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"ungulates" poems
Let us go ewe and I When with bleating out against the sky Like patent leather renowned in fable, Let us go, though uncertain quartered feats, The mutton retreats Of restless nights in fun house hotels And raw dust l'enfant motels: Bleats that bellow like hideous ungulates In unheated tents To bleed you to an ouvre question ... Oh, go ahead and ask, " Feel my *** Let us go us two misfits. ... *Apologies to T.S. Elliot
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Dec 24, 2010
Dec 24, 2010 at 10:25 PM UTC
Spoofrock
At dinner, Zach asks about our nation's history, wars. I say We're taking on everyone, one at a time. First Britain, then Britain again: "He was the surly English pluck, and       there is no tougher or truer, and never was, and never will be." Next Mexico: "Death is indifferent to what hide he tans; life crushes       men like flies." The War Between the States: "Well done, Mr. Cromartie. Time now       for rest." Most of Latin America: "Not only humans longed for liberation. All       ecology groaned for it too. The revolution is also one of lakes,       rivers, trees, animals." Then Southeast Asia: "The slight bump the mortars make as they kiss       the tube goodbye. Then the furious rain, a fist driving home the       message: Boy, you don't belong here." Now the Middle East: "A land to be admired like all lands. Harsh       mountains and deserts, indigenous plants and people, adapted       ungulates, carnivorous mammals." Can't forget the Krauts & Nips: "Then I heard the bomber call me in:       Little Friend, Little Friend, I got two engines on fire. Can you see       me, Little Friend?" Nor the Commies: "You mixed up farewell to an epoch with the       beginning of a new one. I put this book here for you, who once       lived, so that you should visit us no more." The original indigenous people say: "In time we'll become prosperous,       or else we'll become martyrs. The force that placed us here cannot       be trusted."
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Aug 11, 2015
Aug 11, 2015 at 6:19 PM UTC
The force that placed us here cannot be trusted
At dinner, Zach asks about our nation's history, wars. I say We're taking on everyone, one at a time. First Britain, then Britain again: "He was the surly English pluck, and       there is no tougher or truer, and never was, and never will be." Next Mexico: "Death is indifferent to what hide he tans; life crushes       men like flies." The War Between the States: "Well done, Mr. Cromartie. Time now       for rest." Most of Latin America: "Not only humans longed for liberation. All       ecology groaned for it too. The revolution is also one of lakes,       rivers, trees, animals." Then Southeast Asia: "The slight bump the mortars make as they kiss       the tube goodbye. Then the furious rain, a fist driving home the       message: Boy, you don't belong here." Now the Middle East: "A land to be admired like all lands. Harsh       mountains and deserts, indigenous plants and people, adapted       ungulates, carnivorous mammals." Can't forget the Krauts & Nips: "Then I heard the bomber call me in:       Little Friend, Little Friend, I got two engines on fire. Can you see       me, Little Friend?" Nor the Commies: "You mixed up farewell to an epoch with the       beginning of a new one. I put this book here for you, who once       lived, so that you should visit us no more." The original indigenous people say: "In time we'll become prosperous,       or else we'll become martyrs. The force that placed us here cannot       be trusted."
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part of you for me anyway will always be there beautiful on a light and tumble journey watching me watch your lashes paint zebra stripes down your cheekbones. we’ll run from budgies and make friends with otters out-stretched, grinning tickling the noses of long-necked ungulates and hunting for imaginary creatures between cages
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Dec 11, 2019
Dec 11, 2019 at 4:10 PM UTC
At the Zoo
Our species is divided like tribes of warring apes you simple ungulates act with herd mentality. You do what the group does you act as you are told to be following your cluster of Ovis off the proverbial cliff. Take away borders and erase your subjective labels what you have left are scared bleating sheep.
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Apr 8, 2019
Apr 8, 2019 at 7:39 AM UTC
Our Species
(an All Poetry feat to walk in the poetic feet of Robert Frost) Bucolic New England, circa Early twentieth century New England awash with dynamic harmonic leisureliness, when much of North America favored rustic visual whirled wide webbed watercolor waiting afield at dusk, the thrum of nature all abuzz didst feed thine dizzily green jovial mien unlike mean Gary Lewis veritable innocence and naiveté rollicked with mine lanky frame relishing ambling into my own quietude an infinite breadth, length and scope of infrequently trammeled near ****** woodland paths grown over with brambles nonetheless a faintly trussed harbinger marked by weatherbeaten for sale signposts with here and there an abandoned plow long since given over to rust when the pasture seasons elapsed since farmer(s) left unharvested fecund fields absent the cloven hoof, and deprived enrichment manure, sans ungulates ceased sufficing healthy free ranging bovines, where etudes punctuated the terribly gross fresh air, now no longer audibly quickening, snapchatting, nor twittering with the last word of a bluebird deathly silence now 'cept the wind in the willows whispering woebegone laments tree tops pining to cradle idle youthful dreamers boughs devoid of psalm quivering romantic songstress clattering debris merely delivering echoed whooshing refrains continually disintegrating among in a disused graveyard prescient ken aches with nostalgia hallucinogenic nightmare slams irrevocably shut the door in the dark closed for good upon the onset, wrought genocide against the vanishing Red man, a ghostly scarification meaningless ritual wrested, removed, and highjacked from indigenous peoples without rhyme, nor reason as fraternities no longer pledge allegiance.
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Aug 11, 2018
Aug 11, 2018 at 1:38 AM UTC
My Jouncing Gait During Boyhood
(an All Poetry feat to walk in the poetic feet of Robert Frost) Bucolic New England, circa Early twentieth century New England awash with dynamic harmonic leisureliness, when much of North America favored rustic visual whirled wide webbed watercolor waiting afield at dusk, the thrum of nature all abuzz didst feed thine dizzily green jovial mien unlike mean Gary Lewis veritable innocence and naiveté rollicked with mine lanky frame relishing ambling into my own quietude an infinite breadth, length and scope of infrequently trammeled near ****** woodland paths grown over with brambles nonetheless a faintly trussed harbinger marked by weatherbeaten for sale signposts with here and there an abandoned plow long since given over to rust when the pasture seasons elapsed since farmer(s) left unharvested fecund fields absent the cloven hoof, and deprived enrichment manure, sans ungulates ceased sufficing healthy free ranging bovines, where etudes punctuated the terribly gross fresh air, now no longer audibly quickening, snapchatting, nor twittering with the last word of a bluebird deathly silence now 'cept the wind in the willows whispering woebegone laments tree tops pining to cradle idle youthful dreamers boughs devoid of psalm quivering romantic songstress clattering debris merely delivering echoed whooshing refrains continually disintegrating among in a disused graveyard prescient ken aches with nostalgia hallucinogenic nightmare slams irrevocably shut the door in the dark closed for good upon the onset, wrought genocide against the vanishing Red man, a ghostly scarification meaningless ritual wrested, removed, and highjacked from indigenous peoples without rhyme, nor reason as fraternities no longer pledge allegiance.
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