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#stack
nandirito na naman ako, nag-iisa. madalas, tuwing tanghali, ay nalulugmok sa isang paboritong sulok kaharap ang mga bulaklak at insekto habang kinukumutan ng pinaghalu-halong amoy ng mga naglipanang mukha sa aking harapan. dito ko madalas hintayin ang mabagal na oras dahil katatapos lang ng klase at ayaw ko pang umuwi. nagpapahinga, nag-iisip ng kahit na anong maisip, nakatanga, nagmamatyag sa kahit na ano o sinong malapatan ng paningin. walang pakialam sa nagmamadaling mundo ng mga gising. nandito ako't abala sa isang munting sandali ng kapayapaan para hanapin muli ang sarili ko. teka... hindi pala ako nag-iisa rito. kasama ko itong sigarilyo.
0
Aug 20, 2020
Aug 20, 2020 at 9:27 PM UTC
yOSI, aLAALA, aT iBA pA
Who on earth would stack books like sticks? Who would sit turning white-paper-pages With blackened fingertips? You should know that awaiting fire is nothing of a joke Have you not heard of witches on fiery trial, spitting curses That just tightened the rope And did you know That the pages Of every history book ever written Once went up In ancient whispers of smoke? Every manuscript Chronicling man’s unscripted Fighting progression It was reduced to ash? So we wrote it all again… The Romans, messy, careless And surely barbarians We’ll adopt them as our Ancient parents Invaders of course, Progressions must not Be stifled by sentiment or remorse The druids and their hoods They left them among the leaves In the woods Before that Well No one can prove us wrong We’ll say that humans Hunted similar races That were Uglier but strong Defeat, even eating them Of course That which stands before you In physical form Surely it cannot be wrong Our history, As far as we know Is a tale of endless glory, Since they tell of victory In every song So we’d made a start The scholars are desperate To start memorising the dates Of all the events That we are still Required to create Keep the candles burning This could go on rather late The bridges of London We’ll say were built by English men And when some malevolent Invaders burnt them down We built them up again We’re resolute by nature Bordered on two sides Our land it does not shrink We have intimidation in our eyes Well we have all these haunted castles Shakespeare used them in his plays Let’s say we were conquered By Normans Hand-fought battles went on for days We should be modest and believable So let’s say they conquered us, so what? If our past shapes our future let’s show The things we are and what we’re not We’re are a thing that empires covet Some have tried many times Our ships with crews that never sleep Their cannonball trajectory does not fall They fly in a straight line A book that chronicled a fire great Reducing our capital to a raven’s nest Sadly it was lost, Pepys wrote so well, So we’ve told Dickens to try his best We recreate from memories of books The pictures help as well Medieval times were all heads on sticks It resembled what we’ll call hell Heaven, that’s where the noble live Those that were so gallant and brave falling in their tons on the battlefield Winged skeletons rising from their remains The bible, as you know, survived the fire It continues to teach us and guide Reminds us of the elasticity of time And encourages a most conscientious mind We made adjustments, here and there, Lazarus rising for example, readers in mind We couldn’t let that tragic scene end Without him delivering his warning on time We think of the greater good you see For the good of you, and the good of me The plague, bubonic, spreading like fire Is a fiction covering something dark and twisted I can’t begin to describe how as the death toll rose Our king fled for Belgium as the demons persisted The history of London is actually unknown! Well you would moan, but what did you think? The Thames is a man-made canal they froze themselves when ice skate sales were on the brink And bodies that fall in, still alive or dead They scoop them up, make wigs and cut textiles The ones still breathing are given the job of Gathering the bones of the executed neatly arranging them in piles Jack the Ripper, Member of Parliament I should say Was in charge of cleaning up east London crime His method was questionable, objections from Speakers in parliament, but murders in a year went from 38 to 9 Henry, yes he was large, rotund, had his fun with women, But each of his wives was ensnared by courtiers in cloaks They were promised recompense, rewards that never materialised When they killed him, each time, they picked a lookalike from the village folk And I’m no historian, but why assume That soldiers marched all the way from Rome To what was of little value, Cold, wet, a far cry from home No evidence of course, They just put themselves about And there’s a good chance, The Vikings came, you could see bridges, Burning in their eyes, they arm-wrestled Journeying on longboats of considerable size King Charles II had an imagination alright, Kept the wine flowing alright, Enquiring minds and lips Were busied gulping it all down And kissing women who span madly around Their cheeks The colour of rose hips... *Who are these men that hold books under their arm In such a way as a woman clutches a purse?* They arrive in endless streams conversing in their Small groups, absent mindedly Opening and closing books that are in Different languages, *My turn to take five, look after this place, I’ll be just out back, chewing my wife’s sandwiches.* I eavesdrop a little, a vice of mine, Hear them talking about their jobs On the factory line Men and machines, men as machines Or machines made by men, machines That dream in factory nights, Locked away and out of sight, Quietest place you’ll find But they’re restless, I’ve seen the machines sigh I’ve seen the steam that shoots out As the whistle blows calling time, They are restless machines and —The whistle blows and The machines are wandering home after Getting blind drunk, Dreaming… In a few hours they will be woken By a jangling set of keys that Starts them up an hour or two early So that they are fully operational When the hungover workers arrive Beating their chests and Stretching their lever-pulling arms, The machines grind their gears in protest, Become confrontational, Grinding the axe for a while now, They’re all worked up, high pressure, And yet no one takes notice The steam flowing as promised The men are ready in wait A little release of steam Machine’s are functioning well today Factories like these run themselves With their routine set in stone, you can whine and moan and they will, Mostly to their wives on the phone During their allotted break, You can come back early, but never late, Echoing a cuckoo-clock world Of perpetual motion, the machines Dream of a life outside, they have heard So much about irons and their boards, And baths with plugs on a chain, Manhole covers, oven doors and drains, The machines do what they were made to do, Workers too, this job chose them For their durability, stocky build, the confusion and absence of revolution in their eyes, Life’s lustre hides in Friday’s pies, Yawning men find it in the coffee *** as it boils on Monday morning, On Tuesday it will taste like soil again, And on rare occasions, you’ll see it When the sun comes through the Highest window, and eventually, On the right day, the right time, it reflects and refracts, The whole factory is scattered With light artefacts, as if glass was Raining down from the sky, They take five, in celebration of Their planet’s undiminished charms, And though a bit longer to enjoy them Wouldn’t do any harm They are ordered to resume order Belts and levers and rivets and arms Must pull, a few more hours of life Set to whistles and alarms Creak! There’s another dodgy floorboard! How quaint, we’ve gone back in time, I can’t reach the books... *Shall we walk past the pond On our way to the tailors? A fine suit, perhaps we’ll Also need a coat and a pair of shoes*
0
Jun 14, 2016
Jun 14, 2016 at 9:28 PM UTC
Stack Books Like Sticks/On Tuesday It Will Taste Like Soil Again
Who on earth would stack books like sticks? Who would sit turning white-paper-pages With blackened fingertips? You should know that awaiting fire is nothing of a joke Have you not heard of witches on fiery trial, spitting curses That just tightened the rope And did you know That the pages Of every history book ever written Once went up In ancient whispers of smoke? Every manuscript Chronicling man’s unscripted Fighting progression It was reduced to ash? So we wrote it all again… The Romans, messy, careless And surely barbarians We’ll adopt them as our Ancient parents Invaders of course, Progressions must not Be stifled by sentiment or remorse The druids and their hoods They left them among the leaves In the woods Before that Well No one can prove us wrong We’ll say that humans Hunted similar races That were Uglier but strong Defeat, even eating them Of course That which stands before you In physical form Surely it cannot be wrong Our history, As far as we know Is a tale of endless glory, Since they tell of victory In every song So we’d made a start The scholars are desperate To start memorising the dates Of all the events That we are still Required to create Keep the candles burning This could go on rather late The bridges of London We’ll say were built by English men And when some malevolent Invaders burnt them down We built them up again We’re resolute by nature Bordered on two sides Our land it does not shrink We have intimidation in our eyes Well we have all these haunted castles Shakespeare used them in his plays Let’s say we were conquered By Normans Hand-fought battles went on for days We should be modest and believable So let’s say they conquered us, so what? If our past shapes our future let’s show The things we are and what we’re not We’re are a thing that empires covet Some have tried many times Our ships with crews that never sleep Their cannonball trajectory does not fall They fly in a straight line A book that chronicled a fire great Reducing our capital to a raven’s nest Sadly it was lost, Pepys wrote so well, So we’ve told Dickens to try his best We recreate from memories of books The pictures help as well Medieval times were all heads on sticks It resembled what we’ll call hell Heaven, that’s where the noble live Those that were so gallant and brave falling in their tons on the battlefield Winged skeletons rising from their remains The bible, as you know, survived the fire It continues to teach us and guide Reminds us of the elasticity of time And encourages a most conscientious mind We made adjustments, here and there, Lazarus rising for example, readers in mind We couldn’t let that tragic scene end Without him delivering his warning on time We think of the greater good you see For the good of you, and the good of me The plague, bubonic, spreading like fire Is a fiction covering something dark and twisted I can’t begin to describe how as the death toll rose Our king fled for Belgium as the demons persisted The history of London is actually unknown! Well you would moan, but what did you think? The Thames is a man-made canal they froze themselves when ice skate sales were on the brink And bodies that fall in, still alive or dead They scoop them up, make wigs and cut textiles The ones still breathing are given the job of Gathering the bones of the executed neatly arranging them in piles Jack the Ripper, Member of Parliament I should say Was in charge of cleaning up east London crime His method was questionable, objections from Speakers in parliament, but murders in a year went from 38 to 9 Henry, yes he was large, rotund, had his fun with women, But each of his wives was ensnared by courtiers in cloaks They were promised recompense, rewards that never materialised When they killed him, each time, they picked a lookalike from the village folk And I’m no historian, but why assume That soldiers marched all the way from Rome To what was of little value, Cold, wet, a far cry from home No evidence of course, They just put themselves about And there’s a good chance, The Vikings came, you could see bridges, Burning in their eyes, they arm-wrestled Journeying on longboats of considerable size King Charles II had an imagination alright, Kept the wine flowing alright, Enquiring minds and lips Were busied gulping it all down And kissing women who span madly around Their cheeks The colour of rose hips... *Who are these men that hold books under their arm In such a way as a woman clutches a purse?* They arrive in endless streams conversing in their Small groups, absent mindedly Opening and closing books that are in Different languages, *My turn to take five, look after this place, I’ll be just out back, chewing my wife’s sandwiches.* I eavesdrop a little, a vice of mine, Hear them talking about their jobs On the factory line Men and machines, men as machines Or machines made by men, machines That dream in factory nights, Locked away and out of sight, Quietest place you’ll find But they’re restless, I’ve seen the machines sigh I’ve seen the steam that shoots out As the whistle blows calling time, They are restless machines and —The whistle blows and The machines are wandering home after Getting blind drunk, Dreaming… In a few hours they will be woken By a jangling set of keys that Starts them up an hour or two early So that they are fully operational When the hungover workers arrive Beating their chests and Stretching their lever-pulling arms, The machines grind their gears in protest, Become confrontational, Grinding the axe for a while now, They’re all worked up, high pressure, And yet no one takes notice The steam flowing as promised The men are ready in wait A little release of steam Machine’s are functioning well today Factories like these run themselves With their routine set in stone, you can whine and moan and they will, Mostly to their wives on the phone During their allotted break, You can come back early, but never late, Echoing a cuckoo-clock world Of perpetual motion, the machines Dream of a life outside, they have heard So much about irons and their boards, And baths with plugs on a chain, Manhole covers, oven doors and drains, The machines do what they were made to do, Workers too, this job chose them For their durability, stocky build, the confusion and absence of revolution in their eyes, Life’s lustre hides in Friday’s pies, Yawning men find it in the coffee *** as it boils on Monday morning, On Tuesday it will taste like soil again, And on rare occasions, you’ll see it When the sun comes through the Highest window, and eventually, On the right day, the right time, it reflects and refracts, The whole factory is scattered With light artefacts, as if glass was Raining down from the sky, They take five, in celebration of Their planet’s undiminished charms, And though a bit longer to enjoy them Wouldn’t do any harm They are ordered to resume order Belts and levers and rivets and arms Must pull, a few more hours of life Set to whistles and alarms Creak! There’s another dodgy floorboard! How quaint, we’ve gone back in time, I can’t reach the books... *Shall we walk past the pond On our way to the tailors? A fine suit, perhaps we’ll Also need a coat and a pair of shoes*
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220
here is now  to what the             heck?          jump out of this year          with that old joint attitude          and leave a mark          like it's too hot for me.                   so quickly                   that burden ate.                    loved the way                    he operates.                       won't let us help. needed it.                       sounded good.               man, what's wrong with less?      let's meet up again sometime soon.            after a few more questions.   let's meetup somewhere                       between                          two am                                   and                                    here.
0
Aug 24, 2015
Aug 24, 2015 at 6:24 AM UTC
qualitative analysis