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"keats" poems
I’m no author, novelist or poet. I’m just Me, And don’t I know it. I don’t need to be classified, As long as I’m writing, I’m satisfied. Typing out words, line by line, I don’t care if they don’t rhyme. I don’t care if my verses don’t scan: I’m not always an Iambic Man. I just say what I gotta say, I’m not worried about any pay. Words come to me without much bidding, The world of its evils I hope to be ridding. I love to spread lots and lots of Love, Bringing peace to all like a messenger dove. Things of beauty bring joy, John Keats rightly said, To make us sleep easy when we go to bed. So I’ll paint what I paint, And sing what I sing, Just letting those words Do their magical thing. Paul Butters
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Nov 15, 2015
Nov 15, 2015 at 4:54 AM UTC
Me, Paul Butters
I feel like I am neurologically deficient That a lot of my brain cells are missing Like a punch drunk doped up punk boxer A pimply muscle bound ***** on steroids Hanging out at my old high school locker No shocker that I am no medical doctor But I always thought I’d be just a bit better I guess on average I am a little bit smarter But the bar is set so low that it requires Very little to grow and go over it, you know In comparison to the other young men I may be grandstanding and one upping them But when it comes to grand scheme of things When compared to past people Who shared my glorious dreams Like Percy Shelley and John Keats Like Ginsburg and the other Beats I think I am drifting of course just a bit Lest we all forget the **** cut the crap to fit in it Maybe I’m okay few travel this way anyways So who’s to say if I’m doing it the wrong or the right way But I still feel like my brain needs a chemical treatment A diet with more nutrients and sufficient Supplements Because I’m feeling neurologically deficient
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May 24, 2015
May 24, 2015 at 4:19 PM UTC
Feeling Deficiant
Season of sun and sand and sea, Holiday time for you and me. Daylight right ‘til ten o’clock, Don’t forget to wear sun-block. Sitting idly reading Keats, Watching kids with buckets and spades; Sparrows with their frantic tweets, Flying high above the glades. Oh it’s great to be so free, No more snow or ice for me. Even mugginess is okay, So long as it’s warm throughout the day. Swimming in that so cool pool, Sure beats sweating back in school. Summer is my favourite month, Whoops my rhyme-scheme just went Whoomph! Nothing rhymes with month you know, But let’s forget about that snow. Let’s laze instead on lawn or beach, And keep a beer within our reach. Paul Butters
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Aug 15, 2015
Aug 15, 2015 at 9:29 AM UTC
Ode to Summer
I watch the prom Dance, In an awkward stance, my friends walk in with dates, and the excitement Abates. Alone in a corner, I mope like a mourner, With no partner to dance with, No gentleman to prance with. Amidst the mirth and cheers, My eyes fill up with tears. I rush out into the open air, And by Jove! I see Voltaire! With his satirical charms, He draws me in his arms. As I sway to the beats, I'm waltzing with Keats. Causing my funny bone to arouse, Enters P.G.  Wodehouse! Using nonchalant wittiness, He acknowledges my prettiness. And then walks in Shakespeare, Who  wipes away my tear, And my senses curdle like curds, As he showers me with words. While I repress the excited child, I'm swaying with Oscar Wilde. I'm rendered helplessly mute, With his phrases so astute. With a proposal so verse-y, I'm serenaded by Shelly  B. Percy. And before this fantasy can spoil, I fox trot with  Conan Doyle. And thus literally seduced, into putty I'm reduced. I am platonic-ally smitten, By the genius of what they've written. The dating circus can’t make me cry, because a host of paramours have I.
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Jul 3, 2014
Jul 3, 2014 at 3:20 AM UTC
Literary Seduction
A garden in a garden: a green spot Where all is green: most fitting slumber-place For the strong man grown weary of a race Soon over. Unto him a goodly lot Hath fallen in fertile ground; there thorns are not, But his own daisies: silence, full of grace, Surely hath shed a quiet on his face: His earth is but sweet leaves that fall and rot. What was his record of himself, ere he Went from us ? Here lies one whose name was writ In water: while the chilly shadows flit Of sweet Saint Agnes' Eve; while basil springs, His name, in every humble heart that sings, Shall be a fountain of love, verily.
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On Keats
I wish you detox from drunken heights, I’m jesus for today until my current shift ends and the next one begins, after many nights, in the garden centre of fallen south coast eden. Shine shine shine Light of mine For now everything’s just fine People’s faces glitter as I go by, memories of sinless youth, for my hands blind with nostalgia, that my being resurrects. The child Lazarus scurries past my side, to his home with his future in his hands, in my hands, cupped wide. Shine shine shine Light of mine For now everything’s just fine I can love the unfortunate, for my fortune is golden. Delivered in letters from North, West, East. My trinity circle who join me at my supper, breaking the garlic bread and sipping the borello, to top crab ravioli baptised in the stream of sauce. Shine shine shine Light of mine For now everything’s just fine The gates of heaven are open, unblocked by the deaths of Keats, Shelley and Williams, their souls not blocking the exit with an Underground Queue. I give my blessings to Livingstone and Charles Gordon The one native he changed and the others’ sacrifice at Khartoum Gained me my crown to modestly flaunt. Shine shine shine Light of mine For now everything’s just fine I float down the hall, to His Mighty Voice, as my gold becomes a donation on the alter, to gain the choral hymns of Mercury gilded rock gods that will brighten my days for now, oh glorious moments. Amen.
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Aug 22, 2018
Aug 22, 2018 at 12:22 PM UTC
The Messiah In Miss Hart's Class.
I know, you never intended to be in this world.     But you’re in it all the same.     So why not get started immediately.     I mean, belonging to it.     There is so much to admire, to weep over.     And to write music or poems about.     Bless the feet that take you to and fro.     Bless the eyes and the listening ears.     Bless the tongue, the marvel of taste.     Bless touching.     You could live a hundred years, it’s happened.     Or not.     I am speaking from the fortunate platform     of many years,     none of which, I think, I ever wasted.     Do you need a ****     Do you need a little darkness to get you going?     Let me be as urgent as a knife, then,     and remind you of Keats,     so single of purpose and thinking, for a while,     he had a lifetime. Mary Oliver
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Feb 10, 2015
Feb 10, 2015 at 2:08 AM UTC
The Fourth Sign of the Zodiac (part 3) by Mary Oliver
It's an old question. Pilate asked. Keats told us. It's what we believe. A lie is truth. Some lies may coincide With my truth, But never quite the same. There's always a bit of truth In every line.
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Jun 17, 2015
Jun 17, 2015 at 7:42 AM UTC
Truth Be Told
JOHN KEATS’ LAST POEM WRITTEN IN ROME ON 21st February 1821* (From The Imagination Of The Writer) I am fading, fading fast, Fanny, my love eternal Far away from you and home I am dying, the hours I am counting In what I liken to my grave that is Rome. All that I seek in this dark loneliness is solace Moments of respite thinking Of you and our past exchanges of affection Dissolved by fate with our hopes descending Unto the oblivion that had been pre-ordained Tears are comfortless and what is to come Is but this pain that seared love must bear unknown Only self-felt and suffered without end that renders my heart totally numb. I can’t understand and it defies reason The human heart should bear so much pain While the tranquil stars hold so steadfast and the song Of the nightingale drifts so sublimely in every sweet refrain. Youth once gaily clothed in such beauty but now Grows spectre-thin and here is but fret and fever Where the old and infirm hang their heads down In tearful reminiscences of happy days that have fled forever. And now, my ***** my only love, you alone in this The saddest schemes of things should share This my life so wretched , lost, unfulfilled and joy-bereft I beg forgiveness, only remember my poems—sorrow let us silently bear. John Keats one of the greatest English romantic poets died on 23rd February 1821 in Rome, aged twenty-five
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Sep 3, 2015
Sep 3, 2015 at 8:12 PM UTC
JOHN KEATS’ LAST POEM WRITTEN IN ROME ON 21st February 1821* (From The Imagination Of The Writer)
Rural fairies with their soft hands plant the corn To make the black earth green And turn it into a delightful scene The green corn turns yellow in the morn The corn sprouts from the earth Like Jesus gets eternal re-birth The farm becomes greenery I wonder at nature’s nice scenery The earth becomes a green carpet And becomes astonishingly beautiful to look at Plantation of corn is nature’s great citation It becomes a golden carpet in rotation I wonder at the beauty of plantation It is more beautiful than Keats’ quotation More enjoyable than any musical sensation I think it’s God’s mysterious revelation
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Jan 29, 2011
Jan 29, 2011 at 5:28 AM UTC
RURAL FAIRIES' PLANTATION
I feel bad for women who date online. There are good men in this world, I swear. Not every man who walks the earth wastes his breath and your time, with cro-magnon scribbles from a mind so bare, that it comes as a surprise they managed even to write one line, much less something so cerebral as this:                               "Yo, prety gurl. Liek yur pic,                                 I so >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>                                Wanna see mah **** So deep, right? What Socratic genius might have penned such lines? Surely not even Shakespeare or Keats could craft words so divine! I am so sorry, women who date online. Truly, I'm sorry, on behalf of mankind
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Feb 5, 2015
Feb 5, 2015 at 1:21 AM UTC
Online Dating
A lake as still as still — a cloudless sky — A bird-less forest — silent as the page, That monk-like sits reflecting for an age On pious deeds exalted upon high, The page gilded in wisdom, lauded by Its maker’s peers, wherein is set the stage For Nature’s bountied beauty — I give homage Unto its gifted craftsman, one that I Have oft’ with envious eyes admired afar, And matchless to his art, have grasped for skill Far far above my grade — From him to me Has come a gift as bright as Keats' Bright Star —         Unto thy lake, may this stone rend the still,         And loose thy songbird skywards, Timothy.
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Sep 24, 2018
Sep 24, 2018 at 3:14 AM UTC
Ode to Thee
…These men are worth your tears: You are not worth their merriment. -Wilfred Owen, “Apologia Pro Poemate Meo” When that loudmouth on the wireless machine Alludes to Western Civilization What does he mean? Paradise Lost? Probably not Nor Saint Paul speaking on the Field of Mars The Kalevala, Hagia Sophia With its pendentives lifting up our prayers Horatius fighting to defend his bridge And Wilfred Owen dying bravely on his Lord Tennyson and Idylls of the King Chapultepec, Henry V, Becket The paratroops at Arnhem, Saint Thomas More, His King’s loyal servant, but God’s first The Stray Dog poets of Saint Petersburg The brave last stand of Roland at Roncesvalles Lewis and Tolkien and glasses of beer Montcalm and Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham Hildegard von Bingen, Siegfried and the Rhine Magna Carta, HMS Hood, the Thames The Grove of Daphne, “The Old Rugged Cross” Beatrix Potter and her little pet rabbit El Cid, Anne Frank, John Keats, Saint Benedict “I Have a Dream,” Dostoyevsky, and Greene Viktor Frankl, Dag Hammarkskjold, and Proust Good Chaucer’s naughty pilgrims telling tales The Gettysburg Address, Willie and Joe Stern Saint Augustine of North Africa Wodehouse writing a jolly bit of fun Saint Corbinian and Bavaria The ancient glories of Byzantium Pius XII contra the bombs and lies The 602nd TD Battalion Saint Joan, the Prado, and Robert Frost And far, far more. When that loudmouth on the wireless machine Alludes to Western Civilization What does he mean?
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Nov 4, 2018
Nov 4, 2018 at 4:06 PM UTC
Western Civilization and Radio Static
…These men are worth your tears: You are not worth their merriment. -Wilfred Owen, “Apologia Pro Poemate Meo” When that loudmouth on the wireless machine Alludes to Western Civilization What does he mean? Paradise Lost? Probably not Nor Saint Paul speaking on the Field of Mars The Kalevala, Hagia Sophia With its pendentives lifting up our prayers Horatius fighting to defend his bridge And Wilfred Owen dying bravely on his Lord Tennyson and Idylls of the King Chapultepec, Henry V, Becket The paratroops at Arnhem, Saint Thomas More, His King’s loyal servant, but God’s first The Stray Dog poets of Saint Petersburg The brave last stand of Roland at Roncesvalles Lewis and Tolkien and glasses of beer Montcalm and Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham Hildegard von Bingen, Siegfried and the Rhine Magna Carta, HMS Hood, the Thames The Grove of Daphne, “The Old Rugged Cross” Beatrix Potter and her little pet rabbit El Cid, Anne Frank, John Keats, Saint Benedict “I Have a Dream,” Dostoyevsky, and Greene Viktor Frankl, Dag Hammarkskjold, and Proust Good Chaucer’s naughty pilgrims telling tales The Gettysburg Address, Willie and Joe Stern Saint Augustine of North Africa Wodehouse writing a jolly bit of fun Saint Corbinian and Bavaria The ancient glories of Byzantium Pius XII contra the bombs and lies The 602nd TD Battalion Saint Joan, the Prado, and Robert Frost And far, far more. When that loudmouth on the wireless machine Alludes to Western Civilization What does he mean?
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(Solitary Chamber. Heart breaking melodious music is flowing silently. Young Ren is looking pale, soliloquizing.) Young Ren: Sweet Flance! Can you hear me? I do know you can never see me now; But hear me --- my words at least! Feel my heart that hangs on nothing; Yet resting itself on my unrequited love. Hear me! Do hear me! Send thy spirit unto me awhile, And hearken my silent words. Dear Flance! Thou must be now with thy partner Breaking thy footprints with me once; Yet ne'er am I angry with thee. From him I should not take thee away; Yet listen unto me awhile. Dear Flance! I loved thee not at the very first sight Like Orlando and Rosalind --- Orlando was a wrestler, Rosalind was a fair lady. Their love began at an arena in a contest --- Rosalind in the guise of Ganymede, Their love passed thro' rustic lands Symbolizing the art of Nature, Their love stirred the young hearts With wonder and fancy. Sweet Flance! Romeo died of Juliet and Juliet of Romeo --- Breaking endurance to chaos. There was poison in their love. Dear Flance! Jealousy lingered in the fatal love Betwixt Othello and Desdemona, At night their love was born, At night their love was dead When blackened by the candle light. Dear Flance! Lysander loved Hermia And sought fanciful beings For their fanciful union. Dear Flance! Know you, Keats died of consumption? His love for ***** Brown was limitless, And so burst into tears. Oh! No! MY love for thee can never have comparisons. Sweet Flance! Blossomed my love for thee When thou wert young, When thou wert beautiful; Yet it's not of Romeo's, Of Othello's, Of Lysander's, Of Dante's, Of Keats', For they died of their love. My love for thee be unrequited; yet ineffable. You felt not my love; yet I cannot be Romeo. Know you? Romeo loved Juliet, Juliet loved Romeo, And so they died without love. Loved I thy heart, not thee? Love I thy heart, not thee? And so, We live in remembrance of each other. Dear Flance! Thou must be now living with thy partner Rejoicing in his presence. Can you think of me living myself. Rejoicing in my thoughts of you? Here am I in the air with wings waxed; Yet I'll not fall down to fragments. Know you? I am to lead my life myself, But with thoughts of you! For Loved I thee, still I love thee, Ever I'll love thee. (Young Ren sheds tears) Sweet Flance! My tears are not of my loneliness sans thee; But born of bliss within me with thoughts of you. (Curtain Falls)
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Dec 20, 2011
Dec 20, 2011 at 11:38 AM UTC
Dramatic Monologue Fragrant Thorns
(Solitary Chamber. Heart breaking melodious music is flowing silently. Young Ren is looking pale, soliloquizing.) Young Ren: Sweet Flance! Can you hear me? I do know you can never see me now; But hear me --- my words at least! Feel my heart that hangs on nothing; Yet resting itself on my unrequited love. Hear me! Do hear me! Send thy spirit unto me awhile, And hearken my silent words. Dear Flance! Thou must be now with thy partner Breaking thy footprints with me once; Yet ne'er am I angry with thee. From him I should not take thee away; Yet listen unto me awhile. Dear Flance! I loved thee not at the very first sight Like Orlando and Rosalind --- Orlando was a wrestler, Rosalind was a fair lady. Their love began at an arena in a contest --- Rosalind in the guise of Ganymede, Their love passed thro' rustic lands Symbolizing the art of Nature, Their love stirred the young hearts With wonder and fancy. Sweet Flance! Romeo died of Juliet and Juliet of Romeo --- Breaking endurance to chaos. There was poison in their love. Dear Flance! Jealousy lingered in the fatal love Betwixt Othello and Desdemona, At night their love was born, At night their love was dead When blackened by the candle light. Dear Flance! Lysander loved Hermia And sought fanciful beings For their fanciful union. Dear Flance! Know you, Keats died of consumption? His love for ***** Brown was limitless, And so burst into tears. Oh! No! MY love for thee can never have comparisons. Sweet Flance! Blossomed my love for thee When thou wert young, When thou wert beautiful; Yet it's not of Romeo's, Of Othello's, Of Lysander's, Of Dante's, Of Keats', For they died of their love. My love for thee be unrequited; yet ineffable. You felt not my love; yet I cannot be Romeo. Know you? Romeo loved Juliet, Juliet loved Romeo, And so they died without love. Loved I thy heart, not thee? Love I thy heart, not thee? And so, We live in remembrance of each other. Dear Flance! Thou must be now living with thy partner Rejoicing in his presence. Can you think of me living myself. Rejoicing in my thoughts of you? Here am I in the air with wings waxed; Yet I'll not fall down to fragments. Know you? I am to lead my life myself, But with thoughts of you! For Loved I thee, still I love thee, Ever I'll love thee. (Young Ren sheds tears) Sweet Flance! My tears are not of my loneliness sans thee; But born of bliss within me with thoughts of you. (Curtain Falls)
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for Dr. Ursula Goodenougth To better view the fairest the stars of Genesis, Keats or Kepler, the priests of vertical transcendence built towers over clouds - beyond the touch of worldly toil. Standing below in soiled boots, newer prophets citing the universal brotherhood of mitosis, chromosomes and DNA, urge a new transcendence spread on a horizontal plain where bridges are preferred to ladders. Muffled distant drums, beating somber warnings of poisoned waters and global heat, summon us down from our lofty towers of denial. Murmuring rhythms of forests and streams and all species of flora and fauna line out the same life beats as the engines in our chests. The God without is the God within - nestled within our nuclei. With global death within the grasp of our reckless finger tips, and bullet fever infesting our earthly villages, are we ready yet to yield a measure of our trust to the healing power of horizontal transcendence? May, 2007
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Jul 24, 2014
Jul 24, 2014 at 1:18 PM UTC
Horizontal Transcendence
I'm ****** off with Robert Frost And the guy who wrote Paradise Lost. I ain't happy with Aristotle, And especially John, the weird Apostle. Don't mention, please, Shelley or Keats, Blake, Byron or Yeats; Each and every one you see, (if you're ready for some truth) Took their themes from me. Don't look aghast, Don't tsk and titter, Their thievery's left me Mean and bitter. Just because they said it first, Doesn't mean I find it just. It doesn't give them ownership Of my themes and authorship. I write of Roads, Good and Evil, God and Satan, love and leaving. I know I'm internally bleating, But I can't abide this metric beating. Although they're merely dust and bones, They don't have the right to own All the great lines I have sown: The best laid plans of mice and men. (I said that before Robbie Burns). Let me make this poeticaly clear; ***If I was there, or he were here, I'd sue the *** of Will Shakespeare***.
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May 11, 2018
May 11, 2018 at 9:31 AM UTC
Robbie Burns Is a Plagiarist
I now delight In spite Of the might And the right Of classic tradition, In writing And reciting Straight ahead, Without let or omission, Just any little rhyme In any little time That runs in my head; Because, I’ve said, My rhymes no longer shall stand arrayed Like Prussian soldiers on parade That march, Stiff as starch, Foot to foot, Boot to boot, Blade to blade, Button to button, Cheeks and chops and chins like mutton. No! No! My rhymes must go Turn ’ee, twist ’ee, Twinkling, frosty, Will-o’-the-wisp-like, misty; Rhymes I will make Like Keats and Blake And Christina Rossetti, With run and ripple and shake. How pretty To take A merry little rhyme In a jolly little time And poke it, And choke it, Change it, arrange it, Straight-lace it, deface it, Pleat it with pleats, Sheet it with sheets Of empty conceits, And chop and chew, And hack and hew, And weld it into a uniform stanza, And evolve a neat, Complacent, complete, Academic extravaganza!
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Free Verse
I stood flat-footed upon an eroding hill Here the sweet peas, on tip-toe for a fight With wing of coarsest black o'er delicate night And spiteful fingers grasping at all beauty To bind us all in deeds unworthy Oh, toxic wind and fertile rain Disperse the fragrance of this pain In healing gardens root a seed Sprout the bliss we sorely need This tiny pulse of life we hold Thrives in soil tilled with love And tender vines create a bower Of sweet pea tended, brought to flower I stand bare foot on an erupting volcanic mount Here the sweet peas, on tip toe for a flight With wing of justice verity o’er delicate sight And nails that compassionately snowball serenity To bind us all with concord and altruism Oh, acidic rain share the tears Wash thy tainted eye-sight Then crux us in the high-yield land As we germinate to heaven’s height The seed so robust and fertile A shell encased with human forms The greenness of reflected sextile Oh Sweet pea, our mirrored storm *Inspired by a stanza from Keats' poem: I stood tip-toe upon a little hill Here are sweet peas, on tip-toe for a flight: With wing of gentle flush o’er delicate white, And taper fingers catching at all things, To bind them all about with tiny rings."*
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Jul 14, 2016
Jul 14, 2016 at 9:11 AM UTC
Sweet Peas (a collaboration featuring Sassy J)
Keats was twenty-four when he wrote, "To Autumn" then he died of tuberculosis when he was twenty-five. I will be twenty in twenty-six days. In one thousand, eight hundred, and fifty-two days, I will have outlived Keats' age. so it is then, that I will decide, if I am a has-been or never-was
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May 7, 2013
May 7, 2013 at 7:16 PM UTC
Keats
I scanned two lines with some surmise As over Keats I chanced to pore: 'And there I shut her wild, wild eyes With kisses four.' Says I: 'Why was it only four, Not five or six or seven? I think I would have made it more,-- Even eleven. 'Gee! If she'd lured a guy like me Into her gelid grot I'd make that Belle Dame sans Merci Sure kiss a lot. 'Them poets have their little tricks; I think John counted kisses for, Not two or three or five or six To rhyme with "sore."'
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What Kisses Had John Keats?
(for the unknown You) – Sweep up a mound of achievements; layer dogwood and newspaper beneath; find a small, secluded shoreline to sleep an endless sleep; shovel money (in at least twenty currencies), some status and fame onto the funeral pyre’s unremembering flame; write furiously with computer or pen, fill out the days’ whitespace with enthusiastic fantasy; revel on a fallacy (or three); win the gladiatorial games in the Corporate Arena; rediscover a bit of ancient folklore; set up nice altruistic societies to make orphans feel infinite; plant a little garden – give guidance in its growth; build four or five fine-but-small boats with richly decorated keels; fight for something worth believing, though I’m still unsure what that means… A(my) guess: lyricism and poetry and prose, musical composition, simply being kind and open; A suggestion(for You): lay Your hand on a patient’s slowing heart in a cancer ward, catch their tears with a jar and meditate on better things to do; give the old folks a laugh; steal the Elgin Marbles back for the Greeks, or, for the memory of ancient Greece; find where lay a psychopathic fascist’s bitter ashes and give them to the conspirators for closure; (for me) place letters on the graves of John Keats, Percy Shelley, Wystan Auden and William Yeats; rescind, abolish, annul, invalidate my station in God’s dysphoric, existential reverie; heap up beautiful words and send them off to sea inside a laptop on a cellophane-wrapped raft; (for both of us) think thoughts uplifting; smile thirty-three times a day (or more); plan for the future of ourselves and others; give just a bit of love to our mothers; sweep the kitchen and the city streets for free; by your garden plant a tree. Beyond these things for us to do, be proud-yet-humble, open-eyed and acquiescent; just accept; all things inanimate and animate, accept.
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Jul 4, 2012
Jul 4, 2012 at 7:58 AM UTC
Things to do
(for the unknown You) – Sweep up a mound of achievements; layer dogwood and newspaper beneath; find a small, secluded shoreline to sleep an endless sleep; shovel money (in at least twenty currencies), some status and fame onto the funeral pyre’s unremembering flame; write furiously with computer or pen, fill out the days’ whitespace with enthusiastic fantasy; revel on a fallacy (or three); win the gladiatorial games in the Corporate Arena; rediscover a bit of ancient folklore; set up nice altruistic societies to make orphans feel infinite; plant a little garden – give guidance in its growth; build four or five fine-but-small boats with richly decorated keels; fight for something worth believing, though I’m still unsure what that means… A(my) guess: lyricism and poetry and prose, musical composition, simply being kind and open; A suggestion(for You): lay Your hand on a patient’s slowing heart in a cancer ward, catch their tears with a jar and meditate on better things to do; give the old folks a laugh; steal the Elgin Marbles back for the Greeks, or, for the memory of ancient Greece; find where lay a psychopathic fascist’s bitter ashes and give them to the conspirators for closure; (for me) place letters on the graves of John Keats, Percy Shelley, Wystan Auden and William Yeats; rescind, abolish, annul, invalidate my station in God’s dysphoric, existential reverie; heap up beautiful words and send them off to sea inside a laptop on a cellophane-wrapped raft; (for both of us) think thoughts uplifting; smile thirty-three times a day (or more); plan for the future of ourselves and others; give just a bit of love to our mothers; sweep the kitchen and the city streets for free; by your garden plant a tree. Beyond these things for us to do, be proud-yet-humble, open-eyed and acquiescent; just accept; all things inanimate and animate, accept.
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These are the letters which Endymion wrote To one he loved in secret, and apart. And now the brawlers of the auction mart Bargain and bid for each poor blotted note, Ay! for each separate pulse of passion quote The merchant’s price. I think they love not art Who break the crystal of a poet’s heart That small and sickly eyes may glare and gloat. Is it not said that many years ago, In a far Eastern town, some soldiers ran With torches through the midnight, and began To wrangle for mean raiment, and to throw Dice for the garments of a wretched man, Not knowing the God’s wonder, or His woe?
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On The Sale By Auction Of Keats’ Love Letters