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"shoals" poems
the walls of the inside passage look the same from sound to straight tugs and plugs dot the coastline as the quartermaster rolls giving time for evening glare   pods are in sequence as the high tail smashes and jaws at the krill white bellies and sea cows bob and weave as bow heads glide over haida gwaii   northern lights dance and tlingit chant as the tide settles softly on savory shores their getting hungry in hoonah as the blue back and beating drums mark the life blood of the sea   driftwood nets and sitka spruce surround the cook house ravens and tinhorns man the scullery kerosene lamps flicker as clam shells roast on open flames   villagers stroll on pebbled sand *in the harbor of souls where ships set sail on might and mass into the steady winds of the golden skies* ice fields (to the north) of kryptonite blue cutting hills at a glacial pace knuckle clouds above the snowline where warlocks craft a hidden trade   trappers, skinners muscle shoals grizzly feasts in kodiak bowl determined pilgrims on a dead horse trail in search of gold the holy grail
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Mar 1, 2017
Mar 1, 2017 at 11:52 PM UTC
black jaw
Elated to see you aloft in the night sky To what do I owe this enchanted boon. In the merry company of winking stars, Enthralled by this sight as I admire my moon. Bathe me in your streaks of translucent silver. Accompany me through my sleepless nights. Watching over me with unwavering vigil. Swathe me in whispers of peaceful respite. Oh how you govern the raging tides of my soul. Rest your gaze as the waters break upon my shore... Erode and weaken the load strewn over my burning shoals, Sands drowned breathless but craving for more. Few nights now... Smitten as you coyly turn away. Thick strands of shadow clad hair in gentle cascades, Alluringly obscuring a slight fraction of your face. A tiny crescent blanketed away; into the blackness it fades. More nights pass... Now I see only a lesser moon Leaving me with only half; darkness so had claimed. Please make yourself last; you mustn't leave too soon, I'm not ready to be left crippled and maimed. I silently look up as more nights go by. I watched my lunar love dissolving into space. My heart too, torn away a morsel at a time... Finally she had gone; without a sliver or a trace. Every nightfall since is rife with emptiness and despair. I asked the stars if they could soothe my gaping void... But they'd only twinkle in indifference... Regardless of the pleas I've employed. Unsure of how many rises it has thus been. Nights only brought the onslaught of mocking stars above. Still I toy with the promises made overhead, For the awaited return of my crazed elusive love. I know it's frivolous to think I'm the only one... There are others who pine just as I do. But I yearn the most for your sought after attention, For our hearts have sung in every colour and every hue. Anxiety at peak, dismayed almost broken, Then I hear a sweet song sung; distant and far. A song that shared the words we once had spoken, Again enveloped in translucent silver, with relief I sighed...,                           "There you are..." .
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Oct 21, 2014
Oct 21, 2014 at 9:03 AM UTC
Moongazer
Elated to see you aloft in the night sky To what do I owe this enchanted boon. In the merry company of winking stars, Enthralled by this sight as I admire my moon. Bathe me in your streaks of translucent silver. Accompany me through my sleepless nights. Watching over me with unwavering vigil. Swathe me in whispers of peaceful respite. Oh how you govern the raging tides of my soul. Rest your gaze as the waters break upon my shore... Erode and weaken the load strewn over my burning shoals, Sands drowned breathless but craving for more. Few nights now... Smitten as you coyly turn away. Thick strands of shadow clad hair in gentle cascades, Alluringly obscuring a slight fraction of your face. A tiny crescent blanketed away; into the blackness it fades. More nights pass... Now I see only a lesser moon Leaving me with only half; darkness so had claimed. Please make yourself last; you mustn't leave too soon, I'm not ready to be left crippled and maimed. I silently look up as more nights go by. I watched my lunar love dissolving into space. My heart too, torn away a morsel at a time... Finally she had gone; without a sliver or a trace. Every nightfall since is rife with emptiness and despair. I asked the stars if they could soothe my gaping void... But they'd only twinkle in indifference... Regardless of the pleas I've employed. Unsure of how many rises it has thus been. Nights only brought the onslaught of mocking stars above. Still I toy with the promises made overhead, For the awaited return of my crazed elusive love. I know it's frivolous to think I'm the only one... There are others who pine just as I do. But I yearn the most for your sought after attention, For our hearts have sung in every colour and every hue. Anxiety at peak, dismayed almost broken, Then I hear a sweet song sung; distant and far. A song that shared the words we once had spoken, Again enveloped in translucent silver, with relief I sighed...,                           "There you are..." .
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42
To give life you must take life, and as our grief falls flat and hollow upon the billion-blooded sea I pass upon serious inward-breaking shoals rimmed with white-legged, white-bellied rotting creatures lengthily dead and rioting against surrounding scenes. Dear child, I only did to you what the sparrow did to you; I am old when it is fashionable to be young; I cry when it is fashionable to laugh. I hated you when it would have taken less courage to love.
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15.2k
As The Sparrow
You brave heroic minds, Worthy your country's name, That honour still pursue, Go, and subdue, Whilst loit'ring hinds Lurke here at home with shame. Britons, you stay too long, Quickly aboard bestow you; And with a merry gale Swell your stretched sail, With vows as strong As the winds that blow you. Your course securely steer, West and by South forth keep; Rocks, lee-shores, nor shoals, When Eolus scowls, You need nor fear, So absolute the deep. And cheerfully at sea, Success you still entice To get the pearl and gold; And ours to hold Virginia, Earth's only Paradise. Where Nature hath in store Fowl, venison, and fish; And the fruitfull'st soil, Without your toil, Three harvests more, All greater than your wish. And the ambitious vine Crowns with his purple mass The cedar reaching high To kiss the sky, The cypress, pine, And useful sassafras. To whom the golden age Still Nature's laws doth give, No other cares attend But them to defend From winter's rage, That long there doth not live. When as the luscious smell Of that delicious land, Above the sea that flows, The clear wind throws, Your hearts to swell, Approaching the dear strand. In kenning of the shore, (Thanks to God first given) O you, the happiest men, Be frolic then! Let canons roar, Frighting the wide heaven! And in regions far Such heroes bring ye forth As those from whom we came, And plant our name Under that star Not known unto our North. And as there plenty grows Of laurel everywhere, Apollo's sacred tree, You may it see A poet's brows To crown, that may sing there. Thy voyages attend Industrious Hakluit, Whose reading shall inflame Men to seek fame, And much commend To after-times thy wit.
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Passions in PoetryTo the Virginian Voyage
You brave heroic minds, Worthy your country's name, That honour still pursue, Go, and subdue, Whilst loit'ring hinds Lurke here at home with shame. Britons, you stay too long, Quickly aboard bestow you; And with a merry gale Swell your stretched sail, With vows as strong As the winds that blow you. Your course securely steer, West and by South forth keep; Rocks, lee-shores, nor shoals, When Eolus scowls, You need nor fear, So absolute the deep. And cheerfully at sea, Success you still entice To get the pearl and gold; And ours to hold Virginia, Earth's only Paradise. Where Nature hath in store Fowl, venison, and fish; And the fruitfull'st soil, Without your toil, Three harvests more, All greater than your wish. And the ambitious vine Crowns with his purple mass The cedar reaching high To kiss the sky, The cypress, pine, And useful sassafras. To whom the golden age Still Nature's laws doth give, No other cares attend But them to defend From winter's rage, That long there doth not live. When as the luscious smell Of that delicious land, Above the sea that flows, The clear wind throws, Your hearts to swell, Approaching the dear strand. In kenning of the shore, (Thanks to God first given) O you, the happiest men, Be frolic then! Let canons roar, Frighting the wide heaven! And in regions far Such heroes bring ye forth As those from whom we came, And plant our name Under that star Not known unto our North. And as there plenty grows Of laurel everywhere, Apollo's sacred tree, You may it see A poet's brows To crown, that may sing there. Thy voyages attend Industrious Hakluit, Whose reading shall inflame Men to seek fame, And much commend To after-times thy wit.
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72
From my perch,spanning the vast, fathomless sky at night, where 100 billion galaxies vie with one another, for foothold, shoals of fish on the swim in diverse forms of being ( or nothingness of various kind) in cycles  of birth from dust, growth, death in dark holes and rebirth. I now see only  a lone star above, cowering at a far corner, in silence anxiety ridden  as she's alone in this celestial grand opera house. Wonder, where had gone all, the spectacular display of star power, profligacy of fish of  ocean above proudly displaying just yesterday. Lessons, on equanimity perhaps, nature teaches,writing on the night sky.
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Dec 11, 2015
Dec 11, 2015 at 7:42 AM UTC
Lessons on equanimity written in the starlit sky
O Krishna, Lord of Hindustan, I sorrowed by the lonely Jumna river bank, where Thy flute-notes thrilled the air and led the lost calves to their homes. O Lotus of Love, musing on the sad absence of Thy delusion-dispelling eyes, I saw Thine invisible Spirit take form, frozen by my devotion's frost. Thy divine form of sky-blue rays, with feet of eternity, walked on the banks of my mind, planting lasting footprints of realization there. I am one of Thy lost calves which followed Thy flower-footprints on the shoals of time. Listening to the melody of Thy flute of wisdom, I am following the middle path of calm activity, by which Thou hast led many through the portals of the dark past into the light. Since all of us are of Thy fold, whether moving, sidetracked, or held stationary by the fogs of disbelief, O Divine Christ-na, lead us back to Thy fold of everlasting freedom. O Krishna, Thou reignest on the heart-throne of each knower of Thy love. From: Whispers from Eternity A Book of Answered Prayers 1949 Edition
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Come To Me O Krishna
THERE is a wolf in me ... fangs pointed for tearing gashes ... a red tongue for raw meat ... and the hot lapping of blood-I keep this wolf because the wilderness gave it to me and the wilderness will not let it go. There is a fox in me ... a silver-gray fox ... I sniff and guess ... I pick things out of the wind and air ... I nose in the dark night and take sleepers and eat them and hide the feathers ... I circle and loop and double-cross. There is a hog in me ... a snout and a belly ... a machinery for eating and grunting ... a machinery for sleeping satisfied in the sun-I got this too from the wilderness and the wilderness will not let it go. There is a fish in me ... I know I came from saltblue water-gates ... I scurried with shoals of herring ... I blew waterspouts with porpoises ... before land was ... before the water went down ... before Noah ... before the first chapter of Genesis. There is a baboon in me ... clambering-clawed ... dog-faced ... yawping a galoot's hunger ... hairy under the armpits ... here are the hawk-eyed hankering men ... here are the blond and blue-eyed women ... here they hide curled asleep waiting ... ready to snarl and **** ... ready to sing and give milk ... waiting-I keep the baboon because the wilderness says so. There is an eagle in me and a mockingbird ... and the eagle flies among the Rocky Mountains of my dreams and fights among the Sierra crags of what I want ... and the mockingbird warbles in the early forenoon before the dew is gone, warbles in the underbrush of my Chattanoogas of hope, gushes over the blue Ozark foothills of my wishes-And I got the eagle and the mockingbird from the wilderness. O, I got a zoo, I got a menagerie, inside my ribs, under my bony head, under my red-valve heart-and I got something else: it is a man-child heart, a woman-child heart: it is a father and mother and lover: it came from God-Knows-Where: it is going to God-Knows-Where-For I am the keeper of the zoo: I say yes and no: I sing and **** and work: I am a pal of the world: I came from the wilderness.
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Wilderness
THERE is a wolf in me ... fangs pointed for tearing gashes ... a red tongue for raw meat ... and the hot lapping of blood-I keep this wolf because the wilderness gave it to me and the wilderness will not let it go. There is a fox in me ... a silver-gray fox ... I sniff and guess ... I pick things out of the wind and air ... I nose in the dark night and take sleepers and eat them and hide the feathers ... I circle and loop and double-cross. There is a hog in me ... a snout and a belly ... a machinery for eating and grunting ... a machinery for sleeping satisfied in the sun-I got this too from the wilderness and the wilderness will not let it go. There is a fish in me ... I know I came from saltblue water-gates ... I scurried with shoals of herring ... I blew waterspouts with porpoises ... before land was ... before the water went down ... before Noah ... before the first chapter of Genesis. There is a baboon in me ... clambering-clawed ... dog-faced ... yawping a galoot's hunger ... hairy under the armpits ... here are the hawk-eyed hankering men ... here are the blond and blue-eyed women ... here they hide curled asleep waiting ... ready to snarl and **** ... ready to sing and give milk ... waiting-I keep the baboon because the wilderness says so. There is an eagle in me and a mockingbird ... and the eagle flies among the Rocky Mountains of my dreams and fights among the Sierra crags of what I want ... and the mockingbird warbles in the early forenoon before the dew is gone, warbles in the underbrush of my Chattanoogas of hope, gushes over the blue Ozark foothills of my wishes-And I got the eagle and the mockingbird from the wilderness. O, I got a zoo, I got a menagerie, inside my ribs, under my bony head, under my red-valve heart-and I got something else: it is a man-child heart, a woman-child heart: it is a father and mother and lover: it came from God-Knows-Where: it is going to God-Knows-Where-For I am the keeper of the zoo: I say yes and no: I sing and **** and work: I am a pal of the world: I came from the wilderness.
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7
An away game at Leeds! The Loiner Lion will have its feeds. So it was, back in the day When Revie’s Men held full sway. Reaney, Charlton, Hunter, Cooper, That defence was really super. David Harvey, ‘keeper complete, Guaranteed a solid clean sheet. The midfield ruled by Bremner and Giles, Billy’s energy, Johnny’s wiles. Lorimer and Gray down the wings, Recalling Eddie (Gray), oh my heart sings. Jones and Clarkey gave us goals, Lots of them, shoals and shoals. 73-74 our greatest year, Opponents always full of fear. Man U relegated that season too, Better days there were very few. We won the league by a merry mile, Time to smile as we did it in style. In 69 we lost just two from 42. Opponents didn’t know what to do. Burnley and City our only losses, Otherwise we were the bosses. 92 was another good year, Man U crying in their beer. Then we sold them Cantona, That really was a bridge too far. The rest is history as they say; We strive again to have our day. In the second tier on Italian money, Seeking the land of milk and honey. The Premiership’s the place where we should be, Please Messi, join us, on a free! We hanker for those glory days. God please help us with your mysterious ways. Paul Butters © PB 11\9\2015.
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Sep 11, 2015
Sep 11, 2015 at 5:42 AM UTC
We Are Leeds
Tonight watching the waves break over Dead Woman's Shoals quite a ways away through the windows of the Riverview where I once thought the bar was the bottom of a boat scarred deep from the drink on the rocks and sand bars until I realized it was a coffin shellacked black as the hazards of marriage between a waterman and a lonely woman black as the soft leather of the stool climbed and kicked away black as the water the night you found her there still swinging from the rope of the nets she repaired for her man while he was away chasing the catch deep in the darkness of the black waves.
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Apr 10, 2017
Apr 10, 2017 at 11:45 PM UTC
Black
body and soul part part and part whole oars and sail wet waves and wet shoals sand and surf tide's end and tides evening kisses wash and away gone and then and gone again scent of strawberry and reaching fields gentle holds gentle feels
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Sep 29, 2014
Sep 29, 2014 at 5:59 PM UTC
strawberry surf
To a Louse by Robert Burns translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Hey! Where're you going, you crawling hair-fly? Your impudence protects you, barely; I can only say that you swagger rarely Over gauze and lace. Though faith! I fear you dine but sparely In such a place. You ugly, creeping, blasted wonder, Detested, shunned by both saint and sinner, How dare you set your feet upon her— So fine a lady! Go somewhere else to seek your dinner On some poor body. Off! around some beggar's temple shamble: There you may creep, and sprawl, and scramble, With other kindred, jumping cattle, In shoals and nations; Where horn nor bone never dare unsettle Your thick plantations. Now hold you there! You're out of sight, Below the folderols, snug and tight; No, faith just yet! You'll not be right, Till you've got on it: The very topmost, towering height Of miss's bonnet. My word! right bold you root, contrary, As plump and gray as any gooseberry. Oh, for some rank, mercurial resin, Or dread red poison; I'd give you such a hearty dose, flea, It'd dress your noggin! I wouldn't be surprised to spy You on some housewife's flannel tie: Or maybe on some ragged boy's Pale undervest; But Miss's finest bonnet! Fie! How dare you jest? Oh Jenny, do not toss your head, And lash your lovely braids abroad! You hardly know what cursed speed The creature's making! Those winks and finger-ends, I dread, Are notice-taking! O would some Power with vision teach us To see ourselves as others see us! It would from many a blunder free us, And foolish notions: What airs in dress and carriage would leave us, And even devotion! One Sunday while sitting behind a young lady in church, Robert Burns noticed a louse roaming through the bows and ribbons of her bonnet. The poem "To a Louse" resulted from his observations. The poor woman had no idea that she would be the subject of one of Burns' best poems about how we see ourselves, compared to how other people see us at our worst moments. Keywords/Tags: Robert Burns, louse, church, bonnet, lace, Scotland, Scots, dialect, translation
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Apr 21, 2020
Apr 21, 2020 at 5:26 AM UTC
Robert Burns "To a Louse" translation
To a Louse by Robert Burns translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch Hey! Where're you going, you crawling hair-fly? Your impudence protects you, barely; I can only say that you swagger rarely Over gauze and lace. Though faith! I fear you dine but sparely In such a place. You ugly, creeping, blasted wonder, Detested, shunned by both saint and sinner, How dare you set your feet upon her— So fine a lady! Go somewhere else to seek your dinner On some poor body. Off! around some beggar's temple shamble: There you may creep, and sprawl, and scramble, With other kindred, jumping cattle, In shoals and nations; Where horn nor bone never dare unsettle Your thick plantations. Now hold you there! You're out of sight, Below the folderols, snug and tight; No, faith just yet! You'll not be right, Till you've got on it: The very topmost, towering height Of miss's bonnet. My word! right bold you root, contrary, As plump and gray as any gooseberry. Oh, for some rank, mercurial resin, Or dread red poison; I'd give you such a hearty dose, flea, It'd dress your noggin! I wouldn't be surprised to spy You on some housewife's flannel tie: Or maybe on some ragged boy's Pale undervest; But Miss's finest bonnet! Fie! How dare you jest? Oh Jenny, do not toss your head, And lash your lovely braids abroad! You hardly know what cursed speed The creature's making! Those winks and finger-ends, I dread, Are notice-taking! O would some Power with vision teach us To see ourselves as others see us! It would from many a blunder free us, And foolish notions: What airs in dress and carriage would leave us, And even devotion! One Sunday while sitting behind a young lady in church, Robert Burns noticed a louse roaming through the bows and ribbons of her bonnet. The poem "To a Louse" resulted from his observations. The poor woman had no idea that she would be the subject of one of Burns' best poems about how we see ourselves, compared to how other people see us at our worst moments. Keywords/Tags: Robert Burns, louse, church, bonnet, lace, Scotland, Scots, dialect, translation
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52
ON SEEING ONE ON A LADY’S BONNET AT CHURCH Ha! whare ye gaun, ye crowlin ferlie! Your impudence protects you sairly: I canna say but ye strunt rarely Owre gauze and lace; Tho’ faith, I fear ye dine but sparely On sic a place. Ye ugly, creepin, blastit wonner, Detested, shunned by saunt an’ sinner, How daur ye set your fit upon her, Sae fine a lady! *** somewhere else and seek your dinner, On some poor body. Swith, in some beggar’s haffet squattle; There ye may creep, and sprawl, and sprattle Wi’ ither kindred, jumpin cattle, In shoals and nations; Whare horn or bane ne’er daur unsettle Your thick plantations. Now haud ye there, ye’re out o’ sight, Below the fatt’rels, snug an’ tight; Na faith ye yet! ye’ll no be right Till ye’ve got on it, The vera tapmost, towering height O’ Miss’s bonnet. My sooth! right bauld ye set your nose out, As plump an’ grey as onie grozet: O for some rank, mercurial rozet, Or fell, red smeddum, I’d gie ye sic a hearty dose o’t, *** dress your droddum! I *** na been surprised to spy You on an auld wife’s flainen toy; Or aiblins some bit duddie boy, On’s wyliecoat; But Miss’s fine Lunardi!—fie! How daur ye do’t? O Jenny, dinna toss your head, An’ set your beauties a’ abread! Ye little ken what cursed speed The blastie’s makin! Thae winks and finger-ends, I dread, Are notice takin! O, *** some Power the giftie gie us To see oursels as others see us! It *** frae monie a blunder free us An’ foolish notion: What airs in dress an’ gait *** lea’e us, And ev’n Devotion!
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To A Louse
ON SEEING ONE ON A LADY’S BONNET AT CHURCH Ha! whare ye gaun, ye crowlin ferlie! Your impudence protects you sairly: I canna say but ye strunt rarely Owre gauze and lace; Tho’ faith, I fear ye dine but sparely On sic a place. Ye ugly, creepin, blastit wonner, Detested, shunned by saunt an’ sinner, How daur ye set your fit upon her, Sae fine a lady! *** somewhere else and seek your dinner, On some poor body. Swith, in some beggar’s haffet squattle; There ye may creep, and sprawl, and sprattle Wi’ ither kindred, jumpin cattle, In shoals and nations; Whare horn or bane ne’er daur unsettle Your thick plantations. Now haud ye there, ye’re out o’ sight, Below the fatt’rels, snug an’ tight; Na faith ye yet! ye’ll no be right Till ye’ve got on it, The vera tapmost, towering height O’ Miss’s bonnet. My sooth! right bauld ye set your nose out, As plump an’ grey as onie grozet: O for some rank, mercurial rozet, Or fell, red smeddum, I’d gie ye sic a hearty dose o’t, *** dress your droddum! I *** na been surprised to spy You on an auld wife’s flainen toy; Or aiblins some bit duddie boy, On’s wyliecoat; But Miss’s fine Lunardi!—fie! How daur ye do’t? O Jenny, dinna toss your head, An’ set your beauties a’ abread! Ye little ken what cursed speed The blastie’s makin! Thae winks and finger-ends, I dread, Are notice takin! O, *** some Power the giftie gie us To see oursels as others see us! It *** frae monie a blunder free us An’ foolish notion: What airs in dress an’ gait *** lea’e us, And ev’n Devotion!
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49
Oh what comes over the sea, Shoals and quicksands past; And what comes home to me, Sailing slow, sailing fast? A wind comes over the sea With a moan in its blast; But nothing comes home to me, Sailing slow, sailing fast. Let me be, let me be, For my lot is cast: Land or sea all's one to me, And sail it slow or fast.
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3.2k
Song (Oh What Comes Over The Sea)
oh, san juans, your riches beckon your wealth, your beauty calls your waveless, salty waters blue my heart since childhood draws your waters lap at darkened rock 'round islands, bays and inlets fill with returning salmon teeming your breaking waters thrill your tide, oh ever river changing charges muddy oyster flats your thriving pods of orca leap o'er spray in mid-air acrobats from seabed swift, cold and deep  the lushness of your green hills rise  your sun falls fleet like shooting star your sparkling waters mesmerize sailing craft from ’neath horizon angels spread their wings of color skirt your shoals and ply your straits find safety anchored in your harbors  oh, san juans, your wonder waits your treasure and your magic calls your waveless, crystal waters blue my heart since youth still draws calls me to return each year to dip my paddle deep when life averts the journey there in dreams you beckon while i sleep
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Oct 14, 2013
Oct 14, 2013 at 2:22 AM UTC
oh, san juans
Blow, blow your trumpets till they crack, Ye little men of little souls! And bid them huddle at your back - Gold-sucking leeches, shoals on shoals! Fill all the air with hungry wails - "Reward us, ere we think or write! Without your Gold mere Knowledge fails To sate the swinish appetite!" And, where great Plato paced serene, Or Newton paused with wistful eye, Rush to the chace with hoofs unclean And Babel-clamour of the sty Be yours the pay: be theirs the praise: We will not rob them of their due, Nor vex the ghosts of other days By naming them along with you. They sought and found undying fame: They toiled not for reward nor thanks: Their cheeks are hot with honest shame For you, the modern mountebanks! Who preach of Justice - plead with tears That Love and Mercy should abound - While marking with complacent ears The moaning of some tortured hound: Who prate of Wisdom - nay, forbear, Lest Wisdom turn on you in wrath, Trampling, with heel that will not spare, The vermin that beset her path! Go, throng each other's drawing-rooms, Ye idols of a petty clique: Strut your brief hour in borrowed plumes, And make your penny-trumpets squeak. Deck your dull talk with pilfered shreds Of learning from a nobler time, And oil each other's little heads With mutual Flattery's golden slime: And when the topmost height ye gain, And stand in Glory's ether clear, And grasp the prize of all your pain - So many hundred pounds a year - Then let Fame's banner be unfurled! Sing Paeans for a victory won! Ye tapers, that would light the world, And cast a shadow on the Sun - Who still shall pour His rays sublime, One crystal flood, from East to West, When YE have burned your little time And feebly flickered into rest!
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Fame's Penny-Trumpet
Blow, blow your trumpets till they crack, Ye little men of little souls! And bid them huddle at your back - Gold-sucking leeches, shoals on shoals! Fill all the air with hungry wails - "Reward us, ere we think or write! Without your Gold mere Knowledge fails To sate the swinish appetite!" And, where great Plato paced serene, Or Newton paused with wistful eye, Rush to the chace with hoofs unclean And Babel-clamour of the sty Be yours the pay: be theirs the praise: We will not rob them of their due, Nor vex the ghosts of other days By naming them along with you. They sought and found undying fame: They toiled not for reward nor thanks: Their cheeks are hot with honest shame For you, the modern mountebanks! Who preach of Justice - plead with tears That Love and Mercy should abound - While marking with complacent ears The moaning of some tortured hound: Who prate of Wisdom - nay, forbear, Lest Wisdom turn on you in wrath, Trampling, with heel that will not spare, The vermin that beset her path! Go, throng each other's drawing-rooms, Ye idols of a petty clique: Strut your brief hour in borrowed plumes, And make your penny-trumpets squeak. Deck your dull talk with pilfered shreds Of learning from a nobler time, And oil each other's little heads With mutual Flattery's golden slime: And when the topmost height ye gain, And stand in Glory's ether clear, And grasp the prize of all your pain - So many hundred pounds a year - Then let Fame's banner be unfurled! Sing Paeans for a victory won! Ye tapers, that would light the world, And cast a shadow on the Sun - Who still shall pour His rays sublime, One crystal flood, from East to West, When YE have burned your little time And feebly flickered into rest!
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48
His skin weaved in the golden sand, Shone under the sun of his motherland. Hair a tangled meshwork of thread, Reminiscent of the nets his father spread. He had no toys but crystals and shells, that he collected onshore in lonely spells. His food, the raw salty fish, Swiftly with skill that he gut and dished. He goes and lays down in wet sand, the spirit of which he loves to no end. He sings to the mermaids and in mud he rolls, and the sea laughs with him in breaking shoals. He is made of blood but ocean too, he knows no music but woosh woosh woosh. He wishes to marry a girl of the sea, who'll dwell with him in his fantasy. He turns his head and closes his ears, while people run away from the ocean in fear. Destruction and death loom ahead, The blue ocean rises violently filling the town with dread. Like a heavenly curse it fells on the town, crushes and sweeps like the tragedy bound. With his holy hand it avenges it's kin, and his water that was treated as nothing but bin. It tears every home away from it's root, just like how the humans did its fish loot. And squeezes the life out of the fishermen, that feast on the dead of his homeland. It starves and suffocates many men, who made him breathless with oil spills time and again. Like a storm it rages and plunders. In minutes, wrecks havoc on the land and rips it asunder. It gradually descends back to it's nest, Satisfied with the curse it did impress. The next day a body lay on the shore. Like a coffin did it mud wore. As people looked on it, they could not help but chant; ***The Child of the Ocean lies strangled in its waters, We feed things love and they destroy us and slaughter.***
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May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 9:05 AM UTC
The Child Of the Ocean
His skin weaved in the golden sand, Shone under the sun of his motherland. Hair a tangled meshwork of thread, Reminiscent of the nets his father spread. He had no toys but crystals and shells, that he collected onshore in lonely spells. His food, the raw salty fish, Swiftly with skill that he gut and dished. He goes and lays down in wet sand, the spirit of which he loves to no end. He sings to the mermaids and in mud he rolls, and the sea laughs with him in breaking shoals. He is made of blood but ocean too, he knows no music but woosh woosh woosh. He wishes to marry a girl of the sea, who'll dwell with him in his fantasy. He turns his head and closes his ears, while people run away from the ocean in fear. Destruction and death loom ahead, The blue ocean rises violently filling the town with dread. Like a heavenly curse it fells on the town, crushes and sweeps like the tragedy bound. With his holy hand it avenges it's kin, and his water that was treated as nothing but bin. It tears every home away from it's root, just like how the humans did its fish loot. And squeezes the life out of the fishermen, that feast on the dead of his homeland. It starves and suffocates many men, who made him breathless with oil spills time and again. Like a storm it rages and plunders. In minutes, wrecks havoc on the land and rips it asunder. It gradually descends back to it's nest, Satisfied with the curse it did impress. The next day a body lay on the shore. Like a coffin did it mud wore. As people looked on it, they could not help but chant; ***The Child of the Ocean lies strangled in its waters, We feed things love and they destroy us and slaughter.***
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moving inland far away from the coast temptation doth bring deeper in land the head seems consumed by everything nearing the coast it's the heart that sings though inland, my love, you will find me away from the bogs or the shoals o' herring holding you at bay with ***** keeping me next to me wanting tomorrow to be the better day my mind, an island for tromping shores different from desert sands when the tide of your concern reprimands on this island the shells are smaller and there are no dollars,   the sea, a shrunken plastic expanse of syringes and lip balm containers, soft fluid-filled bodies turned into sopping brown-bag skeletons, revenges of modern life. there is a rivulet further up shore do you feel it? follow the inlet wind near a candescent pond there is a house open the door if you fall in a home can be found.
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Jan 12, 2017
Jan 12, 2017 at 1:37 AM UTC
inland heart
grasses brown up nice, this time of year, Sun slices, through the spaces of branches and the love- ly leaves, shadow seekers, and sun bathers wait on, the changing dark shape, to place their bodies and at by the end of the day such justifies the means, while buckets of water empty and fill and liquid pill fertilizer, is a miser of plant health, wealth and chaotic growth, you can't control your eating or time, so why should a **** heed the call to stop, why should a plant, slow down instead, cant toward the Sun you worship or hide your hide from, and your dog or cat, just lays about the place, licks your nose or face, serve wine over ice and take a couple of ice cubes from a heart, that there is never a chance of thaw, at the temperature of dry ice and dry eyes that will not shed tears, will not shuck fears, like oysters, on the life that is a beach, shoals, rip tides, confide and confounded, leave the corpse in the sand until the waves have pounded knowledge of gardening and gardens of life, go on live beyond the strife, soften the take on weed(s).
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Jun 21, 2015
Jun 21, 2015 at 8:23 PM UTC
Gardening, Gardeners
Oceans fish stars, that are overhead, swimming; those dying masses of sun, looking the night sky to pieces. Silver dots barely skimming deep dwelling currents that invisibly ply sky netting that makes the sea’s mirror, a gridded field filled with shoals of stars setting small fires that out last the jettings of Amber Jack and squid around a sea turtle who they easily tire. Filled with eggs, ready to be this moon’s batch on a brief beach made white by the nights contrast. Not all turtles will inevitably hatch. Those who will, will live if lucky and fast. The stars, that insignificantly wink, ride the currents that rise and sink
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Mar 5, 2014
Mar 5, 2014 at 9:59 PM UTC
Oceans Fish Stars
Wide, grey waters rolling in Invisibly it flows Like a spreading carpet over mud Inexorably it grows. Created by a lunar force And global winds at play, Twice each day the tides do surge To crest and flow away. Twice each day the tide rolls in To cover shoals of sands And beds of oysters, muddy brown With squirting water glands. And twice each day the seabirds flock To alight on draining shores To harvest succulents and ***** And other tasty mores. Oyster pickers congregate In flocks of white and black Red beaks plunging deeply In green pastures for a snack. Amazingly, they all take flight A thousand beating wings Which heel about collectively Inking out all skyward things. A thousand, million wavelets play Across the level span Pursued by wind’s relentless glove In a patterned, surging plan. And each reflects a kiss of light, Each wavelet in the run Collectively illuminate Like diamonds in the sun. Above the waves the seagulls ply In corridors of air In squadron flights of symmetry To weave and wheel with flair, Their raucous calls at distance The poetry of sound, In tidal terms, a symphony Of seaward things profound. The haze at the horizon Of salt spray in the air, White ,crunchy shells on beaches, Pohutukawa’s everywhere. A feeling of things tidal In a lazy, salty way, And enjoying the quiet beauty Of this lovely, coastal bay. Marshalg @ the Gate Mangere Bridge 4th March 2009
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Nov 27, 2009
Nov 27, 2009 at 2:20 PM UTC
Tidal
We the men of the Sussex Weald When winters nights are long Sit beside the deep log fire And sing the Sussex songs We talk of crops and fertile soil Of rich earth turned by the plough Of fishing boats who from harbours small Reap a harvest from the shoals Strong ale shared by those who care About the Sussex weald Yes we, we who care we will be the shield We the men of the Southern downs Yes we of the Sussex weald To no man will we go on bended knee To no man will we yield
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Dec 28, 2014
Dec 28, 2014 at 8:21 PM UTC
We Of The Sussex Weald
Sound the deep waters:-- Who shall sound that deep?-- Too short the plummet, And the watchmen sleep. Some dream of effort Up a toilsome steep; Some dream of pasture grounds For harmless sheep. White shapes flit to and fro From mast to mast; They feel the distant tempest That nears them fast: Great rocks are straight ahead, Great shoals not past; They shout to one another Upon the blast. O, soft the streams drop music Between the hills, And musical the birds' nests Beside those rills: The nests are types of home Love-hidden from ills, The nests are types of spirits Love-music fills. So dream the sleepers, Each man in his place; The lightning shows the smile Upon each face: The ship is driving, driving, It drives apace: And sleepers smile, and spirits Bewail their case. The lightning glares and reddens Across the skies; It seems but sunset To those sleeping eyes. When did the sun go down On such a wise? From such a sunset When shall day arise? "Wake," call the spirits: But to heedless ears; They have forgotten sorrows And hopes and fears; They have forgotten perils And smiles and tears; Their dream has held them long, Long years and years. "Wake," call the spirits again: But it would take A louder summons To bid them awake. Some dream of pleasure For another's sake; Some dream, forgetful Of a lifelong ache. One by one slowly, Ah, how sad and slow! Wailing and praying The spirits rise and go: Clear stainless spirits, White,--as white as snow; Pale spirits, wailing For an overthrow. One by one flitting, Like a mournful bird Whose song is tired at last For no mate heard. The loving voice is silent, The useless word; One by one flitting, Sick with hope deferred. Driving and driving, The ship drives amain: While swift from mast to mast Shapes flit again, Flit silent as the silence Where men lie slain; Their shadow cast upon the sails Is like a stain. No voice to call the sleepers, No hand to raise: They sleep to death in dreaming Of length of days. Vanity of vanities, The Preacher says: Vanity is the end Of all their ways.
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2.3k
Sleep At Sea
Sound the deep waters:-- Who shall sound that deep?-- Too short the plummet, And the watchmen sleep. Some dream of effort Up a toilsome steep; Some dream of pasture grounds For harmless sheep. White shapes flit to and fro From mast to mast; They feel the distant tempest That nears them fast: Great rocks are straight ahead, Great shoals not past; They shout to one another Upon the blast. O, soft the streams drop music Between the hills, And musical the birds' nests Beside those rills: The nests are types of home Love-hidden from ills, The nests are types of spirits Love-music fills. So dream the sleepers, Each man in his place; The lightning shows the smile Upon each face: The ship is driving, driving, It drives apace: And sleepers smile, and spirits Bewail their case. The lightning glares and reddens Across the skies; It seems but sunset To those sleeping eyes. When did the sun go down On such a wise? From such a sunset When shall day arise? "Wake," call the spirits: But to heedless ears; They have forgotten sorrows And hopes and fears; They have forgotten perils And smiles and tears; Their dream has held them long, Long years and years. "Wake," call the spirits again: But it would take A louder summons To bid them awake. Some dream of pleasure For another's sake; Some dream, forgetful Of a lifelong ache. One by one slowly, Ah, how sad and slow! Wailing and praying The spirits rise and go: Clear stainless spirits, White,--as white as snow; Pale spirits, wailing For an overthrow. One by one flitting, Like a mournful bird Whose song is tired at last For no mate heard. The loving voice is silent, The useless word; One by one flitting, Sick with hope deferred. Driving and driving, The ship drives amain: While swift from mast to mast Shapes flit again, Flit silent as the silence Where men lie slain; Their shadow cast upon the sails Is like a stain. No voice to call the sleepers, No hand to raise: They sleep to death in dreaming Of length of days. Vanity of vanities, The Preacher says: Vanity is the end Of all their ways.
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Some Rocks Some rocks, Certain shoals, Necessary friends, Needed to crash into. Oh the poems come fast and furious this Sabbath morn, Every phrase a bullet graze, Or a bullseye in the chest wound. No matter, let them come, But know this: If I hit the rocks, The boat of inspiration sinks, I got friends, Who are ricks too, Rocks I can count on. So when my GPS dies (general poetry senses) I look for those rocks To guide me home, Look for those rocks To crash into.
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Sep 21, 2013
Sep 21, 2013 at 9:06 AM UTC
Some Rocks
~  i stand before this kneeling bench, no sanctuary of our making; its walls here open thrown, on stained glass windows found strewn upon the sand, its tide-washed, polished glass, my feet find holy ground; my sandals left at driftwood door. incense burns upon the wind, its salty spray is mingled, with my own upon these joy-stained cheeks. the worshippers that went before have built a temple out of wood, hewn, untouched by human hand, a steeple to the sky is lifted, and within its shelter, remnants of a ring of fire, smoke once lifted to the heavens by believers true; this church i see through salted eyes, this scape awash in teeming life, here i drink this living wine; its ebb, its rush, its living in each moment without need, to connect each dot, or even speak. i long to live at razor's edge, where sands and tides collide; the rocky shoals where dungeness, find sustenance and shelter; the coves where seabirds feed their young, above the sandstone cliffs; the bar beneath a setting sun, in flames awash in waves; find comfort ‘neath the storm-shaped pine, feel longing in the stinging air. these cheeks that weep, though want of tears, not in sorrow mind you, but in joy of freedom, the lure of siren alter call; of a close horizon on a misty morn, the haunting breath of orca, just beyond my sight; the bark of ocean’s lion, the roar of distant waves; with these my prayers i send, as i offer this my praise; this church of no man’s making, here i come for cleansing, to breathe the life that i am given! ~ *post script. by nature we are spiritual creatures; spiritual... not religious.  reading your sea-scaped prose inspires me; planning changes in my own life even more so!! it is said that we return to what we know best... the ocean calls...*
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Sep 28, 2016
Sep 28, 2016 at 10:05 AM UTC
siren call
~  i stand before this kneeling bench, no sanctuary of our making; its walls here open thrown, on stained glass windows found strewn upon the sand, its tide-washed, polished glass, my feet find holy ground; my sandals left at driftwood door. incense burns upon the wind, its salty spray is mingled, with my own upon these joy-stained cheeks. the worshippers that went before have built a temple out of wood, hewn, untouched by human hand, a steeple to the sky is lifted, and within its shelter, remnants of a ring of fire, smoke once lifted to the heavens by believers true; this church i see through salted eyes, this scape awash in teeming life, here i drink this living wine; its ebb, its rush, its living in each moment without need, to connect each dot, or even speak. i long to live at razor's edge, where sands and tides collide; the rocky shoals where dungeness, find sustenance and shelter; the coves where seabirds feed their young, above the sandstone cliffs; the bar beneath a setting sun, in flames awash in waves; find comfort ‘neath the storm-shaped pine, feel longing in the stinging air. these cheeks that weep, though want of tears, not in sorrow mind you, but in joy of freedom, the lure of siren alter call; of a close horizon on a misty morn, the haunting breath of orca, just beyond my sight; the bark of ocean’s lion, the roar of distant waves; with these my prayers i send, as i offer this my praise; this church of no man’s making, here i come for cleansing, to breathe the life that i am given! ~ *post script. by nature we are spiritual creatures; spiritual... not religious.  reading your sea-scaped prose inspires me; planning changes in my own life even more so!! it is said that we return to what we know best... the ocean calls...*
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61
The coastal shoals are your dominion. No salmon, or smelt, nor bottom flounder Had ever left the sea until you struck, You are wraith to the kelp beds dream.
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Jun 1, 2012
Jun 1, 2012 at 7:06 PM UTC
The Osprey ( the sky fisher )