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"greece" poems
Your lips slightly parted; pure smile of ancient Greece seen on endless broken statues. Smile of sun and knowledge. Smile of Artemis and Athena. Smile that smiles in the endless moment. Eternal feminine smile of the mysteries.   ~mce
0
Jun 4, 2015
Jun 4, 2015 at 9:10 PM UTC
Classical Smile
I watched the turtle dwindle day by day, Get more remote, lie limp upon my hand; When offered food he turned his head away; The emerald shell grew soft. Quite near the end Those withdrawn paws stretched out to grasp His long head in a poignant dying gesture. It was so strangely like a human clasp, My heart cracked for the brother creature. I buried him, wrapped in a lettuce leaf, The vivid eye sunk inward, a dull stone. So this was it, the universal grief: Each bears his own end knit up in the bone. Where are the dead? we ask, as we hurtle Toward the dark, part of this strange creation, One with each limpet, leaf, and smallest turtle--- Cry out for life, cry out in desperation! Who will remember you when I have gone, My darling ones, or who remember me? Only in our wild hearts the dead live on. Yet these frail engines bound to mystery Break the harsh turn of all creation's wheel, for we remember China, Greece, and Rome, Our mothers and our fathers, and we steal From death itself its rich store, and bring it home.
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15.1k
Death and the Turtle
Good-by, proud world, I'm going home, Thou'rt not my friend, and I'm not thine; Long through thy weary crowds I roam; A river-ark on the ocean brine, Long I've been tossed like the driven foam, But now, proud world, I'm going home. Good-by to Flattery's fawning face, To Grandeur, with his wise grimace, To upstart Wealth's averted eye, To supple Office low and high, To crowded halls, to court, and street, To frozen hearts, and hasting feet, To those who go, and those who come, Good-by, proud world, I'm going home. I'm going to my own hearth-stone Bosomed in yon green hills, alone, A secret nook in a pleasant land, Whose groves the frolic fairies planned; Where arches green the livelong day Echo the blackbird's roundelay, And ****** feet have never trod A spot that is sacred to thought and God. Oh, when I am safe in my sylvan home, I tread on the pride of Greece and Rome; And when I am stretched beneath the pines Where the evening star so holy shines, I laugh at the lore and the pride of man, At the sophist schools, and the learned clan; For what are they all in their high conceit, When man in the bush with God may meet.
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14.4k
Good-by
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Dec 21, 2019
Dec 21, 2019 at 11:08 AM UTC
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196
I pull open the door And hunt for food in the dim orange light. "There's nothing inside" Well, actually, There is something: Months old cream cheeses precariously stacked atop each other, Several mysterious bottles of brown sauces, Dried out leafy vegetables, But nothing This lazy *** can eat without preparing. I push close the door, Leaving my stomach rumbling and empty, But filling my mind with Dreams Three-fourths of the dull gray door is covered With colorful ceramic magnets From my dad’s corporate adventures To Batangas, Bohol, Bacolod, Davao, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, Macau, Nepal, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, China, Dubai, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia Sudan, Egypt, Ethiopia, Canada, Greece, and Australia. I examine each magnet’s contour and shine, Letting its foreign dust seep into my fingers. I dream that soon I will return all those dusts to their lands And bring home more magnets of my own.
0
Dec 28, 2013
Dec 28, 2013 at 9:50 AM UTC
Refrigerator
Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Santa had another noted name, He was a simple man Called Nicholas living for no fame. He was a Christian. His parents died, when he was still young, In a village of Greece. Thinking of Jesus, his thoughts he strung To help poor kids in peace. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Under Diocletian he became A Bishop in mission. He was imprisoned, and put to shame. He changed the tradition. In time, St. Nicholas' life and deeds Have become a story. He was a helper of those in needs, A man in the glory. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Nicholas became Dutch Sinter Klass, But children changed his name. The Bishop's red cloak changed with time's glass In cloths for Santa's fame. On that day, kids wait for him to come In spirit of giving, The Christmas tree looks no longer glum And it looks like living. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Down the chimney comes Papa Noel Quite slipping and sliding. From his sky with reindeers and sleigh bells Just gnashing and gliding. Spreading stardust glittering at night He brings presents for kids, They pray and sing in the Divine Light. Then, to sky his sleigh skids. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins.
0
Nov 28, 2014
Nov 28, 2014 at 12:23 PM UTC
The Legend of Santa Claus
Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Santa had another noted name, He was a simple man Called Nicholas living for no fame. He was a Christian. His parents died, when he was still young, In a village of Greece. Thinking of Jesus, his thoughts he strung To help poor kids in peace. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Under Diocletian he became A Bishop in mission. He was imprisoned, and put to shame. He changed the tradition. In time, St. Nicholas' life and deeds Have become a story. He was a helper of those in needs, A man in the glory. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Nicholas became Dutch Sinter Klass, But children changed his name. The Bishop's red cloak changed with time's glass In cloths for Santa's fame. On that day, kids wait for him to come In spirit of giving, The Christmas tree looks no longer glum And it looks like living. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins. Down the chimney comes Papa Noel Quite slipping and sliding. From his sky with reindeers and sleigh bells Just gnashing and gliding. Spreading stardust glittering at night He brings presents for kids, They pray and sing in the Divine Light. Then, to sky his sleigh skids. Refrain: The legend of our sweet Santa Claus In December begins Up on the rooftops, when eight strong paws Make sounds of reindeers twins.
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57
So I turned 32 today. Penniless birthday, almost. Howling rains woke me up and I fell back asleep. And the cat respected my birthday. Did not claw my lips like my usual feline alarm. The birthday flowers in the morning were vivid. My mother bought them, deep red and deep yellow. I requested for birthday lunch my mother’s home-cooked burgers and fries sprinkled with iodized salt. And I filled myself up with them hot and crispy fries and didn’t care if they stayed inside my guts until 2014. I never really liked cake. Opted for a dozen original glazed. Heavenly donuts. Two of them tumbled down the escalators. The first birthday flaw. Like a bleep in the grand scheme of birthday things. I brought them to a Greek restaurant. My mom and dad and two sisters. Not really hungry. Just hungry for a different taste. The salad had candied walnuts among the greens and the reds. Progressive Greece. Then a classic lamb dish. Classic Greece. And the waiters in stuffy white bellowed a birthday greeting, dropping the “h” from my name. Belted out a non-Grecian birthday song. No Grecian dance. But they gave me an ice cream treat. Lighted a solitary blue candle, which balanced on the semi-liquid hills of vanilla, caramel and walnuts. The small ice cream hills illuminated by the dancing birthday light.
0
Oct 21, 2013
Oct 21, 2013 at 3:40 AM UTC
Birthday
All Greece hates the still eyes in the white face, the lustre as of olives where she stands, and the white hands. All Greece reviles the wan face when she smiles, hating it deeper still when it grows wan and white, remembering past enchantments and past ills. Greece sees, unmoved, God's daughter, born of love, the beauty of cool feet and slenderest knees, could love indeed the maid, only if she were laid, white ash amid funereal cypresses.
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6.4k
Helen
Maybe you're the colosseum. The code to get through the glass doors is actually just '1954'. You could put up the painting of me at auction, or I could take a cruise from London to the Islands North of Siberia, a stop in a department store in Northern Greece. I stop and take a ride in the middle front-third seat of a older friend's younger brother's car, and force all of them to come outside and see the spider's eggs at Bob-o-Link. Massive cornucopias of cotton walls entwined with silk. In the department store I ask to be introduced to someone who can take me by the hand and recognize me by my number, show me everything I'll need to shoot a full-length feature, even how I can get to Prague so I can do a little shopping. But the horror of seeing is so frightening, and the girl that I came with wants to do nothing. I find a little shop selling Czech candies, music, and newspapers, so I try to buy everything but the horror is getting closer. I'm in a lazy Susan, how often does that happen? One more turn and I'll lose my stomach contents and then I won't need anything. I take a climb up a street that says "Smrzlinu Ahead," but the houses on the street are all either empty or boarded up. I drift in the soccer field, watching my legs, looking over my shoulder. I fall for a pile of clothes that can hide me but are also very soft to lay in. Another cruise- tropical, perhaps? Somewhere for coy adults, who shed their skin in Winter when their eyes start molting off. Someday I will place both hands into the ocean, I'll dream huge, and go swimming until I start to laugh. One day I'll sink to the floor of the bourn, maybe the same day I wake up and I'm not swimming alone.
0
Apr 26, 2014
Apr 26, 2014 at 4:28 AM UTC
swimming. alone.
Maybe you're the colosseum. The code to get through the glass doors is actually just '1954'. You could put up the painting of me at auction, or I could take a cruise from London to the Islands North of Siberia, a stop in a department store in Northern Greece. I stop and take a ride in the middle front-third seat of a older friend's younger brother's car, and force all of them to come outside and see the spider's eggs at Bob-o-Link. Massive cornucopias of cotton walls entwined with silk. In the department store I ask to be introduced to someone who can take me by the hand and recognize me by my number, show me everything I'll need to shoot a full-length feature, even how I can get to Prague so I can do a little shopping. But the horror of seeing is so frightening, and the girl that I came with wants to do nothing. I find a little shop selling Czech candies, music, and newspapers, so I try to buy everything but the horror is getting closer. I'm in a lazy Susan, how often does that happen? One more turn and I'll lose my stomach contents and then I won't need anything. I take a climb up a street that says "Smrzlinu Ahead," but the houses on the street are all either empty or boarded up. I drift in the soccer field, watching my legs, looking over my shoulder. I fall for a pile of clothes that can hide me but are also very soft to lay in. Another cruise- tropical, perhaps? Somewhere for coy adults, who shed their skin in Winter when their eyes start molting off. Someday I will place both hands into the ocean, I'll dream huge, and go swimming until I start to laugh. One day I'll sink to the floor of the bourn, maybe the same day I wake up and I'm not swimming alone.
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5
Listen my dear daughter, to my first song of caution Earmarked for you my wonderful sire, come and listen, That tall old man with white hair all over his head Standing over there is not good; he is gnomish in the mind Be careful with him, he is not human in the heart But a mermaid of Yoruba poetry, just like Thespis of Greece Even the pecuniary psychopomp of Sweden gave him an accolade His heart is selfishly full of avarice; he wants everything for himself, Don’t recite him any of your poetry, lest he spells an abyss Against your juvenile poetic talent, he will fool you with a gift; A white sheep or a scarlet goat for your birth day anniversary Please don’t take it or anything else from him, as nothing from him is genuine But only machinations of evil spell aimed at mahyeming your talent Finally to decimate your girlhood and life, this is my caution For you dear little African girl. Listen my dear little daughter, to my second song of caution That short man in a Muslim gear loafing yonder, is suspect The Muslim beret on his head is merely a smokescreen to aghastly behaviour He is in no way an avatar of god of love and humane piety He is a terrorist working with Boko Haram and Algaeda He is an Alshabab that is bombing young girls in Mombasa and Nairobi All over Kenya he has killed the young people; his long egret-white sari is not for holiness, It is merely a nefarious sanctum of grenades, other tools of work in terrorism trade His loudly prayers, body movements and pocket bursting monies are only a stunt To have you kidnapped into death conduit, once you goof to join his courts, His sanctimony is a total picaresque film, (s)heroes of terror the centerpiece And thus, this is my caution for you dear little African girl. Listen my dear daughter, to my third song of caution Those tourists thronging our streets are deadly *** pets, they also skulk **** Their handsome outlook is not a stamp to any good conscientiousness They derive pleasure from poverty and *** tourism; they yearn to see a girl in poverty, Often rarely will they help an African girl, out of milieu of beggarly squalorism, Instead they go straight for the purse between your thighs, Regardless of the legacy they leave out of this lewdness, they are showy, They regret not in their Byronic broadcast of *** and fatherless urchins in the poor streets Foundation for their further poverty tourism, this is my caution for you dear little African girl.
0
May 26, 2014
May 26, 2014 at 4:20 AM UTC
VERSES OF CAUTION TO AN AFRICAN GIRL
Listen my dear daughter, to my first song of caution Earmarked for you my wonderful sire, come and listen, That tall old man with white hair all over his head Standing over there is not good; he is gnomish in the mind Be careful with him, he is not human in the heart But a mermaid of Yoruba poetry, just like Thespis of Greece Even the pecuniary psychopomp of Sweden gave him an accolade His heart is selfishly full of avarice; he wants everything for himself, Don’t recite him any of your poetry, lest he spells an abyss Against your juvenile poetic talent, he will fool you with a gift; A white sheep or a scarlet goat for your birth day anniversary Please don’t take it or anything else from him, as nothing from him is genuine But only machinations of evil spell aimed at mahyeming your talent Finally to decimate your girlhood and life, this is my caution For you dear little African girl. Listen my dear little daughter, to my second song of caution That short man in a Muslim gear loafing yonder, is suspect The Muslim beret on his head is merely a smokescreen to aghastly behaviour He is in no way an avatar of god of love and humane piety He is a terrorist working with Boko Haram and Algaeda He is an Alshabab that is bombing young girls in Mombasa and Nairobi All over Kenya he has killed the young people; his long egret-white sari is not for holiness, It is merely a nefarious sanctum of grenades, other tools of work in terrorism trade His loudly prayers, body movements and pocket bursting monies are only a stunt To have you kidnapped into death conduit, once you goof to join his courts, His sanctimony is a total picaresque film, (s)heroes of terror the centerpiece And thus, this is my caution for you dear little African girl. Listen my dear daughter, to my third song of caution Those tourists thronging our streets are deadly *** pets, they also skulk **** Their handsome outlook is not a stamp to any good conscientiousness They derive pleasure from poverty and *** tourism; they yearn to see a girl in poverty, Often rarely will they help an African girl, out of milieu of beggarly squalorism, Instead they go straight for the purse between your thighs, Regardless of the legacy they leave out of this lewdness, they are showy, They regret not in their Byronic broadcast of *** and fatherless urchins in the poor streets Foundation for their further poverty tourism, this is my caution for you dear little African girl.
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36
sweet Kali stands before us an offering she holds while all the skulls around her neck sleep in a child's repose there are many souls in limbo they wander through our sight seekers for salvation seeking for the light a universe lies waiting a red planet full of stars just beneath the lingham that rests in Kali's arms the dogs lie waiting patiently while Ganesh begins to writhe turning to a serpent that writhes before our eyes here's the minotaur from Jambu Dweep wrapped in a golden fleece telling stories in my head the tales of ancient Greece then Kali holds a severed head cradled gently in her hand while beneath the Shiva Lingham someone lies upon the sand.....
0
Jun 11, 2012
Jun 11, 2012 at 4:33 AM UTC
sweet Kali
Cloud that I float on, carry me to Peru send to me exotic birds, bearing gifts of aqua blue Lets take a detour through the mountains of Kandahar for it doesn't bother me if I come out with battle scars Oh please, oh please can we stop in Dharamsala I have some questions to ask His Holiness, the Dalai Lama Cloud, if its possible can we please time travel? I want to see how they built the pyramids from dirt, stone, and gravel Lets defy gravity, next stop Andromeda being 2 million light-years away we'll see scores of space phenomena Our next and final stop shall be a place called peace take me there, please cloud, but on the way lets visit Greece. -Bobbie Leigh
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Sep 29, 2014
Sep 29, 2014 at 1:50 PM UTC
Imaginary Traveler
A lot of people come here just to survive I'm **** lucky but I'm not better than anyone It's such a beautiful world It's such a fallen world I have this dream that I want to build a home for a lot of people and myself too I try to be happy and strong but I cover up so much fear that I don't know who I am so I'm really dangerous. France, Korea, Panama, Kenya, Greece it may sound nice and international but it's hard to feel accepted when things change so much I think family is really important especially siblings. Life is not a lie Life is not a fantasy Life is enough to pain you Life is so close to death Guard your entry points You influence them, they influence you You could bring voice to a community Whether you fail or not, you try The way you think needs to be heard. We make a fuss about the dying but what can we do for the dying? Be a neighbor Be a friend We can be easily broken. I have enough skeletons in my closet. In spite of the inequalities all of us are spiritual beings and the one thing that is equal is the value of everyone's soul Jesus is very straight: You want to come with me?  Come
0
Mar 4, 2013
Mar 4, 2013 at 9:03 PM UTC
Boarding School Roommate
* *"To have loved and learned in ancient Greece, And to say nothing more in the least."* *
0
Mar 11, 2017
Mar 11, 2017 at 8:30 PM UTC
The Republic
/ although i'd love to go back to the cinema of, bell, book & candle from the 1950s in early technicolour... can i? don't think so... trapped the rekindled narrative of myth... i wish i could, do the supra-capitalist, drunk at 5 in the afternoon, and still pulling the strings... early nostalgia of what was late nostalgia of what was 19th century german concerning ancient greece... i chose 17th century france... because? because... why could it ever be england as primo optio?! am i either that daft, or as much stiff for waiting for eddie zee theerd?! well? well done, you guessed my thinking: write a fictive narrative, it'll last longer, like a photograph. immigrant song, led zeppelin - probably the only grand theatre plus,           of thor: rangarok; i still don't know where those M16s came from...   and?       given they used a led zeppelin's song? i honestly, don't want to know. i was honestly going to favour a black sabbath oeuvre, using only solitude    by the witches' congregation ask, aspect, or subsequent, marketing ponce scheme.
0
Jul 24, 2018
Jul 24, 2018 at 12:50 AM UTC
modern cinema
Helen, thy beauty is to me Like those Nicean barks of yore, That gently, o’er a perfumed sea, The weary, wayworn wanderer bore To his own native shore. On desperate seas long wont to roam, Thy hyacinth hair, thy classic face, Thy Naiad airs have brought me home To the glory that was Greece, To the grandeur that was Rome. Lo! in yon brilliant window niche, How statue-like I see thee stand, The agate lamp within thy hand! Ah, Psyche, from the regions which Are Holy Land!
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3.6k
To Helen (II)
A GLEAM -- a gleam -- from Ida's height, By the Fire-god sent, it came; From watch to watch it leapt, that light, As a rider rode the flame! It shot through the startled sky, And the torch of that blazing glory Old Lemnos caught on high, On its holy promontory, And sent it on, the jocund sign, To Athos, Mount of Jove divine. Wildly the while, it rose from the isle, So that the might of the journeying Light Skimmed over the back of the gleaming brine! Farther and faster speeds it on, Till the watch that keeps Macistus steep See it burst like a blazing Sun! Doth Macistus sleep On his tower-clad steep? No! rapid and red doth the wild fire sweep; It flashes afar on the wayward stream Of the wild Euripus, the rushing beam! It rouses the light on Messapion's height, And they feed its breath with the withered heath. But it may not stay! And away -- away -- It bounds in its freshening might. Silent and soon, Like a broadened moon, It passes in sheen, Asopus green, And bursts on Cithaeron gray! The warder wakes to the Signal-rays, And it swoops from the hill with a broader blaze. On, on the fiery Glory rode; Thy lonely lake, Gorgopis, glowed! To Megara's Mount it came; They feed it again And it streams amain-- A giant beard of Flame! The headland cliffs that darkly down O'er the Saronic waters frown, Are passed with the Swift One's lurid stride, And the huge rock glares on the glaring tide. With mightier march and fiercer power It gained Arachne's neighboring tower; Thence on our Argive roof its rest it won, Of Ida's fire the long-descended Son! Bright Harbinger of glory and of joy! So first and last with equal honor crowned, In solemn feasts the race-torch circles round. -- And these my heralds! -- this my SIGN OF PEACE; Lo! while we breathe, the victor lords of Greece Stalk, in stern tumult, through the halls of Troy!
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3.7k
The Beacon Fires
A GLEAM -- a gleam -- from Ida's height, By the Fire-god sent, it came; From watch to watch it leapt, that light, As a rider rode the flame! It shot through the startled sky, And the torch of that blazing glory Old Lemnos caught on high, On its holy promontory, And sent it on, the jocund sign, To Athos, Mount of Jove divine. Wildly the while, it rose from the isle, So that the might of the journeying Light Skimmed over the back of the gleaming brine! Farther and faster speeds it on, Till the watch that keeps Macistus steep See it burst like a blazing Sun! Doth Macistus sleep On his tower-clad steep? No! rapid and red doth the wild fire sweep; It flashes afar on the wayward stream Of the wild Euripus, the rushing beam! It rouses the light on Messapion's height, And they feed its breath with the withered heath. But it may not stay! And away -- away -- It bounds in its freshening might. Silent and soon, Like a broadened moon, It passes in sheen, Asopus green, And bursts on Cithaeron gray! The warder wakes to the Signal-rays, And it swoops from the hill with a broader blaze. On, on the fiery Glory rode; Thy lonely lake, Gorgopis, glowed! To Megara's Mount it came; They feed it again And it streams amain-- A giant beard of Flame! The headland cliffs that darkly down O'er the Saronic waters frown, Are passed with the Swift One's lurid stride, And the huge rock glares on the glaring tide. With mightier march and fiercer power It gained Arachne's neighboring tower; Thence on our Argive roof its rest it won, Of Ida's fire the long-descended Son! Bright Harbinger of glory and of joy! So first and last with equal honor crowned, In solemn feasts the race-torch circles round. -- And these my heralds! -- this my SIGN OF PEACE; Lo! while we breathe, the victor lords of Greece Stalk, in stern tumult, through the halls of Troy!
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52
When my aching heart ached in excess, I sought out to sleep, dream, escape. I found myself in the land of the philosophers; Greece. But perhaps it looked nothing like Greece, for I haven’t visited the country to ever know. But upon its heavenly resemblance, I was washed ashore. I remember the sand as soft ivory, dancing under my feet. But pay no attention to the sand, for something else had already caught me. The sky. God in disguise, I tell you. Wrapped in the wildest hue of violet, with the drape’s silky edges tucked into the horizon. The color was deep and passionate in every way, it intoxicated the evening with its romantic cologne. And upon that sky, lie God’s silver angels. The stars constantly winked, praising the earth, in repetitive bangles. But not alone. The moon was its fullest on that night, and so it wasted no time, it beamed in bravado, the strangest white. I sat quietly, listening to Greece sing its gentle yet enigmatic song, silently wishing that this is no fantasy, and that I am not wrong.
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Apr 1, 2014
Apr 1, 2014 at 7:59 PM UTC
The Violet Evening
FORGET THE FAIRYTALES Leafes believe the fairytales of the wind And blows away Remember to forget the fairytales Waves believe the fairytales of the land And loose the sea Remember to forget the fairytales Fairies believe the fairytales of the moon And loose their winds Remember to forget the fairytales Desert believe the fairytales of the shadow and become illusion Remember to forget the fairytales Sky believe the fairytales of the earth And loose the sun Remember to forget the fairytales Books believe the fairytales of the truth And loose their language Remember to forget the fairytales Childrens believe the fairytales of the adults and loose their childhood Remember to forget the fairytales. CHRISTOS HARATSARIS POET ATHENS-GREECE
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Sep 30, 2017
Sep 30, 2017 at 9:27 AM UTC
FORGET THE FAIRYTALES
Kimos, son of Menedoros, a young Greek-Italian, devotes his life to amusing himself, like most young men in Greater Greece brought up in the lap of luxury. But today, in spite of his nature, he is preoccupied, dejected. Near the shore he watched, deeply distressed, as they unload ships with ***** taken from the Peloponnese. G r e e k l o o t: b o o t y f r o m C o r i n t h. Today certainly it is not right, it is not possible for the young Greek-Italian to want to amuse himself in any way.
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3.5k
On An Italian Shore
August nine, I met the girl of mine. Rejection is my fear, don't know how you got me my dear I'm such a dork and failure to others not hopeless but giving in She gave me open doors and let me in. With you my heart runs like a roller-coaster wheel, I swear this is real. We have so much in common, will marry me in London? But she loves to go to Greece I'm falling in love with such ease, You're the only cure to my disease. Will you be my girl please?
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Feb 15, 2015
Feb 15, 2015 at 8:56 AM UTC
Poem for a Cherry Blossom
"She did the laundry in the mirror of me I saw myself in the mirror and disagreed with the smell, The thought of you was beautiful, but I was wrong, and a feeling of discontent -ment came over me," Misspellings Mispronunciations An unconquerable world of big money I parted ways with the large and saw another even larger world, One that was intelligent and reads the Wall Street Journal, listens to NPR, and says "wow" at the sound of hearing one million dollars, or upon hearing about San Francisco start-ups, or Silicon Valley. Or the opposite, in some ways, but still very similar to - Virginia Woolf. whose book on feminism which I'm unable to explain fully other than to say that she suggests that women only need a bedroom, money, clothes, etc., or rather, less than etc. in that, they need little, but only the bare supplies. That they should be able to supply themselves with what they need for when their husband, which, you know, is not required, in her eyes, for when he separates from her and leaves her 'in the dust,' alone without anything, perhaps only with a child, or in another instance, estate-less, with only a white dress, really more of kitchen-robe than anything else; like Virginia Woolf says, we should really try and dismantle the patriarchy that we write and tell about. Reader, what do you after reading a story, article, or book on radical or moderate feminism say? The boys, like me, who will tell, or, try to tell their perspective of the book and say to the closest person around them, "I just read a great book by Virginia Woolf, she brings to mind an image of a university with white buildings and ends of roofs of university buildings leading along to the the main hall of architecture buildings, with sidewalks pristine and underneath people walking in their sweaters, collegiate, and later to make their way to art history classes in the fall evening. So, like Virginia Woolf, who makes you ask why you're not at the Parthenon, but instead are inside of your house, in a city that you don't want to be in, at a hospital, in your apartment, or surrounded by whoever, she nevertheless gives you have a feeling of longing-ness and a strong emotion of want. Virginia Woolf when will we go to Greece together? What do you know about Athens and classical architecture, I nearly beg you. December 30th 2018 7:11am
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Dec 31, 2018
Dec 31, 2018 at 9:51 PM UTC
Virginia Woolf
"She did the laundry in the mirror of me I saw myself in the mirror and disagreed with the smell, The thought of you was beautiful, but I was wrong, and a feeling of discontent -ment came over me," Misspellings Mispronunciations An unconquerable world of big money I parted ways with the large and saw another even larger world, One that was intelligent and reads the Wall Street Journal, listens to NPR, and says "wow" at the sound of hearing one million dollars, or upon hearing about San Francisco start-ups, or Silicon Valley. Or the opposite, in some ways, but still very similar to - Virginia Woolf. whose book on feminism which I'm unable to explain fully other than to say that she suggests that women only need a bedroom, money, clothes, etc., or rather, less than etc. in that, they need little, but only the bare supplies. That they should be able to supply themselves with what they need for when their husband, which, you know, is not required, in her eyes, for when he separates from her and leaves her 'in the dust,' alone without anything, perhaps only with a child, or in another instance, estate-less, with only a white dress, really more of kitchen-robe than anything else; like Virginia Woolf says, we should really try and dismantle the patriarchy that we write and tell about. Reader, what do you after reading a story, article, or book on radical or moderate feminism say? The boys, like me, who will tell, or, try to tell their perspective of the book and say to the closest person around them, "I just read a great book by Virginia Woolf, she brings to mind an image of a university with white buildings and ends of roofs of university buildings leading along to the the main hall of architecture buildings, with sidewalks pristine and underneath people walking in their sweaters, collegiate, and later to make their way to art history classes in the fall evening. So, like Virginia Woolf, who makes you ask why you're not at the Parthenon, but instead are inside of your house, in a city that you don't want to be in, at a hospital, in your apartment, or surrounded by whoever, she nevertheless gives you have a feeling of longing-ness and a strong emotion of want. Virginia Woolf when will we go to Greece together? What do you know about Athens and classical architecture, I nearly beg you. December 30th 2018 7:11am
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41
Hush! Listen do you hear the silence above the roar of life? Hush! Do you hear your heart beating to your life's song? Hush! Do you see the sky above blanketing and comforting? Hush! Do you feel the world spinning around? With you standing still upon it? Hush! Sshhhh! Quiet. Listen to the flow of earth's blood in her rivers and streams, feel her warmth from the sun like an adoring parental gaze. Touch her thrumming life in her growing forests, see her wonders created for us her children. Hear her lullaby before she is muted, choked, buried alive by us, with our waste, our destruction, deforestation, over fishing, hunting. ****** the fruitful earth 'til she our mother is barren and useless. Mother Earth is weeping and above the roar of our selfish modern sound, we do not hear her crying, or see her tears silently falling. Falling onto selfish mankind. Gaia that great mother to all, giver of birth to earth and it's universe is a woman reclining upon the earth surrounded by a host of jealous warring infant adults the fruits of her labours. Oaths sworn in the name of Gaia, in ancient Greece, were considered the most binding of all.
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Sep 9, 2014
Sep 9, 2014 at 12:09 PM UTC
Gaia
So falls Greece, so falls Rome, And in their bone-lipped tombs Forever those still listening for love.
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Jan 10, 2022
Jan 10, 2022 at 2:00 PM UTC
Bone-lipped Love
We have a small sculpture of Henry James on our terrace in New York City. Nothing would surprise him. The beast in the jungle was what he saw-- Edith Wharton's obfuscating older brother. . . He fled the demons of Manhattan for fear they would devour his inner ones (the ones who wrote the books) & silence the stifled screams of his protagonists. To Europe like a wandering Jew-- WASP that he was-- but with the Jew's outsider's hunger. . . face pressed up to the glass of *** refusing every passion but the passion to write the words grew more & more complex & convoluted until they utterly imprisoned him in their fairytale brambles. Language for me is meant to be a transparency, clear water gleaming under a covered bridge. . . I love his spiritual sister because she snatched clarity from her murky history. Tormented New Yorkers both, but she journeyed to the heart of light-- did he? She took her friends on one last voyage, through the isles of Greece on a yacht chartered with her royalties-- a rich girl proud to be making her own money. The light of the Middle Sea was what she sought. All denizens of this demonic city caught between pitch and black long for the light. But she found it in a few of her books. . . while Henry James discovered what he had probably started with: that beast, that jungle, that solipsistic scream. He did not join her on that final cruise. (He was on his own final cruise). Did he want to? I would wager yes. I look back with love and sorrow at them both-- dear teachers-- but she shines like Miss Liberty to Emma Lazarus' hordes, while he gazes within, always, at his own impenetrable jungle.
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3.2k
Henry James in the Heart of the City
We have a small sculpture of Henry James on our terrace in New York City. Nothing would surprise him. The beast in the jungle was what he saw-- Edith Wharton's obfuscating older brother. . . He fled the demons of Manhattan for fear they would devour his inner ones (the ones who wrote the books) & silence the stifled screams of his protagonists. To Europe like a wandering Jew-- WASP that he was-- but with the Jew's outsider's hunger. . . face pressed up to the glass of *** refusing every passion but the passion to write the words grew more & more complex & convoluted until they utterly imprisoned him in their fairytale brambles. Language for me is meant to be a transparency, clear water gleaming under a covered bridge. . . I love his spiritual sister because she snatched clarity from her murky history. Tormented New Yorkers both, but she journeyed to the heart of light-- did he? She took her friends on one last voyage, through the isles of Greece on a yacht chartered with her royalties-- a rich girl proud to be making her own money. The light of the Middle Sea was what she sought. All denizens of this demonic city caught between pitch and black long for the light. But she found it in a few of her books. . . while Henry James discovered what he had probably started with: that beast, that jungle, that solipsistic scream. He did not join her on that final cruise. (He was on his own final cruise). Did he want to? I would wager yes. I look back with love and sorrow at them both-- dear teachers-- but she shines like Miss Liberty to Emma Lazarus' hordes, while he gazes within, always, at his own impenetrable jungle.
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68