"soviets" poems
I come from New Orleans where the swingers hook up with the singers, and the boxes have a person inside who speak to you through a thick horizontal slot in the door. You come from Minnesota where the most aggressive sentence is “Hi, how are you” and you’ve attended church every Sunday of your life, even though you don’t really believe in god.
We came to the West to skate with the surfer junkies. But then the harbors got bombed and we moved out East to see the hipsters and the artists beggin on the streets. We went to the South with the racists and bigots were dying for a good show. We moved up North to escape from the 70s, and with the 80s on the rise we figured we’d best stay away.
The 70s were rockin’ with **** and LSD in parks and concerts, and on benches on the streets. The smoke in the air was everywhere, from the slums in Wisconsin to the cities of Dallas. Even the poor were lost in the haze.
When the 80s arrived with Rock ‘n’ Roll and techno beats from windowsills upstairs. The music was groovin’ and the ladies were fine. We saw billboards of our names in neon orange lights. The *** was replaced by coke, and the LSD with ****** singing and swinging with delight in our eyes.
When the AIDS broke out we were sick in our beds listening to Pink Floyd and Elton John, and still we were singing. The 70s got us high while the 80s made us die
We lived through wars in Vietnam, and Korea; we fought back the communists with red ink on our hands. We broke down the door into China and got them to arrive in the present and join the world. Although their chairman sits on a chair of lies he leads them with an angry fist in the air pumping “three cheers for Mao”. “Three cheers for Mao”.
When the Soviets launched themselves to the moon we responded with our money and flashed our shiny new machinery in their faces. We marked our territory and claimed triumphantly that “We’re the best”. And we launched our war nukes and pinned them into intimidation. Then the Cubans sought revenge for the death of the Pigs on their Bay. With rifles in hand we stormed the beach and unearthed Castro and his regime.
With our beds soaked in blood, and our dreams covered with fog, hand in hand we lay. We recalled the dances in the backs of old Cafes where the passwords were as simple as three quick knocks and two slow ones. We remembered the guns that pierced the heavenly chorus for the negros in the south. And we thought about the music of the 70s and the death in the 80s and I thought about you for a minute more.
Sep 18, 2012
Sep 18, 2012 at 4:29 PM UTC
“Withdrawn from Salem Public Library”
“Salem Public Library, East Main Street,
Salem, VA 24153”
A happy book, thought-stained, and often-read
An anthology of Russian poetry
Salem, Virginia must be a marvelous town
A library stocked with poetry, and stocked
With poetry readers who have turned again
And again to favorite pages here and there
Long-ago poets murdered by the Soviets
But finding love at last in Salem, Virginia
May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 4:39 PM UTC
The Mujahideen fight for their way of life
They simply want to practice their religion
Follow their religion
And live in peace
The Soviets have no right to invade
And tell them how to live
Rocket propelled grenades
Were effectivey used at the Kandahar pass
Soviet tanks were sitting ducks
They met their end
Guerilla fighters
Walk and fight in the mountains
They mastered the ambush
The Battle of Arghandab
The Soviets attacked
An entrenched Mujahideen
The Afghan government forces often defected to the resistance
Some Soviet aircraft
Were shot down by Stinger missles
Provided by the U.S.
The Russian people were lied to
About what their military was doing there
They were told they were nation building
The war caused around one million civilian deaths
And the emigration of 5 to 10 million Afghans
May 24, 2015
May 24, 2015 at 11:27 PM UTC
What comes next?
A fusion with brain and internet? *** text.
descriptions of positions and inhibitions undone
crawling down the screen,
like morse code across the sea
or an old computer reading cards, blurting out silent sentences
passing lights on the screen,
then gone
or the News crawl passing on the bottom of the TV
without the repeats
all in our imaginations
the touches, movements, even some sensations
the connection of two biologies
two living breathing human beings,
much more complicated than simple machines
But this is the computer,
the technology star
that brought us fame and power and wealth
Now seems a bit in ill health.
A downward spiral,
like a old rock star, playing at a seedy corner bar:
the technology that sent a man to the moon
and fought the Soviets until their doom
the frightening technology
of my childhood years,
big computers creating bigger fears
and now being put to good use
as I have my fellow in a metaphorical noose
our fingers go across the keys
and send signals to each other's bodies
connected in imagination with mine
and it's frightening how it works to well
Almost like reality, I can barely tell
but then it's over and in the after glow
A thought taps me on the shoulder, tells me I should know
that in the end the bond with the human being
has evaporated like silent steam,
Not because we're mean
But because he's not there
but now I'm aware
of a peculiar new bond with my phone
Jan 2, 2014
Jan 2, 2014 at 1:38 AM UTC
I was a Communist kid back in the fifties
And a seventeen-year old Socialist.
The Americans made me laugh even then:
Afraid of “Commies”
When they really meant Soviets.
For me Socialism meant
Equal Shares
And humanitarian Christianity,
With the fall-back of a Welfare State.
All Good.
But as I’ve got older I’ve come to appreciate
The other side of the coin.
Not Fascism as such,
But with Socialism
Where is Aspiration?
Where is the Incentive to do more
And better?
We don’t want a society of clones,
Sitting on their backsides
Living on the dole.
But then again, what should we aspire to?
Should I have aimed to be a mega-rich dictator
Of some parasitic world empire?
I’m all for developing talent to the full,
Encouraging people to make a positive contribution
To the wellbeing of all.
And there’s the rub.
There doesn’t seem to be a political system – yet,
That is just and fair
Whilst helping us all to blossom.
Until we invent something better,
A bubbling cauldron of Socialism and Free Enterprise
Is the best we have to work with.
Unless you know better.
Paul Butters
Jul 2, 2017
Jul 2, 2017 at 5:35 PM UTC
Afghanistan used to be such a prosperous nation before the Soviets invaded it
I'm so sorry it fell to such a disastrous fate
If i could take all the suffering and damage away
I would
I'm sorry for all the Afghanis
I hope to see your country in serenity again
I never wanted it to be this way
From yours, an American.
Nov 2, 2015
Nov 2, 2015 at 12:00 AM UTC
I Spy with my Little FBI
I spy with my little bright FBI
A government wet and hung out to dry
On clotheslines that might (or might not) be tapped
Through circuitry that the Soviets mapped
And passed the plans on to bad Vladimir
(Who wrestles tigers sans shirt and sans fear)
But, sure, that mighty hyperborean
Had better watch for the North Korean
And keep him closer than a dodgy brother
because
All we Yanks do is snoop on each other
Mar 7, 2017
Mar 7, 2017 at 4:01 PM UTC
Dot To Dot
Join the dots all in a line
Where do they all lead?
Afghanistan
Land of failed empires
Defeated armies
***** production
Terrorism central
Forget Lebanon
Afghan is number one
Ever since the 70s
The Soviets started it
All the rest added to it
You know the nations
Shall we bet who’s next?
Nov 20, 2021
Nov 20, 2021 at 4:10 PM UTC
Suffering is all I knew,
The soldiers marching through the streets
Each battalion larger than before
Kitty is in danger, along with her kind
A knock on the door knock, knock, knock
My loved ones are in danger,
My feelings alienated
Towards the cruel dictatorship
The door opened with a creak,
My mother hid behind the couch,
My father grabbed the blade,
Sunlight gleaming on its surface
The soldiers step in
I’m behind an overturned table
I hear a bang, two more
A women’s scream, a manly yell
My father and mother were gone.
The soldiers had murdered,
Destroyed the last of my joy
Taken away my pride
I ran away, over to the library
Kitty hid behind the shelf
I was not religious but I still wore the star
I was not the same so they searched for my head
I dyed my hair up to standard,
Put in colored contacts
I went outside and ran away
The soldier catching up to me
“I plead for it to stop,
The tormenting conflict.
I plead for peace,
An end to this hate.
I plead for something new.
I plead for life.
I plead for freedom.
I plead for change.”
My family divided due to death,
I stayed with the locals.
Nearly everyone was religious
In this ethnic neighborhood.
An officer came to my door
And asked for the Jews
Asked whether they were living
In the house next door.
I couldn’t do it,
I couldn’t reveal
To the soldier who waited
For the answer to appear
The survivors of the war,
They destroyed the hate,
I followed their lead,
And pushed away the horror
The memories torture me.
The memories destroy me.
The memories hurt me.
The memories sicken me.
But the liberators came
Their flag red with a sickle
Their big metal beasts
Tearing up the streets.
I risked my life because of this hope,
The hope that my family would survive.
I have lost all of it,
Because of this treachery.
I learned about the Bolsheviks,
How they liberated Russia
How they created the Soviets
And destroyed the Germans.
I did the right thing, I think
But I lost all of my friends
I live now with pain and torture
In Warsaw. Suffering.
Dec 10, 2019
Dec 10, 2019 at 11:29 AM UTC
“Withdrawn from Salem Public Library”
Yevtushenko in a Used-Book Sale
“Salem Public Library, East Main Street,
Salem, VA 24153”
A happy book, thought-stained, and often-read:
An anthology of Russian poetry
Salem, Virginia must be a marvelous town
A library stocked with poetry, and stocked
With poetry readers who have turned again
And again to favorite pages here and there
Long-ago poets murdered by the Soviets
But finding love at last in Salem, Virginia
Re:
20th Century Russian Poetry: Silver and Gold
Selected and with an introduction by Yevgeny Yevtushenko
Albert C. Todd and Max Hayward, editors
New York: Doubleday. 1993
Jan 30, 2018
Jan 30, 2018 at 4:17 PM UTC
it really is an actual word, it's translatable as something
between nudist, and a man walking with his
torso showing...
there's a lot of idiosyncrasy involved -
etymology serves thus:
nagi - which has a male pronoun
differentiation -
the female counterpart?
naga.
Nagasaki?
toot p'ah... a french
variation into making a frown: hą hą hą.....
że sł'i!
so... the word of vector imbeciles...
nygus....
there's real geopolitik involved....
real places, real people... isolated people...
which probably experienced the wrath of
the wehrmacht and the soviets....
real people, real places...
hence the idiosyncrasy....
linguistics aside,
much more fun than talking about chimps,
in all earnest honesty...
chimps? chimps?!
only fools and broken branches?
by now i'm starting to think:
(i'm drunk, so) :
what the **** are you on about?!
i sense no use of l.s.d. - so... what the ****
i don't get them, those bewildered westerners...
they didn't see the second coming in 1945
with the unearthing of the nag hammadi library?
o right... the word in question: nygus...
nygus -
**** knows where that came from...
probably siberia, but even that is uncertain...
it could actually mean a half clad man...
a man exposing his torso....
nygus.... nagi...
(male)....
naga
(female)...
it's actually quiet fun watching western civilisation rot
in the linguistic hell-hole it's at...
i.e. how pronouns don't translate
or simply aren't incorporated into other
grammatical categorisations...
so... as a pole, if i had to resurrect myself,
would i place the genesis at auschwitz...
or at marienburg?
never mind the question, the word nygus still bothers
me... it's specific to a geopolitical locality,
it is locality, per se....
it has no basic meaning in
the location i now occupy...
and it has no direct confrontation
with being applied for a desirable purpose...
what i'm seeing in discussion these days
is akin to the seperation of church from state...
but on a more abstract canvas:
subject from object... which really is covert
for attaché:
and that's what it will always be, should the feat be
given a historical allowance of a century's worth of dispute.
it was clear in the first place:
church and state...
|
the vatican as a church-state;
but those are "real" bodies, in that they are
diplomatic, and therefore bureaucratic...
this next divorce? i.e. the subject from the object?
my intestines have no knowledge of my brain,
and my brain has no knowledge of my pancreas...
i do think the state segregating itself from
the church was a decent checkmate....
but enforcing this objective positivism...
i.e. ****** subjectivity?
the divorce is going to be as violent
as that in the historical framework of
the seperation of church from state;
although "less" violent,
in that: more suicidal among the young.
Apr 18, 2017
Apr 18, 2017 at 4:20 AM UTC
Please don't stuff the ballot box
our choices already chosen
The soviets, with hacker skills
our email accounts, now frozen
Interfering with companies, and corporations
dispersal of the wealth held dear
the one percent, in constant motion
If you really want to hurt us
and bring down our society
Shut down facebook, and twitter
destroy our social, stupidity
And then we'll be more malleable
no outlet for our drivel, the constant idiocy
and, you'll do us a favor
setting us, completely free
Sep 21, 2017
Sep 21, 2017 at 12:57 PM UTC
You have to let the thinkers think
The dreamers dream
The speakers speak
The schemers scheme
The wolves among us feast on sheep
The shepherds teach them how to reap
The harvest of community
The plenty space for unity
If being free is what we want
Equality must be the need
Prioritized beyond our profit
Mass-producing greed machine
Still colonizing everything
Then selling you the diamond ring
The social contract theory bomb
The buffer states that look like Guam
And from the satellites they beam
That perfect family fifties feeling
Reaching for your credit card
With isolation’s *** appealing
Movie star aestheticism
Gaping black hole fetishism
Whispering it’s holiest
Pale ghosts of fascist soviets
Still letting all the thinkers think
The dreamers dream
The speakers speak
The schemers scheme
As money sorts the in-between
Dec 20, 2017
Dec 20, 2017 at 1:28 AM UTC
You were in Africa in June,
When in the head of the from sun skew?
Yeah, like drinking a liter of shampoo
For thin and weakened hair.
And you read young poets,
Trying to make a joke?
Yes, it's like living in the land of Soviets
And all advise far leave to live.
Mar 24, 2019
Mar 24, 2019 at 1:02 AM UTC
What the hell did we fight for?
Did we drop our helmets at the door?
At the door?
Just like the Romans, The British, The Soviets before, now we died in the desert, just like the forces before.
Forces before.
When the sun shone high we pulled the troops and brought em back home to Yankee Doodle land, while we sacrificed the women to the Taliban. You can kiss education, hope and civil rights goodbye.
The sun has set once again so, so long Siagon and Goodbye agan Afghanistan.
Now the citizen fled to the airports trying to hitch a ride on the outside of a plane, gripping that cold metal to their chest and hoping they fall over Afghanistan, rather be dead from a fall than alive over there again.
It's a sad state of affairs when we start a war and skip out on the check, Vietnam springs to mind, so let's hang our head and give thanks to
Bush
Obama
Trump
Biden
I hope it was worth it?
Was it really ******* worth it?
I don't think so
Not at all.
Aug 17, 2021
Aug 17, 2021 at 10:23 AM UTC
Brothers in War
Why did the two brothers fight one another?
In opposing armies on the same battlefield
Because one was Latvian and the other Russian
Both had the same father but different mothers
The Latvian one welcomed the Nazis when they came
For he was fascist and hated communists
He collaborated and was happy for a few short years
Till fortunes of war made the Soviets come
The Nazis left after battling the new Soviet occupiers
The Latvian bro knew what would happen so was ready
He fought the Soviet invaders with his Mauser rifle
Killing many but eventually being cornered in a village
There were informers about and the Soviets knew
With no escape he vowed to never surrender
The Russians sent his Russian brother to **** him
There was no negotiation for he was a collaborator
His bro tried to flush him out with machine gun fire
And then with accurate rifle shots hoping for a headshot
The Latvian bro had two shots left including one for him
When his chance was there he took it and fired
The Russian bro was a loyal communist and wanted promotion
But he slipped up in his zeal and got nailed by his bro
Who then blew his own ******* head off with his big toe
Thus died two brothers on opposing sides and ideologies
Now forgotten by all except the ghosts
Feb 1, 2019
Feb 1, 2019 at 9:25 AM UTC
at a time,
(can we all agree it's now?)
when the animals outside
just know somethings coming
a static in the air
a taste
metallic?
where I hear them talk about conspiracies
of **** gold stored inside Swiss mountains
moon landings filmed in a downtown warehouse where all the participants have died in mysterious circumstances
• a shaving accident
• killed in a stampede
etc
etc
aliens are living amongst us
and when waking up becomes a reenactment of the previous day and the day before that and the day before that and the day
before
she kept a diary of political slogans and propaganda posters
"ALL POWER TO THE SOVIETS"
she mumbled in her sleep
Apr 29, 2017
Apr 29, 2017 at 5:47 AM UTC
Soviets are like mosquitoes
Always there in the environment
There’s no escape from them
They get in your head
So they rule you remorsessly
By power of paranoia
A bite is a bullet
An infection is a bomb
A disease is a nuclear blast
Mosquitoes are Russians
Russians are mosquitoes
Waiting to be eradicated
By a superior power
Always ready for war
Endless circle of deceit
Mosquito flight round you
Looking for an opening
To attack you
While you sleep
The Russian way
Keep you off guard
Then get you
But not if we strike
And drain their pond
Spray them with insecticide
So they never breed again
No more Novichok
Or nukes or bio weapons
Finally we are safe
Except from our own
FECKING PARANOIA!!!
Dec 10, 2019
Dec 10, 2019 at 9:23 PM UTC
Lawrence Hall HSG
[email protected]
1957: The Year We All Became Soviets
“…we’re going to get science applied to social problems
and backed by the whole force of the state…”
Mark Studdock in C. S. Lewis’ That Hideous Strength
Soviet Science launched a beeping toy into space
In the name of Progress; a mass-murderer ordered it so
And a month later Science launched and killed sweet Laika
Abandoned in orbit to die alone
Brave America suffered the Aunt Pittypat vapours:
We too must launch our slide-rules into space
And set our children to study Sovietism
Send civilization into orbit to die alone
Dogs and apes and men have flamed out in crashes
And Alexandria again is but pale ashes
Jun 15, 2024
Jun 15, 2024 at 9:02 PM UTC