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Post some poetry Thankyou Herman for helping me locate this
The Soldier If I should die, think only this of me: That there's some corner of a foreign field That is for ever England. There shall be In that rich earth a richer dust concealed; A dust whom England bore, shaped, made aware, Gave, once, her flowers to love, her ways to roam, A body of England's, breathing English air, Washed by the rivers, blest by suns of home. And think, this heart, all evil shed away, A pulse in the eternal mind, no less Gives somewhere back the thoughts by England given; Her sights and sounds; dreams happy as her day; And laughter, learnt of friends; and gentleness, In hearts at peace, under an English heaven. -- Rupert Brooke Gives me goose bumps | |
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THE SILVER SWAN
The silver swan, who living had no note, When death approached, unlocked her silent throat, Leaning her breast against the reedy shore, Thus sung her first and last, and sung no more: 'Farewell all joys! O death, come close mine eyes; More geese than swans now live, more fools than wise Orlando Gibbons (1583 - 1626) | |
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this is something I wrote a very long time ago... about 7 years ago in fact JOURNEY HOME To quote from a master poet "Did you have a good world when you died?". I know not why these things do concern myself, only that they indeed repeatedly do. Reason is the quickest way to sorrow and redemption both parallel and unique, therefore why must I be the one to reason? shall no one compare tragedy to tragedy and see who scores the most points? surely in the game of sanity versus the insane both must have even scores. Love is lost, it seems, tonight and lost is the love I bore you forever, without which I shall surely perish. A white shirt and jeans are the only clues I have left to a legacy so far away from my eyes in the now. Please make yourself plentiful and drink from my cup, lest you miss me too much; lest I miss you too little. another cross in the meadow, for you, my dear ones, to show me once I get to destiny bay. Hope and pray of all prayers it shall be forthcoming with haste. The show must always go on; for we are the champions! blackened eyes mourn the passing of a supernatural aura so high in being it transcends all dignity and grace. Therefore we cannot dare touch nor see this ethereal one again, lest she banish us to oblivion in agony, not by her own doing. Sunshine be always in my eyes to lighten even dimmest nigh and hellest high, I pray once more to hear your softened voice; to see your jewel eyes and satin hair of length and grace. come to me both near and far so that I may join you in remembering that always we are one and that death is only the beginning of what spirit entrances the soul of dreams relived and retold. Heaven be always in my heart to lift the heavy luggage so long stowed in the deepest cargo bay infested with mirth and bitterness and hate, therefore releasing the tortured souls that are forever bound by only the thickest rope and tightest knot that no mere mortal can deny the passage through which it must go. Try and try alike I do, knowing in my pocket that love can be the forgotten key which lay dormant in my imagination only. Once more I pray it unlocks the key to my heart and being allowing the creation of a noble creature so rare and inviting salt water comes to mind and angels sing their lovely tune for only us to hear. O joy of joys let this be my parting! fill my body with a drop of wine and a pinch of salt around mine eyes, for I am starved and thirsty for life. I know not how to go ahead nor stand and count, therefore in dire need of sustenance- the subtle kind. Show me the way to heaven and I'll show why I'm there. tell me how to please you-nobody shall compare. Life so important; dare I even ask? the battle of evermore brings with it friend and foe, beast and beauty, much and therefore little. such as I hoped it would be, at last. Possible luxuries may not be needed after all.happiness is the way to hopelessness, someone once stated to me. Foolish behavior and reckless emotions may revere more than even promised. As a prophet said , be careful what you wish for- it may just come true. lesson herein comes from within your inner beauty and soul. read the times with caution , as many overlook one final step to after-heed what you have sowed and practice what you know. IS EVERYBODY IN?is everybody in? the ceremony is about to begin. Watch and learn I trust and pray. Blessed be. | |
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I dont care if youre all going to post proper deep poems, I like this one ok?! Halfway down the stairs Is a stair where I sit: There isn't any other stair quite like it. I'm not at the bottom, I'm not at the top: So this is the stair where I always stop. Halfway up the stairs Isn't up, and isn't down. It isn't in the nursery, it isn't in the town: And all sorts of funny thoughts Run round my head: "It isn't really anywhere! It's somewhere else instead!" | |
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Weerwoord
het mes is bij het laatste licht geslepen naast de kerk gaat hij naar de vergeten deur hij heeft zijn harp gespannen, zijn droom begrepen van het meisje met weke hals en verre geur hij zal haar niet wurgen, al spannen zijn kleren als ze verstrooid wat noten kraakt op haar kruk en ze met bleke blik het spreken verleren te veel drinken op het vreemde geluk wacht dacht zijn auto in de stille straat de gebroken snaar wordt morgen beloofd als het meisje van nu naar de kippen gaat met de laatste kruimels uit zijn hoofd hij had al eens gehoord van Jezus enzovoort | |
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All You who Sleep Tonight
by Vikram Seth All you who sleep tonight Far from the ones you love, No hand to left or right And emptiness above - Know that you aren't alone The whole world shares your tears, Some for two nights or one, And some for all their years. | |
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Thomas, come and sing to me
about the Boney king of Nowhere about your little boy named Noah about my grief and my self pity and it's sustained pantomime life fed by marketing machines and media and true love lives on lollipops and crisps | |
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The Melancholy Death of Oyster Boy
He proposed in the dunes, they were wed by the sea, Their nine-day-long honeymoon was on the isle of Capri. For their supper they had one specatular dish- a simmering stew of mollusks and fish. And while he savored the broth, her bride's heart made a wish. That wish came true-she gave birth to a baby. But was this little one human Well, maybe. Ten fingers, ten toes, he had plumbing and sight. He could hear, he could feel, but normal? Not quite. This unnatural birth, this canker, this blight, was the start and the end and the sum of their plight. She railed at the doctor: "He cannot be mine. He smells of the ocean, of seaweed and brine." "You should count yourself lucky, for only last week, I treated a girl with three ears and a beak. That your son is half oyster you cannot blame me. ... have you ever considered, by chance, a small home by the sea?" Not knowing what to name him, they just called him Sam, or sometimes, "that thing that looks like a clam" Everyone wondered, but no one could tell, When would young Oyster Boy come out of his shell? When the Thompson quadruplets espied him one day, they called him a bivalve and ran quickly away. One spring afternoon, Sam was left in the rain. At the southwestern corner of Seaview and Main, he watched the rain water as it swirled down the drain. His mom on the freeway in the breakdown lane was pouding the dashboard- she couldn't contain the ever-rising grief, frustration, and pain. "Really, sweetheart," she said "I don't mean to make fun, but something smells fishy and I think it's our son. I don't like to say this, but it must be said, you're blaming our son for your problems in bed." He tried salves, he tried ointments that turned everything red. He tried potions and lotions and tincture of lead. He ached and he itched and he twitched and he bled. The doctor diagnosed, "I can't quite be sure, but the cause of the problem may also be the cure. They say oysters improve your sexual powers. Perhaps eating your son would help you do it for hours!" He came on tiptoe, he came on the sly, sweat on his forehead, and on his lips-a lie. "Son, are you happy? I don't mean to pry, but do you dream of Heaven? Have you ever wanted to die? Sam blinked his eye twice. but made no reply. Dad fingered his knife and loosened his tie. As he picked up his son, Sam dripped on his coat. With the shell to his lips, Sam slipped down his throat. They burried him quickly in the sand by the sea -sighed a prayer, wept a tear- and they were back home by three. A cross of greay driftwood marked Oyster Boy's grave. Words writ in the sand promised Jesus would save. But his memory was lost with one high-tide wave. |
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Yeats - When You Are Old
When you are old and grey and full of sleep, And nodding by the fire, take down this book, And slowly read, and dream of the soft look Your eyes had once, and of their shadows deep; How many loved your moments of glad grace, And loved your beauty with love false or true, But one man loved the pilgrim Soul in you, And loved the sorrows of your changing face; And bending down beside the glowing bars, Murmur, a little sadly, how Love fled And paced upon the mountains overhead And hid his face amid a crowd of stars. | |
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I asked an orger to write a poem for me ages ago ,but he didn't | |
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Night Train
it's getting late as i travel thru dark tunnels and lights flicker in the car while homeless drunks mumble and doze i sigh... and think back 2 2nite the way our bodies entwined my skin melted in2 yours - choclate sweet i shiver @ the thought of how u kissed - touched - teased me put me @ ease 4 the rest of the night (shhh...peace) i know this route all 2 well but u... took me 2 a place no train, plane, automobile could ever go u were my one-way ticket 2ecstasy - so 2 speak our journey finished now 4 good, so sad as i jump 2 my feet she a tear as wheels screech and step off The Night Train... wrote that when i was about 15 or so. | |
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Nikki23 said: I asked an orger to write a poem for me ages ago ,but he didn't
Would a dirty limerick do? | |
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mdiver said: Nikki23 said: I asked an orger to write a poem for me ages ago ,but he didn't
Would a dirty limerick do? Yes !! | |
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Nikki23 said: mdiver said: Would a dirty limerick do? Yes !! I know of a horny boy Matt Who played with a vampire bat With his dick in his hand His voice did command "Try sucking the blood out of that!" | |
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mdiver said: Nikki23 said: Yes !! I know of a horny boy Matt Who played with a vampire bat With his dick in his hand His voice did command "Try sucking the blood out of that!" | |
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mdiver said: Nikki23 said: Yes !! I know of a horny boy Matt Who played with a vampire bat With his dick in his hand His voice did command "Try sucking the blood out of that!" i still want him to write my poem though ! | |
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Nikki23 said: mdiver said: I know of a horny boy Matt Who played with a vampire bat With his dick in his hand His voice did command "Try sucking the blood out of that!" i still want him to write my poem though ! Said a woman with open delight, My pubic hair's perfectly white. I admit there's a glare, But the fellows don't care They locate it more quickly at night. | |
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mdiver said: Nikki23 said: i still want him to write my poem though ! Said a woman with open delight, My pubic hair's perfectly white. I admit there's a glare, But the fellows don't care They locate it more quickly at night. Where are you getting these from?! | |
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Once a young woman named Alice
Used a dynamite stick for a phallus. They found her vagina In North Carolina, And part of her anus in Dallas. | |
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mdiver said: Once a young woman named Alice
Used a dynamite stick for a phallus. They found her vagina In North Carolina, And part of her anus in Dallas. | |
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MarieLouise said: Weerwoord
het mes is bij het laatste licht geslepen naast de kerk gaat hij naar de vergeten deur hij heeft zijn harp gespannen, zijn droom begrepen van het meisje met weke hals en verre geur hij zal haar niet wurgen, al spannen zijn kleren als ze verstrooid wat noten kraakt op haar kruk en ze met bleke blik het spreken verleren te veel drinken op het vreemde geluk wacht dacht zijn auto in de stille straat de gebroken snaar wordt morgen beloofd als het meisje van nu naar de kippen gaat met de laatste kruimels uit zijn hoofd hij had al eens gehoord van Jezus enzovoort Very nice, MarieLouise.It 'feels' right, you know: it's not just 'rijmen en dichten zonder uw gat op te lichten' Very good | |
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OMG BRB I GOT SOME | |
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isadora said: MarieLouise said: Weerwoord
het mes is bij het laatste licht geslepen naast de kerk gaat hij naar de vergeten deur hij heeft zijn harp gespannen, zijn droom begrepen van het meisje met weke hals en verre geur hij zal haar niet wurgen, al spannen zijn kleren als ze verstrooid wat noten kraakt op haar kruk en ze met bleke blik het spreken verleren te veel drinken op het vreemde geluk wacht dacht zijn auto in de stille straat de gebroken snaar wordt morgen beloofd als het meisje van nu naar de kippen gaat met de laatste kruimels uit zijn hoofd hij had al eens gehoord van Jezus enzovoort Very nice, MarieLouise.It 'feels' right, you know: it's not just 'rijmen en dichten zonder uw gat op te lichten' Very good Thanks! This must be one of the poems I'm most proud of. I've won a prize with it, and it feels like I deserved that. It's the only sonnet I ever managed to write. And this is the guy who inspired it... www.heldersite.com We've only been together for two weeks, because it was too hard for both of us. But it's still someone who makes me shiver when he comes too close. I would never give my boyfriend up for him, it's not at all like that, but... we've been very faithful muses to each other in the past. This poem is almost three years old I guess. | |
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Acid lullaby
Elaine Degro And tonight I will hear the acid lullaby that will rock me to sleep. Acid lullaby in silent lucidity. A drop of your acid lullaby has fallen on my heart and burnt through. Leaving me unattached to you. Fingertips that touch my bleeding heart and stare into your eyes. And your acid lullaby sings me goodnight. Sleepless in a pit of anger and a string of fits. Wondering just why I feel like this. Laying in my own skin lost and scared. And you acid lullaby whispers its dares. Shaking hands, shaking fingers, desperate pleas. But you continue to sing your acid lullaby to me. And your lullaby takes my breath away and makes it your own. Into your pounding heart's home. So as I lay here motionless in my sleep I will always know you sang your acid lullaby to me. The sky is red By: Elaine Degro The sky is red and rain keeps falling down. Droplets of blood splattering upon the ground. Greatness broken and now its story out and told And the sky is now red, scary, and old. Fearless once it was and power it knew Now the sky runs red and plays un-cued. The stars no longer flicker but remain dull and with out a shine. The fire of its own clarity is now burning out in short time. "The sky is red" calls out the children that once knew... that the sky was always clear and bountiful blue. Now it pours the blood drops that it calls rain. Day and night, Night and day, it is always the same. Fragility has poured itself upon this red sky It is now easily broken and down to its demise. A cure can not be cast on the red sky here For it seems merely impossible to bring color through its red tears. The sky is red and the moon is high. Fearful enough it can never say goodbye. The dull capacity of its stars will soon shimmer again. And the sky will one day be blue again. Rain your red tears red sky of time. Doubtful days will go on with out a lie. Rain your red tears red sky of pain. Broken Eagerness shall soon feel the same. | |
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Absolution
The anguish of the earth absolves our eyes Till beauty shines in all that we can see. War is our scourge; yet war has made us wise, And, fighting for our freedom, we are free. Horror of wounds and anger at the foe, And loss of things desired; all these must pass. We are the happy legion, for we know Time’s but a golden wind that shakes the grass. There was an hour when we were loth to part From life we longed to share no less than others. Now, having claimed this heritage of heart, What need we more, my comrades and my brothers? | |
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'If' by rudyard Kipling
If you can keep your head when all about you Are losing theirs and blaming it on you, If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you But make allowance for their doubting too, If you can wait and not be tired by waiting, Or being lied about, don't deal in lies, Or being hated, don't give way to hating, And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise: If you can dream--and not make dreams your master, If you can think--and not make thoughts your aim; If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster And treat those two impostors just the same; If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools, Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken, And stoop and build 'em up with worn-out tools: If you can make one heap of all your winnings And risk it all on one turn of pitch-and-toss, And lose, and start again at your beginnings And never breath a word about your loss; If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew To serve your turn long after they are gone, And so hold on when there is nothing in you Except the Will which says to them: "Hold on!" If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue, Or walk with kings--nor lose the common touch, If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you; If all men count with you, but none too much, If you can fill the unforgiving minute With sixty seconds' worth of distance run, Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it, And--which is more--you'll be a Man, my son! --Rudyard Kipling Best read by Des Lynam Put yourself on the worldwide org map! www.frappr.com/princeorg | |
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I Am A Military Wife
Author Unknown I am a military wife - a member of that sisterhood of women who have had the courage to watch their men go into battle, and the strength to survive until their return. Our sorority knows no rank, for we earn our membership with a marriage license, travelling over miles, or over nations to begin a new life with our military husbands. Within days, we turn a barren, echoing building into a home, and though our quarters are inevitably white-walled and unpapered, we decorate with the treasures of our travels, for we shop the markets of the globe. Using hammer and nail, we tack our pictures to the wall, and our roots to the floor as firmly as if we had lived there for a lifetime. We hold a family together by the bootstraps, and raise the best of 'brats', instilling in them the motto: "Home is togetherness", whether motel, or guest house, apartment or duplex. As military wives we soon realize that the only good in "Good-bye" is the "Hello again". For as salesmen for freedom, our husbands are often on the road, at sea, or in the sky, leaving us behind for a week, a month, an assignment. During separations we guard the home front, existing until the homecoming. Unlike our civilian counterparts, we measure time, not by years, but by tours - married at Petawawa, a baby born at Gagetown, a special anniversary at Uplands, a promotion in St Jean. We plant trees, and never see them grow tall, work on projects completed long after our departure, and enhance our community for the betterment of those who come after us. We leave a part of ourselves at every stop. Through experience, we have learned to pack a suitcase, a car or hold baggage, and live indefinitely from the contents within: and though our fingers are sore from the patches we have sewn, and the silver we have shined, our hands are always ready to help those around us. Women of peace, we pray for a world in harmony, for the flag that leads our men into battle, will also blanket them in death. Yet we are an optimistic group, thinking of the good, and forgetting the bad, cherishing yesterday, while anticipating tomorrow. Never rich by monetary standards, our hearts are overflowing with a wealth of experiences common only to those united by the special tradition of military life. We pass on this legacy to every military bride, welcoming her with outstretched arms, with love and friendship, from one sister to another, sharing in the bounty of our unique, fulfilling military way of life. We all should know that diversity makes for a rich tapestry, and we must understand that all the threads of the tapestry are equal in value no matter what their color. Maya Angelou | |
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I like short right to the point poems, so here goes:
If this thing you and I share were real my life wouldn't seem so incomplete If life gave me everything I wanted you would be here with me If I could be true to only one person no doubt it would be you But, if life wasn't so complicated I probably wouldn't even want you By: DeeDee a.k.a MichaelsLight | |
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2the9s said: All You who Sleep Tonight
by Vikram Seth All you who sleep tonight Far from the ones you love, No hand to left or right And emptiness above - Know that you aren't alone The whole world shares your tears, Some for two nights or one, And some for all their years. wow that's beautiful. In spite of the cost of living, it's still popular. |
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Written in my Poetry 2 module class on October 24th 2001.
For some reason i had sketched a picture of the inside of a woman's reproductive organ I think i has started 2 fight with my mum for the first time when i'd written this I post this at my own risk- i usually feel a lil too vulnerable to share my poetry ~untitled~ lost and abandoned like a motherless child. Not knowing the possible pain felt by a childless mother. To grow is to let go But to let go Is the equivelant of physical pain tearing which occurs in the womb of the mother Does child weep tears of agony Or tears of joy Which come after hours of pounding On the protective walls which Nurtured it so much the cord is cut. But the bond need not be broken. ![]() No hablo espanol,no! Pero hablo ingles..ssii muy muy bien... Missy Quote of da Month: "yeah, sure, that's cool...wait WHAT?! " | |
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