Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
"portico" poems
Through portico of my elegant house you stalk With your wild furies, disturbing garlands of fruit And the fabulous lutes and peacocks, rending the net Of all decorum which holds the whirlwind back. Now, rich order of walls is fallen; rooks croak Above the appalling ruin; in bleak light Of your stormy eye, magic takes flight Like a daunted witch, quitting castle when real days break. Fractured pillars frame prospects of rock; While you stand heroic in coat and tie, I sit Composed in Grecian tunic and psyche-knot, Rooted to your black look, the play turned tragic: Which such blight wrought on our bankrupt estate, What ceremony of words can patch the havoc?
0
6.7k
Conversation Among The Ruins
The third moon brought forth from the shadow dark. Gentle breeze freewheeled across the lakeshore. Windswept was the air, in peace night was marked- Unyielding stillness, blooming fairness more. Silky pastel cloth, gushing curtain soft. The window let in hushed waft soothing cool. Fixed firmly on shore with poles planted stiff, A pavilion meek light heartened the pool. By the portico was a tree bent down Whose white flowers bloomed lovely as a nymph. Its jagged branches, lumped of golden-brown, Delicately grown each emerald leaf. Underneath its shades were cheery plantlets; Pebbles hard and cold; red earth spongy ground; Flying whirly bugs, glittering bead lets. Fair maiden deferred, there then can be found. Pleasing to the eye, that dignified dress In white noble silk with fine needlecraft. Regal as she stood, just for a mistress. Mystic was her eyes, a soul was grafted. Filled with potent life in her burning stare. Profound as the deep, tranquil as it surge. One may glimpse straight to, utmost one can't bare. To its mysteries, one gave in and urged. Verdant her hair was, hearty as it shone. Longer than she was, white as the moonlight. In her neck are chains, beads and shells she owned. Varies in sizes, things that make her bright.
0
Oct 11, 2012
Oct 11, 2012 at 5:30 AM UTC
The Moon Goddess
Know this—I am well acquainted with the wolf, Well versed in his ways, his demeanor, His dispassionate relentlessness, His pitiless focus on hunt and hunted, His workaday disdain of pity. There are those who would laud the mythical Spartan lad Who hid the wolf beneath his cloak, Affecting some gallant stoicism As the beast consumed him without restraint, But I say to you that is a mere romantic fallacy, A wanton failure to apprehend the true moral. I have learned that there is no accommodation, No covenant to be reached with the wolf, And any attempt to do so is merely to invite destruction, And so I choose to engage him openly, without reservation, Rolling tail-over-teacup in the streets, Attempting to hold his jaws open with bare hands While those who find such battle unseemly and uncouth Jeer and hoot from porch and portico. No matter, for I will continue to meet the cur on my terms, For staid suffering in the hopes Of reaching some accord with the beast Is the not the act of the noble sage: It is the mock heroics of the coward, The sad acquiescence of the simpering fool.
0
Mar 20, 2018
Mar 20, 2018 at 2:02 PM UTC
A Variation On Edgar Lee Masters' "Dorcas Gustine"
Somewhat back from the village street Stands the old-fashioned country-seat. Across its antique portico Tall poplar-trees their shadows throw; And from its station in the hall An ancient timepiece says to all,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” Half-way up the stairs it stands, And points and beckons with its hands From its case of massive oak, Like a monk, who, under his cloak, Crosses himself, and sighs, alas! With sorrowful voice to all who pass,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” By day its voice is low and light; But in the silent dead of night, Distinct as a passing footstep’s fall, It echoes along the vacant hall, Along the ceiling, along the floor, And seems to say, at each chamber-door,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” Through days of sorrow and of mirth, Through days of death and days of birth, Through every swift vicissitude Of changeful time, unchanged it has stood, And as if, like God, it all things saw, It calmly repeats those words of awe,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” In that mansion used to be Free-hearted Hospitality; His great fires up the chimney roared; The stranger feasted at his board; But, like the skeleton at the feast, That warning timepiece never ceased,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” There groups of merry children played, There youths and maidens dreaming strayed; O precious hours! O golden prime, And affluence of love and time! Even as a miser counts his gold, Those hours the ancient timepiece told,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” From that chamber, clothed in white, The bride came forth on her wedding night; There, in that silent room below, The dead lay in his shroud of snow; And in the hush that followed the prayer, Was heard the old clock on the stair,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” All are scattered now and fled, Some are married, some are dead; And when I ask, with throbs of pain, “Ah! when shall they all meet again?” As in the days long since gone by, The ancient timepiece makes reply,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” Never here, forever there, Where all parting, pain, and care, And death, and time shall disappear,— Forever there, but never here! The horologe of Eternity Sayeth this incessantly,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!”
0
3.7k
The Old Clock On The Stairs
Somewhat back from the village street Stands the old-fashioned country-seat. Across its antique portico Tall poplar-trees their shadows throw; And from its station in the hall An ancient timepiece says to all,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” Half-way up the stairs it stands, And points and beckons with its hands From its case of massive oak, Like a monk, who, under his cloak, Crosses himself, and sighs, alas! With sorrowful voice to all who pass,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” By day its voice is low and light; But in the silent dead of night, Distinct as a passing footstep’s fall, It echoes along the vacant hall, Along the ceiling, along the floor, And seems to say, at each chamber-door,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” Through days of sorrow and of mirth, Through days of death and days of birth, Through every swift vicissitude Of changeful time, unchanged it has stood, And as if, like God, it all things saw, It calmly repeats those words of awe,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” In that mansion used to be Free-hearted Hospitality; His great fires up the chimney roared; The stranger feasted at his board; But, like the skeleton at the feast, That warning timepiece never ceased,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” There groups of merry children played, There youths and maidens dreaming strayed; O precious hours! O golden prime, And affluence of love and time! Even as a miser counts his gold, Those hours the ancient timepiece told,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” From that chamber, clothed in white, The bride came forth on her wedding night; There, in that silent room below, The dead lay in his shroud of snow; And in the hush that followed the prayer, Was heard the old clock on the stair,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” All are scattered now and fled, Some are married, some are dead; And when I ask, with throbs of pain, “Ah! when shall they all meet again?” As in the days long since gone by, The ancient timepiece makes reply,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!” Never here, forever there, Where all parting, pain, and care, And death, and time shall disappear,— Forever there, but never here! The horologe of Eternity Sayeth this incessantly,— “Forever—never! Never—forever!”
Continue reading...
72
Verdant eyes, translucent pearls speak in silent witness, wounds unfurl meaning revealed, interrupted girl. Safe in solidarity prolific eccentricity, the scandal of particularity. Pouting mouth grief - filled lips alluring, set sail a thousand ships; tempt me to leave harbor. Arousing euphoria as such, resistance, amity and distance amour sans touch her sense of humor transcends, appeasing the mind’s thirst a vogue sultana, seasoned swagger hair resplendent flame, alternating cool, black asymmetrical coiffure; nonconforming demure the renegade metaphor - singular for sure, no cure. Muted vanity, bathos piercing the jaded circumference of banality; pale protagonist servitude the sapient palaver of the urbane, covered patina of pretense, induced coercion, the commodity self appearing abased wearing lesions of lassitude. Artistic chattel - eminent domain preempting genius, subsidiary of consuming narcissism external locus of control; surrender to the tentative, fettered pendant, Venus in chains arrested visionary bane sterile savant, edifice of pain. The soubrette, dubious incarnation gravid ingénue of prevarication imperceptible venue - theatre of the absurd; withdrawn siren, solitude of necessity - skin - slender veil of shame, nearness loitering redemption; moments envisage the appointment with the soul; ambiguity eschews clarity awareness; ineluctable anxiety, imago - centric confession sacred pardon, seraphic venation intravenous textures presume, the tactile margins of liberty. Therapeutic retrieval, Sanguine, beneath the portico of individuation; Your smile I hear, recovered autonomy blessed emancipation, The scandal of particularity; peculiar treasure ironically captured film, canvas, prose profundity. Ciphering as an ambling book, I peruse you, rendered captive hypnotic avant-garde fiction, spectator of denuded opacity analogous reflection, I Mirror you. A modest proposal - pontificate the imperative, forgo the disposal, adapt your narrative, the scandal of particularity - resonate the echo, cogitate our propinquity Love, imagination and destiny. ©2008 & 2011 W.S Warner
0
Sep 9, 2011
Sep 9, 2011 at 1:20 AM UTC
The Scandal of Particularity
Verdant eyes, translucent pearls speak in silent witness, wounds unfurl meaning revealed, interrupted girl. Safe in solidarity prolific eccentricity, the scandal of particularity. Pouting mouth grief - filled lips alluring, set sail a thousand ships; tempt me to leave harbor. Arousing euphoria as such, resistance, amity and distance amour sans touch her sense of humor transcends, appeasing the mind’s thirst a vogue sultana, seasoned swagger hair resplendent flame, alternating cool, black asymmetrical coiffure; nonconforming demure the renegade metaphor - singular for sure, no cure. Muted vanity, bathos piercing the jaded circumference of banality; pale protagonist servitude the sapient palaver of the urbane, covered patina of pretense, induced coercion, the commodity self appearing abased wearing lesions of lassitude. Artistic chattel - eminent domain preempting genius, subsidiary of consuming narcissism external locus of control; surrender to the tentative, fettered pendant, Venus in chains arrested visionary bane sterile savant, edifice of pain. The soubrette, dubious incarnation gravid ingénue of prevarication imperceptible venue - theatre of the absurd; withdrawn siren, solitude of necessity - skin - slender veil of shame, nearness loitering redemption; moments envisage the appointment with the soul; ambiguity eschews clarity awareness; ineluctable anxiety, imago - centric confession sacred pardon, seraphic venation intravenous textures presume, the tactile margins of liberty. Therapeutic retrieval, Sanguine, beneath the portico of individuation; Your smile I hear, recovered autonomy blessed emancipation, The scandal of particularity; peculiar treasure ironically captured film, canvas, prose profundity. Ciphering as an ambling book, I peruse you, rendered captive hypnotic avant-garde fiction, spectator of denuded opacity analogous reflection, I Mirror you. A modest proposal - pontificate the imperative, forgo the disposal, adapt your narrative, the scandal of particularity - resonate the echo, cogitate our propinquity Love, imagination and destiny. ©2008 & 2011 W.S Warner
Continue reading...
82
289 I know some lonely Houses off the Road A Robber’d like the look of— Wooden barred, And Windows hanging low, Inviting to— A Portico, Where two could creep— One—hand the Tools— The other peep— To make sure All’s Asleep— Old fashioned eyes— Not easy to surprise! How orderly the Kitchen’d look, by night, With just a Clock— But they could gag the Tick— And Mice won’t bark— And so the Walls—don’t tell— None—will— A pair of Spectacles ajar just stir— An Almanac’s aware— Was it the Mat—winked, Or a Nervous Star? The Moon—slides down the stair, To see who’s there! There’s plunder—where— Tankard, or Spoon— Earring—or Stone— A Watch—Some Ancient Brooch To match the Grandmama— Staid sleeping—there— Day—rattles—too Stealth’s—slow— The Sun has got as far As the third Sycamore— Screams Chanticleer “Who’s there”? And Echoes—Trains away, Sneer—”Where”! While the old Couple, just astir, Fancy the Sunrise—left the door ajar!
0
3k
I know some lonely Houses off the Road
Wicked nether-land. Nether world, white, askance. Capitulating mangroves, verdant trees spliced with hyperbole, onomatopoeia, and manilla envelopes; her world is stuffed with secrets, she listens to gorillas cracking mussels a kilometer away, near a rill. Never she thought. Nothing that could provide....providence. Mangled heliographs sprayed all over the everywhereworld. "Don't be S.A.F.E.," she whispered. A bouquet of gorse, cistus, and pimpernels squished in her small fingers. She climbed her way through the pedimented stairway, then collapsing on the porch. Legs spent, and spread out upon the desiccate grayed four by four planks of the portico. And as time elapses, the shuttering shake of the hemlock, which writhes through her skinny nimble dactyls, upwards straining the heart as its toxic bends appendages- crisp cerise lumens bend on the Titanium White walls, where only shadows bend time. The hour, still nine. Every adornment, furnished with red and its hues. Not purple, periwinkle, or any masked enhancement. These are the symbols that reticulate splines, that curve temperatures, perverse hemispheres and debunk worlds. Upped antes, verbs that terns flirt worth, birth words. Ooh. Aah. Camera. The forest wraps her in its verdant pasture, where at last the moribund tamarisks disperse. While at the plateau she is quiet and longing. Arms astride, dangling. Vaunt with highs and bliss- a kiss of withstanding pleasure serves her the cure for a lifetime of whining. This, yesterday where her body rattled through crooked vines. Square ships toasting her vocal melancholy in the sweet-waters of Time. So that all of her ripened limbs could grow, no more sheepishly than the magic she knew as a child. Stress free. First among the Earth-words, verbed-up and made jealous by pronouns that encompassed her joy-brimming hide. Closing down her voice and hugging her from behind.
0
Apr 26, 2014
Apr 26, 2014 at 4:44 AM UTC
Vesper: A Dream of Boxed Jellies
Wicked nether-land. Nether world, white, askance. Capitulating mangroves, verdant trees spliced with hyperbole, onomatopoeia, and manilla envelopes; her world is stuffed with secrets, she listens to gorillas cracking mussels a kilometer away, near a rill. Never she thought. Nothing that could provide....providence. Mangled heliographs sprayed all over the everywhereworld. "Don't be S.A.F.E.," she whispered. A bouquet of gorse, cistus, and pimpernels squished in her small fingers. She climbed her way through the pedimented stairway, then collapsing on the porch. Legs spent, and spread out upon the desiccate grayed four by four planks of the portico. And as time elapses, the shuttering shake of the hemlock, which writhes through her skinny nimble dactyls, upwards straining the heart as its toxic bends appendages- crisp cerise lumens bend on the Titanium White walls, where only shadows bend time. The hour, still nine. Every adornment, furnished with red and its hues. Not purple, periwinkle, or any masked enhancement. These are the symbols that reticulate splines, that curve temperatures, perverse hemispheres and debunk worlds. Upped antes, verbs that terns flirt worth, birth words. Ooh. Aah. Camera. The forest wraps her in its verdant pasture, where at last the moribund tamarisks disperse. While at the plateau she is quiet and longing. Arms astride, dangling. Vaunt with highs and bliss- a kiss of withstanding pleasure serves her the cure for a lifetime of whining. This, yesterday where her body rattled through crooked vines. Square ships toasting her vocal melancholy in the sweet-waters of Time. So that all of her ripened limbs could grow, no more sheepishly than the magic she knew as a child. Stress free. First among the Earth-words, verbed-up and made jealous by pronouns that encompassed her joy-brimming hide. Closing down her voice and hugging her from behind.
Continue reading...
5
Peace! God’s Peace upon you all! The Bishop blessed The dyed-young congregation: dyed fathers ‘n mothers, Grandpas ‘n grannies, great-grandpas and great-grannies. The demons of decadence--Hair dye, ****** and Spirits – Chuckled and giggled, crouching well under the pulpit. Dyed gurus ‘n financiers, dyed lawyers, doctors n’ nurses, ****** entrepreneurs and ****** entertainers, dyed judges Dyed ‘n spirited evangelists, priests and vergers on ****** Peace be upon thee all! Blessed the Bishop from the pulpit. Now, the demons in the hiding iterated and reiterated it. A Sunday spirited chat—all smiles! -- in the church portico: The Viagra-dyed banker in later life smiled a dyed smile At the elderly dyed mother of three; and she said: they say, In spite of my age, you know, I look so young and pretty! And the thick flanks under her chin jiggled in approbation. The ****** great-grandpa said to the dyed Justice of spirits: Milord, they say: “The stuff brings cancer;” Fools! Idiots! “The gloves—the condom-like device—that’s our safety!” “Milord! This trinity wizard, they bring a million crores To the exchequer of this famished democracy, milord!” “Milord! The nature lovers say, we wash billions of bottles Of these magic stuffs into their rivers and the seas, milord!” “They say we all-- dyed ****** men-- are sissies and doofuses!” “Milord! Our tubby women dye young, lest they’d be labelled Mammy, Granny, Grandma, Old Granny, the decrepit ‘n that! Now, the dyed media reported: father mated with his daughter, Mother with a teenager, grandpa with an infant; and Ministers, MLAs, MPs—all spirits-Viagra-dyed-- are in a ******* spree! Now the Dark Trinity cried “Wow! In this world of ****** The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory--all are ours! Amen!
0
Nov 27, 2013
Nov 27, 2013 at 11:20 AM UTC
BLESSINGS FROM THE DEMONS
Peace! God’s Peace upon you all! The Bishop blessed The dyed-young congregation: dyed fathers ‘n mothers, Grandpas ‘n grannies, great-grandpas and great-grannies. The demons of decadence--Hair dye, ****** and Spirits – Chuckled and giggled, crouching well under the pulpit. Dyed gurus ‘n financiers, dyed lawyers, doctors n’ nurses, ****** entrepreneurs and ****** entertainers, dyed judges Dyed ‘n spirited evangelists, priests and vergers on ****** Peace be upon thee all! Blessed the Bishop from the pulpit. Now, the demons in the hiding iterated and reiterated it. A Sunday spirited chat—all smiles! -- in the church portico: The Viagra-dyed banker in later life smiled a dyed smile At the elderly dyed mother of three; and she said: they say, In spite of my age, you know, I look so young and pretty! And the thick flanks under her chin jiggled in approbation. The ****** great-grandpa said to the dyed Justice of spirits: Milord, they say: “The stuff brings cancer;” Fools! Idiots! “The gloves—the condom-like device—that’s our safety!” “Milord! This trinity wizard, they bring a million crores To the exchequer of this famished democracy, milord!” “Milord! The nature lovers say, we wash billions of bottles Of these magic stuffs into their rivers and the seas, milord!” “They say we all-- dyed ****** men-- are sissies and doofuses!” “Milord! Our tubby women dye young, lest they’d be labelled Mammy, Granny, Grandma, Old Granny, the decrepit ‘n that! Now, the dyed media reported: father mated with his daughter, Mother with a teenager, grandpa with an infant; and Ministers, MLAs, MPs—all spirits-Viagra-dyed-- are in a ******* spree! Now the Dark Trinity cried “Wow! In this world of ****** The Kingdom, the Power and the Glory--all are ours! Amen!
Continue reading...
30
When she folds into me and weeps, The world of empty things falls into me Like the wetness of July in antiquated Rome, Mother of tears, Mater Lachrymarum, in Forum stone, The rain-addled veneers of Octavia’s portico. Gather up these black sickened bellies of ruins, Turn them out to make hunger the den of the skies, Let the cracked whisper of each monument and temple Breathe as Caesar, in unending stillness like a bare road. A road is the sadness of seeing our beginning But knowing love its far-off end is foretold.
0
May 14, 2021
May 14, 2021 at 10:17 PM UTC
Mother of Tears
Grandpa is a Nasi Papa a Jew And me - Palestinian Grandma, *Gandari Since Long And Mom Never Had Veto Power, ever. When the Portico is yesterday’s Europe And the Living Room is today’s Asia The Kitchen is all-time Africa, It’s quite natural for The Bedroom to be Antarctica. = = = = = = *Gandhari is a character in the Indian epic, the Mahabharata. Gandhari voluntarily blindfolded herself throughout her married life. Her husband Dhritarashtra was born blind, and on meeting him and realizing this, she decided to share the pain of her blind husband.
0
May 24, 2014
May 24, 2014 at 4:44 AM UTC
HOME
There was a time in Europe long ago When no man died for freedom anywhere, But England’s lion leaping from its lair Laid hands on the oppressor! it was so While England could a great Republic show. Witness the men of Piedmont, chiefest care Of Cromwell, when with impotent despair The Pontiff in his painted portico Trembled before our stern ambassadors. How comes it then that from such high estate We have thus fallen, save that Luxury With barren merchandise piles up the gate Where noble thoughts and deeds should enter by: Else might we still be Milton’s heritors.
0
1.4k
Quantum Mutata
Through cold New England January's air I saw him (Frost) squint,                                           iconic from across the East Portico,                                                  culturally symbolic on a platform above me (I was twenty-eight). Years later I knew the paper he held hard to read, his hotel's old typewriter running low on ink                                  the night before. The illegible poem a preface to the one Kennedy requested - the one he'd read years before (ca. 1942) in the Virginia Quarterly Review,                                                         eyes watering. Frost stood there, faltering in the new-fallen snow's reflective light, half-blinded, and I was twenty-eight as I thought, "Kennedy:                   cultured man,                                            sycophant, or...?"
0
Jul 21, 2013
Jul 21, 2013 at 3:49 AM UTC
The Old Man Remembers Kennedy's Inauguration
Starlit nights bring a sense of tininess. The vast soot-stained cloak of the sky, pierced with so many tiny scintillating spots of vim opalescent flares, is a heavy intoxicant. It contains a thing most panache. A girlish teetotaler beside me says, "We're like those stars, distantly inflamed, lost in a void of what we cannot know." She is most apt in her contrivance. I wish to be castellated, terraced with Byzantine buttresses and towers-tops. I want a portcullis for my portico that is made mostly out of gold, an inner bailey where the stars can sleep and the wine may flow. I want the wine most metaphysical, the type that flows and churns, perning inside the inner sanctum of the mind.
0
Sep 28, 2012
Sep 28, 2012 at 2:04 PM UTC
The beginning of a longer poem
~ these words from a friend jar me from my glass-eyed read "even if we are not aware, we live in memories"  and in response i write, "i often feel watched by my loved ones passed on, as though they are aware of my every movement and deed, peering over the portals of a nearby dimension as one from a portico" watching what before them lies. fellow members of a "club" you didn't volunteer for, didn't sign your name to, you know firsthand the longing, the aching, the wishing and the wanting, the praying and the begging, the "take this cup" imploring, remove it far from me, the "i'm down on my knees begging you please" plea. grief... a mournful response a saudade for what will, what can never be again. a shadowy wood, where the seekers lie, where lovers come when lovers die; where hope once lost can still be found, where signs and wonders from beyond abound. where man can touch the face of God, where the path to freedom, with all it twist, its turns, brings new meaning and opens new doors. within this forest there lies a pool from which to drink and be renewed. healing waters in abundance here to wash away the bitter tears; the lonely hours here spent bring peace, its lovely flowers are rarest sweet; the dancer learns her steps again, the singer finds his inner voice; here hearts unfold and bare the creases, here anxious thoughts and anger ceases; and psalmist's soul here finds relief. ~ post script. *thank you Bala, for stirring my morning contemplation time and helping me to reflect on what i have, as being a part of what i have lost.  "saudade"- though sharing no English equivalent is best understood here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudade as apples of gold are wise words... indeed!  my fellow poets, you are a grace to me, a gift i did not heretofore know of; the door to a contemplative.forest i had not previously known.  thank you, to each who stops in to make a kind, a generous comment and sometimes add a very thought-provoking word. i am grateful today!!*
0
Feb 1, 2015
Feb 1, 2015 at 2:44 PM UTC
morning contemplations
~ these words from a friend jar me from my glass-eyed read "even if we are not aware, we live in memories"  and in response i write, "i often feel watched by my loved ones passed on, as though they are aware of my every movement and deed, peering over the portals of a nearby dimension as one from a portico" watching what before them lies. fellow members of a "club" you didn't volunteer for, didn't sign your name to, you know firsthand the longing, the aching, the wishing and the wanting, the praying and the begging, the "take this cup" imploring, remove it far from me, the "i'm down on my knees begging you please" plea. grief... a mournful response a saudade for what will, what can never be again. a shadowy wood, where the seekers lie, where lovers come when lovers die; where hope once lost can still be found, where signs and wonders from beyond abound. where man can touch the face of God, where the path to freedom, with all it twist, its turns, brings new meaning and opens new doors. within this forest there lies a pool from which to drink and be renewed. healing waters in abundance here to wash away the bitter tears; the lonely hours here spent bring peace, its lovely flowers are rarest sweet; the dancer learns her steps again, the singer finds his inner voice; here hearts unfold and bare the creases, here anxious thoughts and anger ceases; and psalmist's soul here finds relief. ~ post script. *thank you Bala, for stirring my morning contemplation time and helping me to reflect on what i have, as being a part of what i have lost.  "saudade"- though sharing no English equivalent is best understood here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saudade as apples of gold are wise words... indeed!  my fellow poets, you are a grace to me, a gift i did not heretofore know of; the door to a contemplative.forest i had not previously known.  thank you, to each who stops in to make a kind, a generous comment and sometimes add a very thought-provoking word. i am grateful today!!*
Continue reading...
71
you awake, and your blood it’s changed, wrong color, which color matters not, just, it isn’t what’s supposed to be, the wound that wasn’t there yesterday, won’t/isn't being healed, somethings wrong you don’t need to admit the admission, no supposition, the truth, it will out you wearing the weariness in/on your eyes, your forehead and anywhere it matters even strangers double take, cross over the street to avoid visiting your visage sometimes it can’t be helped, enormity seems insufficient to redress overwhelming gonna give up this wretched writing gig, recording date & time futile & unimportant the everything everywhere every day is well past  the Nevery, but specificity is not yeah gonna take a breather, a whole season, put aside the reasons, no more deep cuts when the portico spaces shout, sorry ,closed, in spades, but you don’t feel it or care go off and cater to yourself, knowing in advance, that work won’t advance you past the point of return, who, you’re too wounded, no forward, the past is clout clouded, rough the word some is a totality, what you got, is something else, & need another something taking a break from fools and friends, at now, ain't any difference, gonna lie down, yeah, lie down or lie up because sometimes it helps
0
Feb 8, 2025
Feb 8, 2025 at 10:12 AM UTC
sometimes it can’t be helped...
The night’s silence invaded by rains Cutting through the darkness Dingy streets exposed by the lightning Howling ferociously, with vengeance Street dwellers soaked to the spirits Helpless against the outburst of nature Scurrying to salvage their meager belongings Cold and wet streets offer them little solace The old library portico offers some respite Nefarious activities are deluged Tonight no one is on the prowl, no prize catch Although cold outside, it’s been a sleepless night So many memories rain down my thought crucible Filling it to the brim, I feel drowning in them So many emotions raining down on me A shiver runs down my spine, cold eeriness Stormy night stirred up my past My silent present invaded on a rainy night
0
Jul 19, 2014
Jul 19, 2014 at 12:54 AM UTC
A Rainy Night
Woman,      You ask that I write you a poem everyday that you are away from me. I willingly spill the words from my soul, I sacrifice myself and fall upon the sword of the pen, the drops of blood like rain from God. And they fall to paper, all that I am, all that I hope to become within you, in a poem to you, at the moment so far away.        Today, alas I have spilled so much of myself that I too require a filling, a need that sustains me like my words that feed your passion for me. I need the touch of your hand as we sit upon the portico resting on that sunset purple gold, that which lights the stars when darkness falls.        I need the soft of your lips as they graze the nape of my neck, the stride like a galant mare across fields of shimmering lilies, I need the kiss which fits me like gloves in the cold depths of morning one feels as they take in the first chill of morn.       I need you like a poet needs words, I need your depths that fill the abyss like the blood fills the body, or the lover fills the woman, oh this wanton desire for the touch, the kiss, the experience of being with you.....       These are my words, these are my sonnets of infiltration to your soul, a haiku of touch, a verse of making love!      My love all that is poetry is required by your presence. Simply put, the motions of our love.....that which must be experienced,        we are the poetry in motion.                Missing you dearly,                   The poet who lost his words.
0
Dec 17, 2015
Dec 17, 2015 at 10:14 AM UTC
Letter to My Poetry Addicted Lover
Woman,      You ask that I write you a poem everyday that you are away from me. I willingly spill the words from my soul, I sacrifice myself and fall upon the sword of the pen, the drops of blood like rain from God. And they fall to paper, all that I am, all that I hope to become within you, in a poem to you, at the moment so far away.        Today, alas I have spilled so much of myself that I too require a filling, a need that sustains me like my words that feed your passion for me. I need the touch of your hand as we sit upon the portico resting on that sunset purple gold, that which lights the stars when darkness falls.        I need the soft of your lips as they graze the nape of my neck, the stride like a galant mare across fields of shimmering lilies, I need the kiss which fits me like gloves in the cold depths of morning one feels as they take in the first chill of morn.       I need you like a poet needs words, I need your depths that fill the abyss like the blood fills the body, or the lover fills the woman, oh this wanton desire for the touch, the kiss, the experience of being with you.....       These are my words, these are my sonnets of infiltration to your soul, a haiku of touch, a verse of making love!      My love all that is poetry is required by your presence. Simply put, the motions of our love.....that which must be experienced,        we are the poetry in motion.                Missing you dearly,                   The poet who lost his words.
Continue reading...
10
I turbini sollevano la polvere sui tetti, a mulinelli, e sugli spiazzi deserti, ove i cavalli incappucciati annusano la terra, fermi innanzi ai vetri luccicanti degli alberghi. Sul corso, in faccia al mare, tu discendi in questo giorno or piovorno ora acceso, in cui par scatti a sconvolgerne l'ore uguali, strette in trama, un ritornello di castagnette. È il segno d'un'altra orbita: tu seguilo. Discendi all'orizzonte che sovrasta una tromba di piombo, alta sui gorghi, più d'essi vagabonda: salso nembo vorticante, soffiato dal ribelle elemento alle nubi; fa che il passo su la ghiaia ti scricchioli e t'inciampi il viluppo dell'alghe: quell'istante è forse, molto atteso, che ti scampi dal finire il tuo viaggio, anello d'una catena, immoto andare, oh troppo noto delirio, Arsenio, d'immobilità... Ascolta tra i palmizi il getto tremulo dei violini, spento quando rotola il tuono con un fremer di lamiera percossa; la tempesta è dolce quando sgorga bianca la stella di Canicola nel cielo azzurro e lunge par la sera ch'è prossima: se il fulmine la incide dirama come un albero prezioso entro la luce che s'arrosa: e il timpano degli tzigani è il rombo silenzioso Discendi in mezzo al buio che precipita e muta il mezzogiorno in una notte di globi accesi, dondolanti a riva, - e fuori, dove un'ombra sola tiene mare e cielo, dai gozzi sparsi palpita l'acetilene - finché goccia trepido il cielo, fuma il suolo che t'abbevera, tutto d'accanto ti sciaborda, sbattono le tende molli, un fruscio immenso rade la terra, giù s'afflosciano stridendo le lanterne di carta sulle strade. Così sperso tra i vimini e le stuoie grondanti, giunco tu che le radici con sé trascina, viscide, non mai svelte, tremi di vita e ti protendi a un vuoto risonante di lamenti soffocati, la tesa ti ringhiotte dell'onda antica che ti volge; e ancora tutto che ti riprende, strada portico mura specchi ti figge in una sola ghiacciata moltitudine di morti, e se un gesto ti sfiora, una parola ti cade accanto, quello è forse, Arsenio, nell'ora che si scioglie, il cenno d'una vita strozzata per te sorta, e il vento la porta con la cenere degli astri.
0
1.1k
Arsenio
I turbini sollevano la polvere sui tetti, a mulinelli, e sugli spiazzi deserti, ove i cavalli incappucciati annusano la terra, fermi innanzi ai vetri luccicanti degli alberghi. Sul corso, in faccia al mare, tu discendi in questo giorno or piovorno ora acceso, in cui par scatti a sconvolgerne l'ore uguali, strette in trama, un ritornello di castagnette. È il segno d'un'altra orbita: tu seguilo. Discendi all'orizzonte che sovrasta una tromba di piombo, alta sui gorghi, più d'essi vagabonda: salso nembo vorticante, soffiato dal ribelle elemento alle nubi; fa che il passo su la ghiaia ti scricchioli e t'inciampi il viluppo dell'alghe: quell'istante è forse, molto atteso, che ti scampi dal finire il tuo viaggio, anello d'una catena, immoto andare, oh troppo noto delirio, Arsenio, d'immobilità... Ascolta tra i palmizi il getto tremulo dei violini, spento quando rotola il tuono con un fremer di lamiera percossa; la tempesta è dolce quando sgorga bianca la stella di Canicola nel cielo azzurro e lunge par la sera ch'è prossima: se il fulmine la incide dirama come un albero prezioso entro la luce che s'arrosa: e il timpano degli tzigani è il rombo silenzioso Discendi in mezzo al buio che precipita e muta il mezzogiorno in una notte di globi accesi, dondolanti a riva, - e fuori, dove un'ombra sola tiene mare e cielo, dai gozzi sparsi palpita l'acetilene - finché goccia trepido il cielo, fuma il suolo che t'abbevera, tutto d'accanto ti sciaborda, sbattono le tende molli, un fruscio immenso rade la terra, giù s'afflosciano stridendo le lanterne di carta sulle strade. Così sperso tra i vimini e le stuoie grondanti, giunco tu che le radici con sé trascina, viscide, non mai svelte, tremi di vita e ti protendi a un vuoto risonante di lamenti soffocati, la tesa ti ringhiotte dell'onda antica che ti volge; e ancora tutto che ti riprende, strada portico mura specchi ti figge in una sola ghiacciata moltitudine di morti, e se un gesto ti sfiora, una parola ti cade accanto, quello è forse, Arsenio, nell'ora che si scioglie, il cenno d'una vita strozzata per te sorta, e il vento la porta con la cenere degli astri.
Continue reading...
60
Down at the end of Kilmartin Street Where nobody seems to go, A widow lives in an ancient mill Where the river will overflow, The mill race turns the mighty wheel Though it grinds no wheat or corn, It’s not been used as a working mill Since before we both were born. And the widow there is a mystery, For we don’t know where she’s been, She doesn’t give out her history Though we know her name’s Christine, She’s rarely seen in the street outside But the gown she wears is black, And those that visit and go inside Are rarely seen to come back. And I’ve watched myself, that paddle wheel, It seems to go in reverse, Whenever she has a visitor there It’s as if the mill is cursed, For then the water flows uphill It’s against all laws, I know, Whoever heard of the water going Back to the overflow? There’s a warning sign on the portico And a warning sign within, ‘Don’t think to enter the Devil’s Mill If your life is filled with sin, For it may get rid of the things you want And delete the good things too, You may uncover a life within, But of course, that’s up to you.’ I went one day to the portico And beat on the old front door, Then heard her footsteps begin to echo Across the flagstone floor, The door flung wide and she stood aside And I walked into the mill, But heard the grind of the wheel rewind Outside, I can hear it still. I felt my head beginning to spin As I travelled back in time, Undoing every single action That once I’d thought were mine, Then once outside, I stood and cried For my world was not the same, I’d lost my only love, my bride And forgotten our baby’s name. I thought I’d possibly get them back If I went again to the mill, And stood just cautiously inside While the wheel went forward still, But the widow blocked the door to me And she said, ‘Don’t come again, You only get but a single chance Or the end result is pain.’ David Lewis Paget
0
Mar 4, 2017
Mar 4, 2017 at 5:21 AM UTC
The Devil's Mill
Down at the end of Kilmartin Street Where nobody seems to go, A widow lives in an ancient mill Where the river will overflow, The mill race turns the mighty wheel Though it grinds no wheat or corn, It’s not been used as a working mill Since before we both were born. And the widow there is a mystery, For we don’t know where she’s been, She doesn’t give out her history Though we know her name’s Christine, She’s rarely seen in the street outside But the gown she wears is black, And those that visit and go inside Are rarely seen to come back. And I’ve watched myself, that paddle wheel, It seems to go in reverse, Whenever she has a visitor there It’s as if the mill is cursed, For then the water flows uphill It’s against all laws, I know, Whoever heard of the water going Back to the overflow? There’s a warning sign on the portico And a warning sign within, ‘Don’t think to enter the Devil’s Mill If your life is filled with sin, For it may get rid of the things you want And delete the good things too, You may uncover a life within, But of course, that’s up to you.’ I went one day to the portico And beat on the old front door, Then heard her footsteps begin to echo Across the flagstone floor, The door flung wide and she stood aside And I walked into the mill, But heard the grind of the wheel rewind Outside, I can hear it still. I felt my head beginning to spin As I travelled back in time, Undoing every single action That once I’d thought were mine, Then once outside, I stood and cried For my world was not the same, I’d lost my only love, my bride And forgotten our baby’s name. I thought I’d possibly get them back If I went again to the mill, And stood just cautiously inside While the wheel went forward still, But the widow blocked the door to me And she said, ‘Don’t come again, You only get but a single chance Or the end result is pain.’ David Lewis Paget
Continue reading...
57
With the sun settling down, The huge candor of the dusk settles In on its spectral enchantments And its usual "Only God could have done this", Portico: Where the day is meditated And the sigh of humbled gratitude sets in, As the stars form Across the eyes and her hand In your own, It is simply good to have a moment Between the day,the sky, and everything in between.
0
Feb 9, 2016
Feb 9, 2016 at 10:51 PM UTC
Portico
It was not a salubrious neighborhood As the townsfolk there would tell, But you often found a gem of a pearl In an ugly oyster shell, And Derek thought that he’d found his pearl In those mean and dismal streets, A girl by the name of Jennifer Searle Who would make his life complete. He’d met her at a charity ball On a short term holiday, From where she sat, at the end of the hall She’d taken his breath away, Her eyes were such a delicate blue And they held him in their stare, He was like her prize, and hypnotised As he stumbled to her there. And she bade him sit beside her then And she let him hold her hand, And she hushed him when he tried to say What he didn’t understand, Her smile was brittle, her hand was cool And her skin as white as snow, Her form was frail, but he felt her nails Dig in, as he rose to go. And a woman came to claim her then Who dismissed him out of hand, They waited until he’d turned to go In a way that was pre-planned, The woman gave him a printed card With the girl’s address at home, And scribbled there, ‘you may call on me Just once, if you come alone.’ So he walked the damp and dismal street And his heart began to sing, He knew one call would be enough, He would give her everything, He found her door in a portico With its number shaped in lead, And rapped the brass of the knocker there With its atavistic head. Then the door swung slowly open and He was standing in the hall, Following tamely where she led, The woman he’d met at the ball, Jennifer sat at a table and She smiled as he wandered in, He stood and stared at her wheelchair And his look was questioning. ‘You get but a single chance with me That’s all that I ever give, I’ve seen the lies in a hundred eyes So rather than lie, just leave. My legs have been useless now for years But I’m whole, and full of love, If you’d like to take a chance with me Speak now, for I’ve grieved enough.’ ‘I fell in love with your eyes,’ he said ‘From the other side of the hall, I didn’t know that you couldn’t walk And it doesn’t matter at all. I wanted to offer you everything If you’ll have me, well and good…’ Then Jennifer blinked back tears, as she Reached out for him, and stood. David Lewis Paget
0
May 7, 2015
May 7, 2015 at 4:53 AM UTC
The Pearl
It was not a salubrious neighborhood As the townsfolk there would tell, But you often found a gem of a pearl In an ugly oyster shell, And Derek thought that he’d found his pearl In those mean and dismal streets, A girl by the name of Jennifer Searle Who would make his life complete. He’d met her at a charity ball On a short term holiday, From where she sat, at the end of the hall She’d taken his breath away, Her eyes were such a delicate blue And they held him in their stare, He was like her prize, and hypnotised As he stumbled to her there. And she bade him sit beside her then And she let him hold her hand, And she hushed him when he tried to say What he didn’t understand, Her smile was brittle, her hand was cool And her skin as white as snow, Her form was frail, but he felt her nails Dig in, as he rose to go. And a woman came to claim her then Who dismissed him out of hand, They waited until he’d turned to go In a way that was pre-planned, The woman gave him a printed card With the girl’s address at home, And scribbled there, ‘you may call on me Just once, if you come alone.’ So he walked the damp and dismal street And his heart began to sing, He knew one call would be enough, He would give her everything, He found her door in a portico With its number shaped in lead, And rapped the brass of the knocker there With its atavistic head. Then the door swung slowly open and He was standing in the hall, Following tamely where she led, The woman he’d met at the ball, Jennifer sat at a table and She smiled as he wandered in, He stood and stared at her wheelchair And his look was questioning. ‘You get but a single chance with me That’s all that I ever give, I’ve seen the lies in a hundred eyes So rather than lie, just leave. My legs have been useless now for years But I’m whole, and full of love, If you’d like to take a chance with me Speak now, for I’ve grieved enough.’ ‘I fell in love with your eyes,’ he said ‘From the other side of the hall, I didn’t know that you couldn’t walk And it doesn’t matter at all. I wanted to offer you everything If you’ll have me, well and good…’ Then Jennifer blinked back tears, as she Reached out for him, and stood. David Lewis Paget
Continue reading...
65
The river flows and giggles. Sails wide unfurl, the man in the bow allows the horizon to be born in his eyes. In the man's hands there is a land, a shore, for him to name. The river flows   and giggles. A willow in a sand bank is no geography, only a choreography in the amphitheater. The river giggles and flees, in its flow.
0
Apr 25, 2015
Apr 25, 2015 at 6:05 AM UTC
Portico
you will only look for which road i have passed, with girth of oceans startled to hip-curve, bow-legged darling hiding behind pretense of rose frailty. when words ripen, they fall. from vaudeville of fools to silence in all its exactness, i take my place amongst people in stations, machines adorning rotundas, courtyards to a flourish of twilight-bells, the men with retinas spry behind cloaks of smoke— plain, **** drunkenness assaults the billion-blooded sea, each line fraught with inebriation: a god is borrowed with what light fruits from a slow nature, quick to burst and torturously maimed in stride. fated to arrive at one morning — being in total placeness and making merry once again, the dreary face waiting at the portico of days collected. when these words start to wind-hover, a string of birds will appear clearer, mounting umbilicus of lines. as in hounds shear the metastasizing dark, going back to chagrined kens, i make truth out of the tragedy: trace the source of this stream and find my trampled body, floating with the sandalwood. when the still, clenched hand clock-punches, make real the insignia of my arrival: words start with limbs to cross this scalped Earth which moves suddenly naked, leaning in, gropes you in stillness, resuscitating the moon from the working of insolvencies we rear in derelicts of days. drags it closely to ends — left trundling in woe's wearisome vessel. and if in this newly thatched home it screams, let this voice deftly shred so i may once more lie straight to your half-illuminated faces, a call i only hear.
0
Dec 4, 2015
Dec 4, 2015 at 10:02 PM UTC
Clock-Punch
you will only look for which road i have passed, with girth of oceans startled to hip-curve, bow-legged darling hiding behind pretense of rose frailty. when words ripen, they fall. from vaudeville of fools to silence in all its exactness, i take my place amongst people in stations, machines adorning rotundas, courtyards to a flourish of twilight-bells, the men with retinas spry behind cloaks of smoke— plain, **** drunkenness assaults the billion-blooded sea, each line fraught with inebriation: a god is borrowed with what light fruits from a slow nature, quick to burst and torturously maimed in stride. fated to arrive at one morning — being in total placeness and making merry once again, the dreary face waiting at the portico of days collected. when these words start to wind-hover, a string of birds will appear clearer, mounting umbilicus of lines. as in hounds shear the metastasizing dark, going back to chagrined kens, i make truth out of the tragedy: trace the source of this stream and find my trampled body, floating with the sandalwood. when the still, clenched hand clock-punches, make real the insignia of my arrival: words start with limbs to cross this scalped Earth which moves suddenly naked, leaning in, gropes you in stillness, resuscitating the moon from the working of insolvencies we rear in derelicts of days. drags it closely to ends — left trundling in woe's wearisome vessel. and if in this newly thatched home it screams, let this voice deftly shred so i may once more lie straight to your half-illuminated faces, a call i only hear.
Continue reading...
40