. You read my book as if you wrote it, but you read it so badly I’ve come to hate it. Quem recitas meus est, o Fidentine, libellus: sed male *** recitas, incipit esse tuus. Recite my epigrams? I decline, for then they’d be yours, not mine. Ut recitem tibi nostra rogas epigrammata. Nolo: non audire, Celer, sed recitare cupis. I do not love you, but cannot say why. I do not love you: no reason, no lie. Non amo te, Sabidi, nec possum dicere quare: hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te. You’re young and lovely, wealthy too, but that changes nothing: you’re a shrew. Bella es, nouimus, et puella, uerum est, et diues, quis enim potest negare? Sed *** te nimium, Fabulla, laudas, nec diues neque bella nec puella es.
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Feb 24, 2020
Feb 24, 2020 at 3:30 AM UTC
Epigrams IV
Epigrams IV Nun Fun Undone by Michael R. Burch Abbesses’ recesses are not for excesses! *** Hex by Michael R. Burch Love’s full of cute paradoxes (and highly acute poxes). Saving Graces for the Religious Right by Michael R. Burch Life’s saving graces are love, pleasure, laughter (wisdom, it seems, is for the Hereafter). The Whole of Wit by Michael R. Burch for and after Richard Moore If brevity is the soul of wit then brevity and levity are the whole of it. (Published by Shot Glass Journal, Brief Poems, AZquotes, IdleHearts, JarOfQuotes, QuoteFancy, QuoteMaster) Conformists of a feather flock together. —Michael R. Burch Winner of the National Poetry Month Couplet Competition Feathered Fiends by Michael R. Burch Fascists of a feather flock together. Laughter’s Cry by Michael R. Burch Because life is a mystery, we laugh and do not know the half. Because death is a mystery, we cry when one is gone, our numbering thrown awry. If every witty thing that’s said were true, Oscar Wilde, the world would worship You! —Michael R. Burch Multiplication, Tabled for the Religious Right by Michael R. Burch “Be fruitful and multiply”— great advice, for a fruitfly! But for women and men, simple Simons, say, “WHEN!” Not Elves, Exactly by Michael R. Burch Something there is that likes a wall, that likes it spiked and likes it tall, that likes its pikes’ sharp rows of teeth and doesn’t mind its victims’ grief (wherever they come from, far or wide) as long as they fall on the other side. Fierce ancient skalds summoned verse from their guts; today’s genteel poets prefer modern ruts. —Michael R. Burch Long Division by Kim Cherub after Laura Riding Jackson All things become one Through death’s long division And perfect precision. Meal Deal by Michael R. Burch Love is a splendid ideal (at least till it costs us a meal). Vice Grip by Michael R. Burch There’s no need to rant about Al-Qaeda and ISIS. The cruelty of “civilization” suffices: our ordinary vices. Self-ish by Kim Cherub Let’s not pretend we “understand” other elves As long as we remain mysteries to ourselves. Piecemeal by Kim Cherub And so it begins—the ending. The narrowing veins, the soft tissues rending. Your final solution is pending. Lance-Lot by Michael R. Burch Preposterous bird! Inelegant! Absurd! Until the great & mighty heron brandishes his fearsome sword. Fleet Tweet: Apologies to Shakespeare @mikerburch (Michael R. Burch) A tweet by any other name would be as fleet. Fleet Tweet II: Further Apologies to Shakespeare @mikerburch (Michael R. Burch) Remember, doggonit, heroic verse crowns the Shakespearean sonnet! So if you intend to write a couplet, please do it on the doublet! The First Complete Musical Composition Shine, while you live; blaze beyond grief, for life is brief and Time, a thief. —Michael R. Burch, after Seikilos of Euterpes The so-called Seikilos Epitaph is the oldest known surviving complete musical composition which includes musical notation. It is believed to date to the first or second century AD. The epitaph appears to be signed “Seikilos of Euterpes” or dedicated “Seikilos to Euterpe.” Euterpe was the ancient Greek Muse of music. Ars Brevis, Proofreading Longa by Michael R. Burch Poets may labor from sun to sun, but their editor's work is never done. 15 Seconds by Michael R. Burch Our president’s *** life—atrocious! Asian markets are all hocus-pocus. Politics—a shell game. My brief moment of fame flashed by before Oprah could notice. Death by Michael R. Burch Death is the ultimate finality and banality of reality. Translations Shattered by Vera Pavlova loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch I shattered your heart; now I limp through the shards barefoot. Birdsong by Rumi loose translation by Michael R. Burch Birdsong relieves my deepest griefs: now I'm just as ecstatic as they, but with nothing to say! Please universe, rehearse your poetry through me! Raise your words, not their volume. Rain grows flowers, not thunder. —Rumi, translation by Michael R. Burch The imbecile constructs cages for everyone he knows, while the sage (who has to duck his head whenever the moon glows) keeps dispensing keys all night long to the beautiful, rowdy, prison gang. —Hafiz loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch An unbending tree breaks easily. —Lao Tzu, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Little sparks ignite great flames.—Dante, translation by Michael R. Burch Once fanaticism has gangrened brains the incurable malady invariably remains. —Voltaire, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Booksellers laud authors for novel editions as pimps praise their ****** for exotic positions. —Thomas Campion, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch No wind is favorable to the man who lacks direction. —Seneca the Younger, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Hypocrisy may deceive the most perceptive adult, but the dullest child recognizes and is revolted by it, however ingeniously disguised. —Leo Tolstoy translation by Michael R. Burch Just as I select a ship when it's time to travel, or a house when it's time to change residences, even so I will choose when it's time to depart from life. —Seneca, speaking about the right to euthanasia in the first century AD, translation by Michael R. Burch Improve yourself through others' writings, thus attaining more easily what they acquired through great difficulty. —Socrates, translation by Michael R. Burch Fools call wisdom foolishness. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch One true friend is worth ten thousand kin. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch Not to speak one’s mind is slavery. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch I would rather die standing than kneel, a slave. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch Fresh tears are wasted on old griefs. ―Euripides, translation by Michael R. Burch Truths are more likely discovered by one man than by nations. —Rene Descartes, translation by Michael R. Burch Cassidy Hutchinson is not only credible, but her courage and poise under fire have been incredible. — Michael R. Burch Native American Proverb loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Before you judge a man for his sins be sure to trudge many moons in his moccasins. Native American Proverb by Crazy Horse, Oglala Lakota Sioux (circa 1840-1877) loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch A man must pursue his Vision as the eagle explores the sky's deepest blues. Native American Proverb loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Let us walk respectfully here among earth's creatures, great and small, remembering, our footsteps light, that one wise God created all. The Least of These... What you do to the refugee you do unto Me! —Jesus Christ, translation/paraphrase by Michael R. Burch The Church Gets the Burch Rod How can the Bible be "infallible" when from Genesis to Revelation slavery is commanded and condoned, but never condemned? —Michael R. Burch If God is good half the Bible is libel. —Michael R. Burch I have my doubts about your God and his "love": If one screams below, what the hell is "Above"? —Michael R. Burch If God has the cattle on a thousand hills, why does he need my tithes to pay his bills? —Michael R. Burch The best tonic for other people's bad ideas is to think for oneself.—Michael R. Burch Hell hath no fury like a fundamentalist whose God condemned him for having "impure thoughts."—Michael R. Burch Religion is the difficult process of choosing the least malevolent invisible friends.—Michael R. Burch Religion is the ****** of the people.—Karl Marx Religion is the dopiate of the sheeple.—Michael R. Burch An ideal that cannot be realized is, in the end, just wishful thinking.—Michael R. Burch God and his "profits" could never agree on any gospel acceptable to an intelligent flea. —Michael R. Burch To fall an inch short of infinity is to fall infinitely short.—Michael R. Burch Most Christians make God seem like the Devil. Atheists and agnostics at least give him the "benefit of the doubt."—Michael R. Burch Hell has been hellishly overdone since Jehovah and his prophets never mentioned it once. —Michael R. Burch (Bible scholars agree: the word "hell" has been removed from the Old Testaments of the more accurate modern Bible translations. And the few New Testament verses that mention "hell" are obvious mistranslations.) If every witty thing that's said were true, Oscar Wilde, the world would worship You! —Michael R. Burch Wayne Gretzky was pure skill poured into skates.—Michael R. Burch You ask me why I love fresh country air? You're not befouling it, mon frère. —Martial, loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch 1. You’ll find good poems, but mostly poor and worse, my peers being “diverse” in their verse. 2. Some good poems here, but most not worth a curse: such is the crapshoot of a book of verse. Sunt bona, sunt quaedam mediocria, sunt mala plura quae legis hic: aliter non fit, Auite, liber. He undertook to be a doctor but turned out to be an undertaker. Chirurgus fuerat, nunc est uispillo Diaulus: coepit quo poterat clinicus esse modo. 1. The book you recite from, Fidentinus, was my own, till your butchering made it yours alone. 2. The book you recite from I once called my own, but you read it so badly, it’s now yours alone. 3. You read my book as if you wrote it, but you read it so badly I’ve come to hate it. Quem recitas meus est, o Fidentine, libellus: sed male *** recitas, incipit esse tuus. Recite my epigrams? I decline, for then they’d be yours, not mine. Ut recitem tibi nostra rogas epigrammata. Nolo: non audire, Celer, sed recitare cupis. I do not love you, but cannot say why. I do not love you: no reason, no lie. Non amo te, Sabidi, nec possum dicere quare: hoc tantum possum dicere, non amo te. You’re young and lovely, wealthy too, but that changes nothing: you’re a shrew. Bella es, nouimus, et puella, uerum est, et diues, quis enim potest negare? Sed *** te nimium, Fabulla, laudas, nec diues neque bella nec puella es.
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I wear a mask and i wear a smile, I stay awake and i find a place to hide, My eyes are sore and my soul bleeds Want to leave it all and get back to sleep, Sleep where my brain stops so that i could stay away from all chaos, Complexities had mended my soul and now its full of dent and full of bruise, My life had turned into an inevitable cage which is driving me crazy and inducing the rage, I try to keep the balance in my life but It feels like running from my darker side, The demon inside me is embracing this fall Cause he is getting control of my every cords, I can't cope up with these negative thoughts and this is turning me into a sociopath.
0
Dec 9, 2019
Dec 9, 2019 at 5:08 PM UTC
JOKER
kudos to Oscar every best picture ever- Hollywood Haiku
0
Nov 3, 2019
Nov 3, 2019 at 8:55 PM UTC
Hollywood Haiku
A repost: A Roman poem written before The birth of Christ, inspired the title Gone With The wind with Scarlett and Rhett Butler But here you see only old confessions of a man's true love for his beloved who is all gone -Or- (Or a woman's true love for her beloved runner wishing she could have chased.) ~~~ CYNAR*A. ~~~~~ Last night yesternight, betwixt her lips and mine There fell thy shadow, Cynara! Thy breath was shed Upon my soul between the kisses and the wine; And I was desolate and sick of an old passion,   Yea, I was desolate and bowed my head: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. All night upon mine heart I felt her warm heart beat, Night-long within mine arms in love and sleep she lay; Surely the kisses of her bought red mouth were sweet; But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,   When I awoke and found the dawn was grey: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. I have forgot much, Cynara! Gone with the wind, Flung roses, roses riotously with the throng, Dancing, to put thy pale, lost lilies out of mind But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,   Yea, all the time, because the dance was long: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. I cried for madder music and for stronger wine, But when the feast is finished and the lamps expire, Then falls thy shadow, Cynara! The night is thine; And I am desolate and sick of an old passion,   Yea, hungry for the lips of my desire: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. ~~~~~~~ By:Ernest Dowson For:RhettlvScarlet. to honor Karijinbba in her great loss and healing of her memory chip. ~~~~~~ Copy Rights. ~~~~ Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) died of alcoholism at the age of 32. His downward spiral began at age 23 when he fell for an 11 year old girl who would spurn him at 14 when he proposed marriage. The following year, in 1894 his father died from an overdose. Dowson's mother hanged herself within a year of her husband's death. Soon after this dual tragedy Dowson left for France before returning back to England in 1897. Curiously he lived with the family of his unrequited love. Penniless, heartbroken and filling the empty voids in his life with alcohol, Dowson would spend the last six weeks of his life in the cottage of the Oscar Wilde biographer Robert Sherard who had found him drunk in a bar. Speaking of Oscar Wilde, he wrote after Dowson's death of a,"Poor wounded wonderful fellow that he was, a tragic reproduction of all tragic poetry, like a symbol, or a scene. I hope bay leaves will be laid on his tomb and rue and myrtle too for he knew what true love unrequieted love was." ~~~~~
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Oct 22, 2018
Oct 22, 2018 at 12:44 AM UTC
Cynara
A repost: A Roman poem written before The birth of Christ, inspired the title Gone With The wind with Scarlett and Rhett Butler But here you see only old confessions of a man's true love for his beloved who is all gone -Or- (Or a woman's true love for her beloved runner wishing she could have chased.) ~~~ CYNAR*A. ~~~~~ Last night yesternight, betwixt her lips and mine There fell thy shadow, Cynara! Thy breath was shed Upon my soul between the kisses and the wine; And I was desolate and sick of an old passion,   Yea, I was desolate and bowed my head: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. All night upon mine heart I felt her warm heart beat, Night-long within mine arms in love and sleep she lay; Surely the kisses of her bought red mouth were sweet; But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,   When I awoke and found the dawn was grey: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. I have forgot much, Cynara! Gone with the wind, Flung roses, roses riotously with the throng, Dancing, to put thy pale, lost lilies out of mind But I was desolate and sick of an old passion,   Yea, all the time, because the dance was long: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. I cried for madder music and for stronger wine, But when the feast is finished and the lamps expire, Then falls thy shadow, Cynara! The night is thine; And I am desolate and sick of an old passion,   Yea, hungry for the lips of my desire: I have been faithful to thee, Cynara! in my fashion. ~~~~~~~ By:Ernest Dowson For:RhettlvScarlet. to honor Karijinbba in her great loss and healing of her memory chip. ~~~~~~ Copy Rights. ~~~~ Ernest Dowson (1867-1900) died of alcoholism at the age of 32. His downward spiral began at age 23 when he fell for an 11 year old girl who would spurn him at 14 when he proposed marriage. The following year, in 1894 his father died from an overdose. Dowson's mother hanged herself within a year of her husband's death. Soon after this dual tragedy Dowson left for France before returning back to England in 1897. Curiously he lived with the family of his unrequited love. Penniless, heartbroken and filling the empty voids in his life with alcohol, Dowson would spend the last six weeks of his life in the cottage of the Oscar Wilde biographer Robert Sherard who had found him drunk in a bar. Speaking of Oscar Wilde, he wrote after Dowson's death of a,"Poor wounded wonderful fellow that he was, a tragic reproduction of all tragic poetry, like a symbol, or a scene. I hope bay leaves will be laid on his tomb and rue and myrtle too for he knew what true love unrequieted love was." ~~~~~
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53
Be yourself There is no one else Be who you are and say what you feel, because those who mind don't matter, and those who matter don't mind And I don’t mind I guess I Shouldn’t cry because it's over, But  smile because it happened It might overcome the sadness, But i never quite escape the nostalgia… How do you live, With these broken memories in your head, And happy feelings in your heart? No one ever listens How do I move on with the weight of my past on my back, The comfort so welcoming I always cry Over the things that don’t matter Hiding the hurt, hiding the pain, Hiding the tears that fell like rain… So long ago, and yet, Time is weird in my head
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Feb 19, 2018
Feb 19, 2018 at 2:03 PM UTC
Nothing, everything, me, and everyone else.
a young warrior fulfils a dream, one on one combat, and his foe folds like wet parchment. a wounded musician, has his back even as the javelin impaled in her arm (her spoils) drips with life. the clatter of a die. a number announcing if she survives is softly reported [or how Oscar’s help was neither wanted nor needed, thank you very much]
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Jan 15, 2018
Jan 15, 2018 at 7:23 PM UTC
Campaign Vignettes - 3
Gazing through the looking glass, and attempting to reminisce, he lets go, relieves, and perceives.Colossi of raindrops subtly fall through sky’s shadows , violently battling the grey in great amounts, failing to come anywhere near the threshold of one’s most sensitive ear. Nature’s children appear to tremble as dark forebodings of a dreary future pervade the air. The danger and annoyances of such rarities is always given priority and significance. He misunderstands it; he believes in its false infinity. Unable to stabilize, unable to achieve a desired normality. From every pitter, he regrets; from every patter he forgets. Forcefully drudging through the thick swamp of his mind, struggling to understand what and why, diminishing his hopes of any change, any desire. Suddenly, several elements collide against his one-way mirror in his cell and revitalize his consciousness. Looking through the droplet, his face pressed against, his mentality momentarily produces quick successions of thoughts and random impulses of recovering memory.   Every snowflake understands its place as sui generis; every raindrop understands its place as trite. The beauty of a snowflake with death, the dullness of rain with life. It’s uniformity and strict nature are necessary to sustain life, but somehow it places a bittersweet piece of an unusual feeling inside him. Its unexplainable transparency, disguising itself as invisible, but not untouchable, stimulates a sense of deep nostalgic hopelessness within him. As he discovers the profound pulchritude, and simultaneous incomprehensibility, of the paradoxical elements of natural and artificial state cooperating to achieve more of the same, he realizes more in this moment. The monotonous, repetitive beat of rain seems to harmonize in an odd manner with some contrasting presence. A new rhythm to this sound, a new color to this sight. A particular emotion of gradually diminishing despair comes about as he observes little rain boots composing a sort of  rhythmic song with the catchy beat of the rain’s clashing, the continuous flow of the tree’s trembling, the back-up percussion of the thunder’s loud suddenness, the sight of lightning's exciting flash, and the cheerful singing from their voices.Upon this feat, he accepts the shadow’s tears; no longer must he endure the pain of the past’s ********** of the future, now he begins to savor the varied colors of newfound harmony.
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Jan 24, 2017
Jan 24, 2017 at 5:50 AM UTC
Gazing
Gazing through the looking glass, and attempting to reminisce, he lets go, relieves, and perceives.Colossi of raindrops subtly fall through sky’s shadows , violently battling the grey in great amounts, failing to come anywhere near the threshold of one’s most sensitive ear. Nature’s children appear to tremble as dark forebodings of a dreary future pervade the air. The danger and annoyances of such rarities is always given priority and significance. He misunderstands it; he believes in its false infinity. Unable to stabilize, unable to achieve a desired normality. From every pitter, he regrets; from every patter he forgets. Forcefully drudging through the thick swamp of his mind, struggling to understand what and why, diminishing his hopes of any change, any desire. Suddenly, several elements collide against his one-way mirror in his cell and revitalize his consciousness. Looking through the droplet, his face pressed against, his mentality momentarily produces quick successions of thoughts and random impulses of recovering memory.   Every snowflake understands its place as sui generis; every raindrop understands its place as trite. The beauty of a snowflake with death, the dullness of rain with life. It’s uniformity and strict nature are necessary to sustain life, but somehow it places a bittersweet piece of an unusual feeling inside him. Its unexplainable transparency, disguising itself as invisible, but not untouchable, stimulates a sense of deep nostalgic hopelessness within him. As he discovers the profound pulchritude, and simultaneous incomprehensibility, of the paradoxical elements of natural and artificial state cooperating to achieve more of the same, he realizes more in this moment. The monotonous, repetitive beat of rain seems to harmonize in an odd manner with some contrasting presence. A new rhythm to this sound, a new color to this sight. A particular emotion of gradually diminishing despair comes about as he observes little rain boots composing a sort of  rhythmic song with the catchy beat of the rain’s clashing, the continuous flow of the tree’s trembling, the back-up percussion of the thunder’s loud suddenness, the sight of lightning's exciting flash, and the cheerful singing from their voices.Upon this feat, he accepts the shadow’s tears; no longer must he endure the pain of the past’s ********** of the future, now he begins to savor the varied colors of newfound harmony.
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4
And just like that, the two most impossible things happened. 1. We were over 2. Leonardo DiCaprio won an Oscar
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Feb 29, 2016
Feb 29, 2016 at 4:01 PM UTC
11:00 pm, February 28
burn your playlist to an empty CD wish I could just burn our memory here I lay in my room, all lonely only got you in my mind now, baby I close my eyes, imagine you in your car; smoking, driving further, driving so far meanwhile, I still wish for the last falling star patiently, like how Leo waited for the Oscar
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Feb 29, 2016
Feb 29, 2016 at 7:13 AM UTC
Burn
Oscar Wilde, where do you get your inspiration? Tell me, do your muses dance on the stars, can they be heard by the sea? Poetic and tragically romantic, words strung together on the dewey webs of little black widows, poisoning me with a cracked rosy vision . What visions dance to create such imagery? What do you see, in your time, to create vivid color? O, Oscar Wilde, the question haunts me. Where do you get your inspiration?
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Sep 7, 2015
Sep 7, 2015 at 9:50 PM UTC
Oscar Wilde
( July 16th 01:10am) Dear boy! The love that dare not speak it's name which caused you suffering, expounds these days; no golden sphynxes fold their wings in shame, there's pride in gaiety and all it's ways. To think that tiny window on the sky was all you had, to show the world was real! For bigotry and hate will always try to break a butterfly upon a wheel. Bereft and broken, still by love possessed, you were vanquished by prejudicial law; and yet, with trusting candour, you confessed to all the passion you were fighting for. From Paradise to gutter, behind bars, Oscar was always looking at the stars.
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Jul 15, 2015
Jul 15, 2015 at 8:11 PM UTC
For Oscar
Fig Pizza melts on my tongue Dark Chocolate lightening my mood I could be squashed on the street Run over by revolution But I’m not I could be shot in the abdomen 1…2…3 times for not paying a bus fare But I’m not My mood is blue But my skin is white I am fed, housed, clothed Owe debt but cannot be jailed Don’t have a job but have friends I am not desperate Just sad I am not in isolation Just a witness to those who are I am not sick But see its effects everywhere I am not rich But I am, I am
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Jul 14, 2015
Jul 14, 2015 at 7:34 PM UTC
Unearned Blessings
" I love your positive outlook on life. It's like you're never depressed. Or at least I wouldn't think so," you tell me. Maybe that's why DeCaprio never won his Oscar; they're  savin' 'em all for me.
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Jan 29, 2015
Jan 29, 2015 at 12:26 PM UTC
Sorry Leo
Her Voice by Oscar Wilde THE wild bee reels from bough to bough With his furry coat and his gauzy wing.
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Dec 23, 2014
Dec 23, 2014 at 12:51 AM UTC
Her Voice by Oscar Wilde
if my hands reflect the hurt they cause, maybe i wouldn't hurt again.
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Oct 5, 2014
Oct 5, 2014 at 12:29 PM UTC
an ode to Dorian Gray, or a poem about my hands, pt. ii
As I sigh, I pat my pockets And search for an old friend. Seeking comfort and consolation In someone I know all too well. A pure white cigarette with a cotton filter. I place it in my mouth and light the end. A familiar greeting. A firm handshake. Then we begin our conversation. I take a long drag from my dear old friend. He pats me on the back. He tells me that I will be okay. He gives me the strength that I lack. Another long puff with a cough at the end. Five minutes of my life that I'll never get back. Five minutes of life taken from me, In exchange for a glimmer of solace. Holding my friend, I take a deep breath. Inhaling the oxygen I need. Then I fill my lungs with smoke. As I feel the comfort slipping away. My friend is gone; my friend is done. I flick his remains away. Although he is gone, he will soon return. Helping my body decay. My solace has disappeared. I'm back to the way that I felt before. My former feelings, now magnified. Leaving me unsatisfied.
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Jul 8, 2014
Jul 8, 2014 at 5:01 AM UTC
Smoke