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"sappho" poems
I like immigrants, immigration. Legal immigration, Jane passionately corrects. Actually my goal is a borderless world. Gathering the neighborhood like family. The men discuss sterilizing welfare mothers. I say You're working       around the edges, humanity has exceeded the carrying capacity of the planet, even those with jobs. And spouses. And houses. Yet it's an idyll of an early summer evening, new cut grass, two baseball teams of children playing in it. Safe from Pakistan. News photos of Muslim refugees, women in blue robes, biblically carrying children away from holocaust. The fundamentalist army not far behind, beheading sinners, sure in its righteousness as the Holy Roman Empire. Somehow Joel Osteen the evangelist comes up while talking about how the Catholic Church is irrelevant in North       America, even Latin America and Africa are going evangelical. Izzi likes Osteen, awesome extemporaneous speaker, no teleprompter, up from bootstraps message. My wife says he's probably Jewish. Fortunately no one claims the Holocaust never happened or slavery       was voluntary. What is the carrying capacity of the planet? In China is it each couple or each adult that gets one offspring? As life expectancy and standards rise, family size diminishes. We draw together into greener, tighter cities. The children of three monotheistic religions, atheists and agnostics play in city streets, work farm fields, explore forests, deserts,       grasslands, space. Two ancient female poets: Enheduanna and Sappho are a revelation. The clarity of their complaints: lost lover, lost city.
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Aug 11, 2015
Aug 11, 2015 at 10:48 AM UTC
Immigration
I like immigrants, immigration. Legal immigration, Jane passionately corrects. Actually my goal is a borderless world. Gathering the neighborhood like family. The men discuss sterilizing welfare mothers. I say You're working       around the edges, humanity has exceeded the carrying capacity of the planet, even those with jobs. And spouses. And houses. Yet it's an idyll of an early summer evening, new cut grass, two baseball teams of children playing in it. Safe from Pakistan. News photos of Muslim refugees, women in blue robes, biblically carrying children away from holocaust. The fundamentalist army not far behind, beheading sinners, sure in its righteousness as the Holy Roman Empire. Somehow Joel Osteen the evangelist comes up while talking about how the Catholic Church is irrelevant in North       America, even Latin America and Africa are going evangelical. Izzi likes Osteen, awesome extemporaneous speaker, no teleprompter, up from bootstraps message. My wife says he's probably Jewish. Fortunately no one claims the Holocaust never happened or slavery       was voluntary. What is the carrying capacity of the planet? In China is it each couple or each adult that gets one offspring? As life expectancy and standards rise, family size diminishes. We draw together into greener, tighter cities. The children of three monotheistic religions, atheists and agnostics play in city streets, work farm fields, explore forests, deserts,       grasslands, space. Two ancient female poets: Enheduanna and Sappho are a revelation. The clarity of their complaints: lost lover, lost city.
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31
Hymn to Aphrodite by Sappho loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Immortal Aphrodite, throned in splendor! Wile-weaving daughter of Zeus, enchantress, and beguiler! I implore you, dread mistress, discipline me no longer with love's anguish! But come to me once again in kindness, heeding my prayers as you have done before; O, come Divine One, descend once again from heaven's golden dominions! Your chariot yoked to love's consecrated doves, their multitudinous pinions aflutter, you once came gliding from the utmost heights, to the dark-bosomed earth. Swiftly they came and vanished, leaving you, O my Goddess, smiling, your face eternally beautiful, asking me what unfathomable longing compelled me to cry out. Asking me what I sought in my hopeless, bewildered desire. Asking, "Who has harmed you, why are you so alarmed, my poor Sappho? Whom should Persuasion summon here?" "Though today she flees love, soon she will pursue you; spurning love's gifts, soon she shall return them; tomorrow she will woo you, however unwillingly!" Come to me now, most Holy Aphrodite! Release me from my heavy heartache and anguish; grant me all I request, be once again my ally and protector! "Hymn to Aphrodite" is the only poem by Sappho of ****** to survive in its entirety. The poem survived intact because it was quoted in full by Dionysus, a Roman orator, in his "On Literary Composition," published around 30 B.C. A number of Sappho's poems mention or are addressed to Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. It is believed that Sappho may have belonged to a cult that worshiped Aphrodite with songs and poetry. If so, "Hymn to Aphrodite" may have been composed for performance within the cult. We do know that Sappho was held in very high regard. For instance, when Sappho visited Syracuse the residents were so honored they erected a statue to commemorate the occasion! During Sappho's lifetime, coins of ****** were minted with her image. Furthermore, Sappho was called "the Tenth Muse" and the other nine were goddesses. Keywords/Tags: Sapphic, Sappho, ****** translation, ancient Greek, hymn, Aphrodite, Zeus, daughter, immortal, goddess, holy, lady, heaven, enchantress, enchantment, love potion, charm, spell, persuasion, beguiler, beguilement, mistress, discipline, ********** prayer, prayers, chariot, heaven, descent, ally, protector, lust, desire, passion, longing, *** crush, girlfriend, women, grief
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Mar 22, 2020
Mar 22, 2020 at 2:51 AM UTC
Sappho "Hymn to Aphrodite" translation
Hymn to Aphrodite by Sappho loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Immortal Aphrodite, throned in splendor! Wile-weaving daughter of Zeus, enchantress, and beguiler! I implore you, dread mistress, discipline me no longer with love's anguish! But come to me once again in kindness, heeding my prayers as you have done before; O, come Divine One, descend once again from heaven's golden dominions! Your chariot yoked to love's consecrated doves, their multitudinous pinions aflutter, you once came gliding from the utmost heights, to the dark-bosomed earth. Swiftly they came and vanished, leaving you, O my Goddess, smiling, your face eternally beautiful, asking me what unfathomable longing compelled me to cry out. Asking me what I sought in my hopeless, bewildered desire. Asking, "Who has harmed you, why are you so alarmed, my poor Sappho? Whom should Persuasion summon here?" "Though today she flees love, soon she will pursue you; spurning love's gifts, soon she shall return them; tomorrow she will woo you, however unwillingly!" Come to me now, most Holy Aphrodite! Release me from my heavy heartache and anguish; grant me all I request, be once again my ally and protector! "Hymn to Aphrodite" is the only poem by Sappho of ****** to survive in its entirety. The poem survived intact because it was quoted in full by Dionysus, a Roman orator, in his "On Literary Composition," published around 30 B.C. A number of Sappho's poems mention or are addressed to Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. It is believed that Sappho may have belonged to a cult that worshiped Aphrodite with songs and poetry. If so, "Hymn to Aphrodite" may have been composed for performance within the cult. We do know that Sappho was held in very high regard. For instance, when Sappho visited Syracuse the residents were so honored they erected a statue to commemorate the occasion! During Sappho's lifetime, coins of ****** were minted with her image. Furthermore, Sappho was called "the Tenth Muse" and the other nine were goddesses. Keywords/Tags: Sapphic, Sappho, ****** translation, ancient Greek, hymn, Aphrodite, Zeus, daughter, immortal, goddess, holy, lady, heaven, enchantress, enchantment, love potion, charm, spell, persuasion, beguiler, beguilement, mistress, discipline, ********** prayer, prayers, chariot, heaven, descent, ally, protector, lust, desire, passion, longing, *** crush, girlfriend, women, grief
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32
I am one rejection away from softball tournaments and flannel.
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Oct 10, 2012
Oct 10, 2012 at 7:18 PM UTC
To my girl, Sappho
sappho greets her as she would a reflection: hand against hand, staring into her eyes. silence dancing around them as a long-lost love- r. enheduanna sighs at the contact and the quiet shifts as her fingers close: as there is no need for language when her inanna will grant them a holy diadem. ----- eternity reeks of nights out on the lawn daisies growing with the weeds pillowing beneath the two dwindling women - hands clasped tightly, their eyes closed. ...lapis blooming within the petals of the undergrowth... gods slumber amongst worthy poets occluding, heart-soothing each other without words or sonnets or divination. sappho dared to look out from heavy-lidded lethargy, for she was yearning: at dawn ...her honeyvoiced,     mythweaving     enheduanna:     a sweet-shelter     of temptation     and goddesses     who wage     tender war and     drink from pools     of sun... at dawn the ancient divine poet gazes again and sappho forgets she too is nearly as old for her lover wears an invisible golden- crowned circlet of springtime and illuminated lands. but she can hardly think anymore, when the songsmith of glory and prayer is kissing her. laying in the basin of heaven and skies she pours restless eternity down her throat. ---- lapis melts to pink clovers of fowlerite no mortals notice two bodies blending between poems rustling tunics maidens casting away their   fruitful sobriety. ---- poet dreams a woman of verse. hardly expecting shallow-breathed kisses of burning solstice and unrequited love.
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Feb 16, 2022
Feb 16, 2022 at 12:18 AM UTC
their hearts grew cold / they let their wings down
sappho greets her as she would a reflection: hand against hand, staring into her eyes. silence dancing around them as a long-lost love- r. enheduanna sighs at the contact and the quiet shifts as her fingers close: as there is no need for language when her inanna will grant them a holy diadem. ----- eternity reeks of nights out on the lawn daisies growing with the weeds pillowing beneath the two dwindling women - hands clasped tightly, their eyes closed. ...lapis blooming within the petals of the undergrowth... gods slumber amongst worthy poets occluding, heart-soothing each other without words or sonnets or divination. sappho dared to look out from heavy-lidded lethargy, for she was yearning: at dawn ...her honeyvoiced,     mythweaving     enheduanna:     a sweet-shelter     of temptation     and goddesses     who wage     tender war and     drink from pools     of sun... at dawn the ancient divine poet gazes again and sappho forgets she too is nearly as old for her lover wears an invisible golden- crowned circlet of springtime and illuminated lands. but she can hardly think anymore, when the songsmith of glory and prayer is kissing her. laying in the basin of heaven and skies she pours restless eternity down her throat. ---- lapis melts to pink clovers of fowlerite no mortals notice two bodies blending between poems rustling tunics maidens casting away their   fruitful sobriety. ---- poet dreams a woman of verse. hardly expecting shallow-breathed kisses of burning solstice and unrequited love.
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96
I sigh at day-dawn, and I sigh When the dull day is passing by. I sigh at evening, and again I sigh when night brings sleep to men. Oh! it were far better to die Than thus forever mourn and sigh, And in death's dreamless sleep to be Unconscious that none weep for me; Eased from my weight of heaviness, Forgetful of forgetfulness, Resting from care and pain and sorrow Thro' the long night that knows no morrow; Living unloved, to die unknown, Unwept, untended, and alone.
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Sappho
Throned in splendor, immortal Aphrodite! Child of Zeus, Enchantress, I implore thee Slay me not in this distress and anguish, Lady of beauty. Hither come as once before thou camest, When from afar thou heard'st my voice lamenting, Heard'st and camest, leaving thy glorious father's Palace golden, Yoking thy chariot. Fair the doves that bore thee; Swift to the darksome earth their course directing, Waving their thick wings from the highest heaven Down through the ether. Quickly they came. Then thou, O blessed goddess, All in smiling wreathed thy face immortal, Bade me tell thee the cause of all my suffering, Why now I called thee; What for my maddened heart I most was longing. "Whom," thou criest, "dost wish that sweet Persuasion Now win over and lead to thy love, my Sappho? Who is it wrongs thee? "For, though now he flies, he soon shall follow, Soon shall be giving gifts who now rejects them. Even though now he love not, soon shall he love thee Even though thou wouldst not." Come then now, dear goddess, and release me From my anguish. All my heart's desiring Grant thou now. Now too again as aforetime, Be thou my ally.
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Hymn To Aphrodite
Hymn to Aphrodite by Sappho (her only complete poem) loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Immortal Aphrodite, throned in splendor! Wile-weaving daughter of Zeus, enchantress, and beguiler! I implore you, dread mistress, discipline me no longer with love's anguish! But come to me once again in kindness, heeding my prayers as you have done before; O, come Divine One, descend once again from heaven's golden dominions! Your chariot yoked to love's consecrated doves, their multitudinous pinions aflutter, you once came gliding from the utmost heights, to this dark earth. Swiftly they came and vanished, leaving you, O my Goddess, smiling, your face eternally beautiful, asking me what unfathomable longing compelled me to cry out. Asking me what I sought in my hopeless, bewildered desire. Asking, "Who has harmed you, why are you so alarmed, my poor Sappho? Whom should Persuasion summon here?" "Though today she flees love, soon she will pursue you; spurning love's gifts, she soon shall return them; tomorrow she will woo you, however unwillingly!" Come to me now, most Holy Aphrodite! Release me from my heavy heartache and anguish; grant me all I request, be once again my ally and protector! "Hymn to Aphrodite" is the only poem by Sappho of ****** to survive in its entirety. The poem survived intact because it was quoted in full by Dionysus, a Roman orator, in his "On Literary Composition," published around 30 B.C. A number of Sappho's poems mention or are addressed to Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. It is believed that Sappho may have belonged to a cult that worshiped Aphrodite with songs and poetry. If so, "Hymn to Aphrodite" may have been composed for performance within the cult. We do know that Sappho was held in very high regard. For instance, when Sappho visited Syracuse the residents were so honored they erected a statue to commemorate the occasion! During Sappho's lifetime, coins of ****** were minted with her image. Furthermore, Sappho was called "the Tenth Muse" and the other nine were goddesses. Keywords/Tags: Sapphic, Sappho, ****** translation, ancient Greek, hymn, Aphrodite, Zeus, daughter, immortal, goddess, holy, lady, heaven, enchantress, enchantment, love potion, charm, spell, persuasion, beguiler, beguilement, mistress, discipline, ********** prayer, prayers, chariot, heaven, descent, ally, protector, lust, desire, passion, longing, *** crush, girlfriend, women, grief
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Mar 1, 2020
Mar 1, 2020 at 10:53 PM UTC
Sappho of ****** "Hymn to Aphrodite" translation
Hymn to Aphrodite by Sappho (her only complete poem) loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Immortal Aphrodite, throned in splendor! Wile-weaving daughter of Zeus, enchantress, and beguiler! I implore you, dread mistress, discipline me no longer with love's anguish! But come to me once again in kindness, heeding my prayers as you have done before; O, come Divine One, descend once again from heaven's golden dominions! Your chariot yoked to love's consecrated doves, their multitudinous pinions aflutter, you once came gliding from the utmost heights, to this dark earth. Swiftly they came and vanished, leaving you, O my Goddess, smiling, your face eternally beautiful, asking me what unfathomable longing compelled me to cry out. Asking me what I sought in my hopeless, bewildered desire. Asking, "Who has harmed you, why are you so alarmed, my poor Sappho? Whom should Persuasion summon here?" "Though today she flees love, soon she will pursue you; spurning love's gifts, she soon shall return them; tomorrow she will woo you, however unwillingly!" Come to me now, most Holy Aphrodite! Release me from my heavy heartache and anguish; grant me all I request, be once again my ally and protector! "Hymn to Aphrodite" is the only poem by Sappho of ****** to survive in its entirety. The poem survived intact because it was quoted in full by Dionysus, a Roman orator, in his "On Literary Composition," published around 30 B.C. A number of Sappho's poems mention or are addressed to Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. It is believed that Sappho may have belonged to a cult that worshiped Aphrodite with songs and poetry. If so, "Hymn to Aphrodite" may have been composed for performance within the cult. We do know that Sappho was held in very high regard. For instance, when Sappho visited Syracuse the residents were so honored they erected a statue to commemorate the occasion! During Sappho's lifetime, coins of ****** were minted with her image. Furthermore, Sappho was called "the Tenth Muse" and the other nine were goddesses. Keywords/Tags: Sapphic, Sappho, ****** translation, ancient Greek, hymn, Aphrodite, Zeus, daughter, immortal, goddess, holy, lady, heaven, enchantress, enchantment, love potion, charm, spell, persuasion, beguiler, beguilement, mistress, discipline, ********** prayer, prayers, chariot, heaven, descent, ally, protector, lust, desire, passion, longing, *** crush, girlfriend, women, grief
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32
I did not intend this, A lust for soft hands, lips like rose. I woke with it already in my veins. But my love is not my own; they stole my reigns. After taking what was left of my voice. It isn't my choice. Slowly the fear of myself becomes too strong. Lost in the rhythm of this sapphic song. I was bred from the blood of a great poetess, A Greek Goddess who loved both Zeus and Aphrodite ferocious. Unashamed of the lust in her hips, Born to a world who saw no difference. Daughter of Sappho why do you cry? Please don't lose your life to a lie. You can do nothing wrong in love, Pray that Aphrodite is generous from above. May she show you that true love transcends gender. Dare Cupid to prove the existence of such splendor. May the Goddess in your bones, Find refuge on the beaches of ****** The people who disagree fear your unknown, They cannot comprehend the grandiose. When they demonize you, Remind them Lucifer was once angel too. Be too large in love for them, Do not succumb to their strange, Better yet prove that you will not be condemned. Be the catalyst of change.
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Feb 11, 2015
Feb 11, 2015 at 8:45 PM UTC
I Found Myself On the Isle of ******
Elan that lifts me above the clouds into pure space, timeless, yea eternal Breath transmuted into words Transmuted back to breath in one hundred two hundred years nearly Immortal, Sappho's 26 centuries of cadenced breathing -- beyond time, clocks, empires, bodies, cars, chariots, rocket ships skyscrapers, Nation empires brass walls, polished marble, Inca Artwork of the mind -- but where's it come from? Inspiration? The muses drawing breath for you? God? Nah, don't believe it, you'll get entangled in Heaven or Hell -- Guilt power, that makes the heart beat wake all night flooding mind with space, echoing through future cities, Megalopolis or Cretan village, Zeus' birth cave Lassithi Plains -- Otsego County farmhouse, Kansas front porch? Buddha's a help, promises ordinary mind no nirvana -- coffee, alcohol, ******* mushrooms, marijuana, laughing gas? Nope, too heavy for this lightness lifts the brain into blue sky at May dawn when birds start singing on East 12th street -- Where does it come from, where does it go forever? May 1996
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Five A.M.
Cytherea, thy dainty Adonis is dying! Ah, what shall we do? O Nymphs, let it echo, the voice of your crying, The greenwood through! O Forest-maidens, smite on the breast, Rend ye the delicate-woven vest! Let the wail ring wild and high: 'Ah for Adonis!' cry. O Sappho, how canst thou chant the bliss Of Kypris — after such day as this? 'Oh Adonis, thou leavest me — woe for my lot! And Eros, my servant, availeth me not!' So wails Cytherea, grief-distraught. 'Who shall console me for thee? There is none — Not Ares my god-lover, passionate one Who sware in his jealousy forth to hale Hephaestus my spouse from his palace, if he Dared but to lift his eyes unto me. Not he can console me, Adonis, for thee!' Wail for Adonis, wail!
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A Lament For Adonis
Sapphic sapphires glisten in the moon These ladies say that Hades makes them as dry as a sand dune Maleficent and Cruella mark their spells on their heads And quietly they tiptoe and sneakily their treads- Move with a rhythm only grace can create Enchanting are these women, seeing them is fate To be an audience member to their auras and their moves Is an opportunity that is divine, spiritually proved Indigo in color, L words leave their lips Straight and curvy bones and fat   vibrate from their hips They mesmerize, they enchant, they let their inhibitions soar Until they dance away, unhinged, and you can't see them anymore Remember this encounter, it is one that will inspire It will make you feel a type of way, it will ignite a fire
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Feb 9, 2017
Feb 9, 2017 at 10:13 PM UTC
Ode to Sappho
It was you, Atthis, who said "Sappho, if you will not get up and let us look at you I shall never love you again! "Get up, unleash your suppleness, lift off your Chian nightdress and, like a lily leaning into "a spring, bathe in the water. Cleis is bringing your best purple frock and the yellow "tunic down from the clothes chest; you will have a cloak thrown over you and flowers crowning your hair... "Praxinoa, my child, will you please roast nuts for our breakfast? One of the gods is being good to us: "today we are going at last into Mitylene, our favorite city, with Sappho, loveliest "of its women; she will walk among us like a mother with all her daughters around her "when she comes home from exile..." But you forget everything
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It was you, Atthis, who said
or "let's order takeout," or "small ineptitudes in the kitchen" 1. butter lop it liberally silver clinging scrape it pan side sputters and hissing smoky? turn the heat down crimsoning elemental browning the butter 2. sizzling whites diaphanous stiffly whitened bubbles surface spatula stroking poly— tetrafluoroethylene roll the egg yolk shattering yellow 3. **** the water nothing— evaporated gasping blue effluvium windows fanblades blackened *** the bite of a char upon it tea for tomorrow
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Mar 5, 2014
Mar 5, 2014 at 1:28 PM UTC
Sappho the Housewife
Helen of Troy had a wandering glance; Sappho's restriction was only the sky; Ninon was ever the chatter of France; But oh, what a good girl am I!
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Words Of Comfort To Be Scratched On A Mirror
If he should lie a-dying I am not willing you should go Into the earth, where Helen went; She is awake by now, I know. Where Cleopatra’s anklets rust You will not lie with my consent; And Sappho is a roving dust; Cressid could love again; Dido, Rotted in state, is restless still; You leave me much against my will.
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To S. M.
Dapple-throned Aphrodite, eternal daughterf God, snare-knitter! Don't, I beg you, cow my heart with grief! Come, as once when you heard my far- off cry and, listening, stepped from your father's house to your gold car, to yoke the pair whose beautiful thick-feathered wings oaring down mid-air from heaven carried you to light swiftly on dark earth; then, blissful one, smiling your immortal smile you asked, What ailed me now that me me call you again? What was it that my distracted heart most wanted? "Whom has Persuasion to bring round now "to your love? Who, Sappho, is unfair to you? For, let her run, she will soon run after; "if she won't accept gifts, she will one day give them; and if she won't love you -- she soon will "love, although unwillingly..." If ever -- come now! Relieve this intolerable pain! What my heart most hopes will happen, make happen; you your- self join forces on my side!
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Drapple-thorned Aphrodite,
371 A precious—mouldering pleasure—’tis— To meet an Antique Book— In just the Dress his Century wore— A privilege—I think— His venerable Hand to take— And warming in our own— A passage back—or two—to make— To Times when he—was young— His quaint opinions—to inspect— His thought to ascertain On Themes concern our mutual mind— The Literature of Man— What interested Scholars—most— What Competitions ran— When Plato—was a Certainty— And Sophocles—a Man— When Sappho—was a living Girl— And Beatrice wore The Gown that Dante—deified— Facts Centuries before He traverses—familiar— As One should come to Town— And tell you all your Dreams—were true— He lived—where Dreams were born— His presence is Enchantment— You beg him not to go— Old Volume shake their Vellum Heads And tantalize—just so—
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A precious—mouldering pleasure
Meet me there, in the Elysian fields that hold us between a mortal and immortal time. Meet me beneath the moonlight beams, and I will wait for you in the moonlit crest banks as the gentle rains of the night transform to the thunderous cries of the gods. Meet me there, my love. Beneath these facades of skin and bone, our souls call to one another. I have known you in a place beyond space and time. So come home to me my love, and let us sail to the shores of our fateful bliss. I shall love you through the storms of time, if only you allow me to hold your hand in mine.
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Oct 12, 2023
Oct 12, 2023 at 11:01 PM UTC
Sappho, Incarnate.
~ October 2023 HP Poet: Maddy Age: 65 Country: USA Question 1: We welcome you to the HP Spotlight, Maddy. Please tell us about your background? Maddy: "Retired Teacher now Media and Digital Literacy Educational Consultant and writer." Question 2: How long have you been writing poetry, and for how long have you been a member of Hello Poetry? Maddy: "Been writing since I was eight. Three years now as an HP member." Question 3: What inspires you? (In other words, how does poetry happen for you). Maddy:  "Poetry wakes me in the middle of the night on airplanes and when I walk. It is still one of my best friends other than my husband, sister, and Best BFF Irene." Question 4: What does poetry mean to you? Maddy: "It is my friend and companion and is a precious asset. Without it my life would be empty." Question 5: Who are your favorite poets? Maddy: "Thoreau, EE Cummings, Sappho, MAYA Angelou, Carole King, Emily Torres, Mary Oliver, Millay, and many here on HEPO." Question 6: What other interests do you have? Maddy: "I love Travel, Photographer, Nature, Cooking, Theatre, Concerts, and Reading." Carlo C. Gomez: “Thank you so much for giving us an opportunity to get to know you, dear Maddy! You are a wonderful addition to the series!” Maddy: "Thanks and looking forward to it and your review of my book on Amazon." Thank you everyone here at HP for taking the time to read this. We hope you enjoyed getting to know Maddy a little bit better. I indeed did. It is our wish that these spotlights are helping everyone to further discover and appreciate their fellow poets. – Carlo C. Gomez (aka Mr. Timetable) We will post Spotlight #9 in November! ~
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Oct 1, 2023
Oct 1, 2023 at 3:33 PM UTC
HP Writers Spotlight: Maddy
~ October 2023 HP Poet: Maddy Age: 65 Country: USA Question 1: We welcome you to the HP Spotlight, Maddy. Please tell us about your background? Maddy: "Retired Teacher now Media and Digital Literacy Educational Consultant and writer." Question 2: How long have you been writing poetry, and for how long have you been a member of Hello Poetry? Maddy: "Been writing since I was eight. Three years now as an HP member." Question 3: What inspires you? (In other words, how does poetry happen for you). Maddy:  "Poetry wakes me in the middle of the night on airplanes and when I walk. It is still one of my best friends other than my husband, sister, and Best BFF Irene." Question 4: What does poetry mean to you? Maddy: "It is my friend and companion and is a precious asset. Without it my life would be empty." Question 5: Who are your favorite poets? Maddy: "Thoreau, EE Cummings, Sappho, MAYA Angelou, Carole King, Emily Torres, Mary Oliver, Millay, and many here on HEPO." Question 6: What other interests do you have? Maddy: "I love Travel, Photographer, Nature, Cooking, Theatre, Concerts, and Reading." Carlo C. Gomez: “Thank you so much for giving us an opportunity to get to know you, dear Maddy! You are a wonderful addition to the series!” Maddy: "Thanks and looking forward to it and your review of my book on Amazon." Thank you everyone here at HP for taking the time to read this. We hope you enjoyed getting to know Maddy a little bit better. I indeed did. It is our wish that these spotlights are helping everyone to further discover and appreciate their fellow poets. – Carlo C. Gomez (aka Mr. Timetable) We will post Spotlight #9 in November! ~
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22
Here in my heart I am Helen; I'm Aspasia and Hero, at least. I'm Judith, and Jael, and Madame de Stael; I'm Salome, moon of the East. Here in my soul I am Sappho; Lady Hamilton am I, as well. In me Recamier vies with Kitty O'Shea, With Dido, and Eve, and poor Nell. I'm of the glamorous ladies At whose beckoning history shook. But you are a man, and see only my pan, So I stay at home with a book.
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2.6k
Song Of One Of The Girls
O Venus, beauty of the skies, To whom a thousand temples rise, Gaily false in gentle smiles, Full of love-perplexing wiles; O goddess, from my heart remove The wasting cares and pains of love. If ever thou hast kindly heard A song in soft distress preferred, Propitious to my tuneful vow, A gentle goddess, hear me now. Descend, thou bright immortal guest, In all thy radiant charms confessed. Thou once didst leave almighty Jove And all the golden roofs above: The car thy wanton sparrows drew, Hovering in air they lightly flew; As to my bower they winged their way I saw their quivering pinions play. The birds dismissed (while you remain) Bore back their empty car again: Then you, with looks divinely mild, In every heavenly feature smiled, And asked what new complaints I made, And why I called you to my aid? What frenzy in my ***** raged, And by what cure to be assuaged? What gentle youth I would allure, Whom in my artful toils secure? Who does thy tender heart subdue, Tell me, my Sappho, tell me who? Though now he shuns thy longing arms, He soon shall court thy slighted charms; Though now thy offerings he despise, He soon to thee shall sacrifice; Though now he freezes, he soon shall burn, And be thy victim in his turn. Celestial visitant, once more Thy needful presence I implore. In pity come, and ease my grief, Bring my distempered soul relief, Favour thy suppliant's hidden fires, And give me all my heart desires.
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2.7k
A Hymn To Venus
Dear Colette, I want to write to you about being a woman for that is what you write to me. I want to tell you how your face enduring after thirty, forty, fifty. . . hangs above my desk like my own muse. I want to tell you how your hands reach out from your books & seize my heart. I want to tell you how your hair electrifies my thoughts like my own halo. I want to tell you how your eyes penetrate my fear & make it melt. I want to tell you simply that I love you-- though you are "dead" & I am still "alive." Suicides & spinsters-- all our kind! Even decorous Jane Austen never marrying, & Sappho leaping, & Sylvia in the oven, & Anna Wickham, Tsvetaeva, Sara Teasdale, & pale Virginia floating like Ophelia, & Emily alone, alone, alone. . . . But you endure & marry, go on writing, lose a husband, gain a husband, go on writing, sing & tap dance & you go on writing, have a child & still you go on writing, love a woman, love a man & go on writing. You endure your writing & your life. Dear Colette, I only want to thank you: for your eyes ringed with bluest paint like bruises, for your hair gathering sparks like brush fire, for your hands which never willingly let go, for your years, your child, your lovers, all your books. . . . Dear Colette, you hold me to this life.
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2.4k
Dear Colette
Sappho of the South Sweetest lips upon my mouth From Tomboy Casanova To Soft Butch Jehovah Stone Top, Touch-Me-Not To chapstick and Birkenstocks She’s my Strapping Queen The only flicker of my bean Oh, Lavender Menace I’m on my knees in minutes   Stud-finder Cunt-diver Love-guider Me-inside-her Lover’s lips upon my mouth   Lovely Sappho of the South
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Jun 14, 2025
Jun 14, 2025 at 1:07 AM UTC
Sappho Of the South