Sunday, March 30, 2008

Now, Gina comes to us from Australia. She is known as Emerald13 on Allpoetry.com.


She can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/Emerald13





I have a photo of you taken in mountains somewhere


~



you, snowflakebearded, you 

smile there forever 

in stainless steel light  


beneath an impossibly-blue sky 

your eyes follow me  

and I move just off-frame  

hoping you will step 


out of the paper 

and kiss me, sometimes  

in this tranquil room, I wonder  

if a morning will come 


when I don't think about you  

and when absence inhabits  

me, becoming 


too much to bear you are turned 

in a handful of silence 

to face the crack in the wall   




Be sure to check her out. 


Friday, March 28, 2008

Kristoffer Rakow comes to us from Sweden, a Scandinavian country sandwiched between Norway and Finland.

He is known as Irial on Allpoetry.com and can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/Irial#





A Silver Morning



A silver morning drenched in dew

We lay there on the grassy plains

Gazing up into the skies

The wild stars blazing


Intergalactic fury


We lay there to rest our bones

From the midnight hunt

Our way

To chase the apathy away

To seek our infinite dreams


Sweaty you turned around

To face me with your lips

By the gods you were beautiful

We were destiny

Children of the eternal wild


Your pale body moved like

A swaying field in the wind

Mesmerizing my very presence 

Harmonic lust combining our souls

Echoes of our love 


Engraved in the roof of the world


We shattered the world that night

What came after was a bleak image 

An illusion of trust

Machine-made-lust

Fading from our minds like dust


Set free to explore 

With spirits entwined 

And with no regrets 

We left this world 

To seek


An endless cascade of infinite dreams



Check him out.

Wednesday, March 26, 2008

Butterflywriter comes to us from Louisiana.

She's a bit shy, so we have no name, but ...

She can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/butterflywriter#







To Thine OWN Self Be True...


I have learned of having courage

in the past three years

courage to be me

to love who I love

say what I say

do what I do

and accept

that I

and what I

believe is not

for everyone, but

for the few that hear

my words and accept my love

it is the top of the mountain

the crest of the wave, the fire in

my writing, and the peace in my soul.



Check her out.


Monday, March 24, 2008

Now, Ruth Kephart comes to us from Pennsylvania, USA.

Ruth can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/RuthKephart


Be sure to check out her book, For Everything There Is A Season, ISBN # 1-4241-4513-9 published 7/2006. 



It is available at barnesandnoble.com http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbninquiry.asp?ISBN=1424145139&pdf=y , amazon.com http://www.amazon.com/Everything-There-Season-Ruth-Kephart/dp/1424145139/ref=sr_11_1/103- , 

and can also be ordered at any bookstore nationwide

And now, here’s Ruth:




My Mother's Quilt

A worn quilt rests upon my favorite chair
Each stitch a faded memory it seems
Of days when I would watch my mother there
With quilting frame and scraps of blues and creams

She’d sew for hours on hours every day
Creating quilts for family and for friends
With time and love she seamed without delay
A throw of all her little odds and ends

Dear mother has been gone now twenty years
And I have aged with children of my own
Though death is one step closer, I’ve no fears
Of dying, loss, or simply the unknown

I hope to see my mother, soon, once more
And know, in heaven, that she waits for me
With quilting frame and cotton scraps galore
Darning her quilts for all eternity

Sunday, March 23, 2008

Valerie Ceres comes to us from Manchester in the UK. Her screenname on Allpoetry.com is Elfin,


and she can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/Elfin


And now, to the poem:






Scottish Springtime


Betwixt windswept moor and meadow

‘neath a vast and changing sky,

rise austere primeval mountains

where the golden eagles fly. 


From his shelter in a thicket

wanders forth a noble stag,

over viewing his wild kingdom

from a high and fearful crag.


Wind whips through the glens and valleys

rustles o’er the new sprung blades,

and it bites like spiny bramble

swift and keenly it pervades.


As the changing of the daylight

passes o’er the glassy loch

it reflects the rugged grandeur

of the cold grey glinting rock.


How these unforgiving Highlands

stir the souls of Celtic men,

as they gaze on savage mountain

or on sprouting vernal glen.


While the skirl of pipes entwine with

plaintive strains of ghostly lutes;

through archaic and ruined dwellings

spirits call me to my roots.



Be sure to check her out.

Next up: David Grace, from California, for a cheery Easter morning.

His screenname on Allpoetry.com is Roaddog Wolf, and he can be found here:

http://allpoetry.com/Roaddog%20Wolf

Those of you who rise early for Easter breakfast might appreciate this fine poem:

Reaching for the Breakfast Fork

Missing image
Words are the syrup of writing's pancakes;
buttered syrup is the economy of words 
for writing waffles of eloquent qualities,
and expressive brevity.

Battered butter syrup instant waffle mix
are the non-existent written words of elloquence;
the expressive quality readers want for breakfast
and everyone looks for a chef to create.

Life is the abode of culinary arts 
the art of writing is life's culinary kitchen 
of creative inventions and breakfast pancakes.
Molasses anyone?


Come check him out.

Saturday, March 22, 2008

For Easter, we have Rupert Brooke, with an inimitable and matchless ...

poem, and sadly, the only for which he is remembered today:


V. 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.


On April 4, 1915, Dean Inge of St. Paul's Cathedral read a sonnet from the pulpit as part of his Easter Sunday sermon. The sermon was published in The Times the next day, and the sonnet therein became, as George Parfitt describes, "an important document of national preparation for war." Originally entitled 'The Recruit', Rupert Brooke's sonnet 'The Soldier' was the last in a sonnet sequence entitled '1914'. The five numbered sonnets, preceded by an unnumbered sonnet were first published in the periodical New Numbers (number 4) in January of 1915:

The TreasureI. PeaceII. SafetyIII. The DeadIV. The Dead, V. The Soldier



Thursday, March 20, 2008

Today we have Serge Charles Frechette from Canada.


He is known as capricornpoet on Allpoetry.com.  He can be found here:

http://allpoetry.com/capricornpoet


This is the link to his book reference, "Poems For All Seasons":


www.redleadbooks.com/


Now, on to his beautiful poem:





A Painter's Weave


Phtalo blue he brushed before all eyes;

And the sky appeared flawless and still

Soft yellow on the horizon, a sun's hue,

touched by cadmium white breath strokes,

over prussian blues and alizarins

Mingle of yellows and ochres, greens and vandyke brown,

giant fir trees and misty forests on mountains;

and the earth was filled onto the canvas;

there flowed prussian blue water and 

liquid white contours, the pond quiet now;

The painter's dream and weave done....



Check him out.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Now, from Australia, comes Ron Wiseman, with wisdom

for us today, about life and growing old.   Known as Lyndon on Allpoetry.com,  he can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/Lyndon




A winter god




 

I look to one side of the living room and see a jungle of treeferns dripping with mist.
On the other, I see fogs curl along valleys far below, slow as glaciers.
A pale moon hangs among clouds, points to the western sun.

I have just showered and it’s winter outside, Australian winter, cool
and bleak but I am warm in front of a log fire pouring carbon footprints
one by one into the still air above, mounting to the stratosphere or

somewhere near it, and so I ponder forgetting I look like a sculpture
of David, if somewhat flabby and old, still completely male,
a flushed image of God, in our little cottage mounted upon a cliff-face

in defiance of gravity, winter, the whole of creation including the stars,
all dimensions of everything undiscovered as yet and, for a nanosecond,
I am a god, powerful, invulnerable and then I wake up, wide-eyed to

hear my wife say, “Are you all right, dear?”
I am as strong as I can hope to be and hide nakedness
not out of prudery; more, a sense of disappointment

 

emanating from a hallway mirror, reflecting whey milk of sunshine

left dissected, a heart rendered unsure, and a black cloud

hovering over coastal hills, sullen and unmoving. 



Check him out.

Monday, March 17, 2008

Wanda Lea Brayton makes her appearance, from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, USA,

too deeply rooted to be blown away by any hurricanes or dust storms.

She can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/Night%20Hope


or here:


www.myspace.com/105007070




Within the Glistening





I have been wounded

& warped

by words falling errant

upon the page,

yet, healed by quiet murmurs,

the gentle rustle

of hands reaching out for me

in silence.

I have danced

beyond dawn's coming gleam,

unable to lay down my pen

& sleep,

taut with fiery imagination.

I have wished for moment's return

when I couldn't clarify my clouded emotions

& regretted the steel trap's closing

when I lashed out in anger.

I have whispered tender endearments

under moonlight's caress

 

& wept beyond reparation

when the world seemed too far away

to hold me.

I have been a Poet

every instant of my life,

even when language fails...



All visitors welcome.  Check her out.

Sunday, March 16, 2008

Rob Ganson, known as Just Rob on Allpoetry.com comes to us from Wisconsin, USA:

His inimitable writings can be found here:


http://allpoetry.com/Just%20Rob




A Stream flows from the Loon Lake of my mind

 

 

 

 

 

 

                              {For Pat Dinnen}

 

 

 

A stream flows from the loon lake of my mind:

 

It requires no particular place to flow,

no respect from the land it feeds,

no song of itself for ungrateful ears.

It cannot be damned by merchant

or scoundrel, by grasping claws

of those who cannot inherit

the magic of the moon, the clarity,

the wisdom of water tumbling

over the smooth stone of time.

 

 

The paintings I sing,

the vistas of poetry I paint,

the story that tells me, line the banks

like wildflowers that usurp a neglected park.

All seasons reside along this rhythmic

ribbon of thought, This Stream

of consciousness.

 

 

If you listen, you can hear your spirit

sing like my loon, my coyote, my

laughter and tears.

There is a bend on this chromium path,

where sunrise kisses each mourning

with a hopeful mouth, hungry for you,

where a forever stone creates an eddy

that defines peace with silent song.

 

 

Can you hear the ripples, from the stone

I have tossed for you?

This is the place light goes to play

with water  and time is not.

 

 

This morning, I built you a bench there.

It is not an ordinary bench.

It will take you to your own stream,

lift you from unwanted time, place, and company.

 

 

This bench can fly.



Rob is an amazing writer.   Check him out.

Saturday, March 15, 2008

Ryan comes to us from New York ...

writing in his own inimitable way, bringing us something to ponder today.







A Veil


Heavy feet assist muck

Drowning heels, which once

spread haste across Rock Glade

And drank from bathwater

tepid, of course, a preference


Sight becomes sunset

Dropping past etchings

of many artists' depictions

Giving me double-visions

even now, in remembrance


Extending appendages

to grasp sanded mug

Which holds the elements required

by both oceans and thirsts

Becomes my weakest attempt


Last words, true to form

Are still written, 

If not on pages, at least branded

into the outsetting walls

of my mind




Go check him out.

Friday, March 14, 2008

Today we have Jess, a remarkable young lady from the U.K.

with a particularly pertinent perspective on the class system in schools and universities in the United Kingdom.  She can be found here:    

http://allpoetry.com/EternitysLastWish





Monotony


You shouldn't lift a finger to people who are

better than you, so you don't.

This is the drill we know, the routine they expect.

Just scurrying past the cast-iron gates leaves me dry-mouthed.

They line the pavements,

dominant males roosting at the bus stop, hands on the smalls

of the female backs. Filthy yet so clean.


Clack, clack, clack in my bedraggled skirt. 

A big white starry jacket. The zip's stuck.

They erode your dignity slowly, as they notice these things.

"Where do you shop?" hollow laughter.

Empty vessels, "where do you shop?"

you want to ask why their tongue has more power than

their mind, but you don't.

"Charity handouts?"

Clink, clink, clink, you've paid for this.


A swish of perfect hair

clucking at the scraggy ravens on the opposite side of the road.

Tottering along a sacred pavement, thighs hugged together by firm 

pressed black

pull it down over the knees when the organ starts.

Long hours, straight backed, uttering

breathless litanies of words

they will never understand.

One girl even fainted.


Talk of Oxbridge, aren't they. 

They pick their way past you, a breeze of refined

masculinity. Snap.

You can smell it on their starched white collars,

smell it on their necks.



Be sure to check her out using the link above.

Thursday, March 13, 2008

Vera Rich hails from England. She is the Editor of Manifold Magazine of New Poetry ...



"All God's Children"...


“A coin for Charon, new shoes for the road.”

So, the Museum guide says, Romans blessed

Their dead away. “Sound logic”, he opines,

“For those whose Empire’s heart was the Golden Milestone!”

(Though Merlin, Otherworldly wise, knew better:

The rough-spliced sandal-strap would serve the boy

An hour and all eternity…)

 

But Christians need no offering of shoes;

(Angels in icons glide on stocking-feet),

Dante through death’s three kingdoms, Bedford John,

Or Inkling Jack – none (if my memory serves)

Speaks of the Pilgrim’s need for sturdy footwear.

Only the barefoot dream a well-shod heaven;

Plantation slaves hymned golden slippers; prattling

Of scarlet boots, Avvakum’s young disciples

Joyfully leapt into the fire…

 

Yet, viewing Roman death-shoes (simulated

From nailmarks in the clay) my mind returns

To the dead of Kurapaty – Windflower Hill –

Where beneath pines, among the bones and bullets,

So many shoes survived the march to death,

So many to be listed: peasant “walkers”,

Gumboots made from old tyres, elegant

Feminine pantoufles, sturdy city lace-ups,

A gym-shoe trademarked “Riga”… Cleaned and counted,

Not for museums (“Footwear, nineteen-thirties,

Mid-Stalin-era”), not to identify

The dead by name (though some, they say, have found

Relics there of their kin) only to seek

Not who they were,  but what, what kind, what genus

Of people perished there… And toiling through

My long translation-task, and coining terms

Where English had none, I found but one answer:

Peasant and scholar, poet, clerk and worker –

All trades, all grades of life lie in those finds

Of lasting leather… Do not send to find

For whom the bell tolls, Master Donne; ask rather

Whom the shoe fits! For snugly it fits thee,

And him and her and ye… and, likewise, me…



Previously published  Manifold, No.39, 2001




Author’s notes:


PLEASE EXCUSE THIS LONG EXPLANATION - but the subject and some of the allusions may not be familiar to all members - though I presume that that Stalin's purges are -alas -sufficiently well-known.

This poem refers, in particular, to the mass-murder of up to 200,000 victims, shot at Kurapaty ("Windflower Hill") just outside Minsk, capital of Belarus, during the Stalin purges of 1937-41.

The burial site was discovered and excavated during the final years of the Soviet Union, and although the Soviet authorities (even then, in spite of the new official policy of glasnost - "openness"!)tried to claim that the killings dated from WWII and that the Nazis were responsible, the archaeological evidence (as well as some personal testimonies of old people who, as children, had lived near the site) overwhelmingly confirmed the earlier date!

The victims' clothes had for the most part rotted - but metal fastenings and trimmings and anything made from rubber or leather (in particular, shoes) had lasted, and was subjected to thorough archaeological/forensic study. It was my task to translate the Belarusian investigators' report into English.

Most of the "literary" and historical allusions in the poem will, I think, be familiar to the majority of Allpoetry readers:
However, in case some are not, I should, however, perhaps remind you that
"Jack" (C.S) Lewis - member of the famous Oxford "Inklings" literary group - wrote a religious-allegorical work "The Pilgim's Regress" - a kind of modern and personal answer to the "Pilgrim's Progress" of John Bunyan ("Bedford John");


Also, I should perhaps mention that during the 17th century Great Schism in the Russian Orthodox Church, the Arch-Priest Avvakum was one of the leading figures among the "Old Believers", many of whom, including small children, voluntarily burned themselves to death;

and a Welsh legend tells how Merlin saw a young lad spend his money on sweetmeats instead of getting his sandal repaired - and when a bystander criticised the lad, Merlin said that the knotted strap would last "long enough" - foreseeing that within an hour the lad would fall into the river and drown.

The title of this poem (as you will probably recognize) comes from the traditional Afro-American "spiritual" "I've gotta shoes, you've gotta shoes, all God's children's got shoes" (I ask pardon of Afro-Americans if I have not transcribed their demotic correctly!)

and Dante and John Donne surely need no explanation!


Wednesday, March 12, 2008

From Delaware, wbiro with something relevant ...

to what we intrinsically are:  poets and writers, and those who appreciate them. He can be found here:

http://allpoetry.com/wbiro


What an Artist Does

Throwing fate to the zealous zephyrs

an artist does, though rarely supported

and though the artist’s life crumbles about

from neglecting life's practical bouts

there is ever one last word to write

one last intriguing scene to paint

one last soaring note to compose-

for that is what an artist does.

 

Where an artist did, an artist was

though forever disdained by family and friends

who never perceived an artist at all-

just an impractical spirit engaging in

what they had desired for themselves,

and thus are challenged to acknowledge it…

 

Sad, every ten people should have at least one artist

that they all support; but alas

jealousy and nature being what it is,

not to mention their idea of what an artist is

corrupted by shallow sensationalism

has thus far prevented us from such a culture…

 

So what becomes of an artist’s life?

the message is as clear as the art itself-

tossed to the winds,

crumbling to dust,

it does not matter when an artist has done

what an artist does.

 

What then, when neatly shuttled away

and shorn of the tools an artist uses,

is an artist to do what an artist does?

It does not matter, an artist does

what artists will do

with whatever's at hand 

wherever the artist is…

 

Perhaps it is a mystery of the heart

sharing and expressing vision and thought;

perhaps it is contained in the artist’s eyes

that spreads through those who’ve been touched

by the artist who does what an artist does.

 

For individual glory an artist does not,

as a speck in society an artist does;

painting a mural on the wall of souls

encountered, remembered, touched, forgotten

yet living

in what the artist does.

 

There is always one, last magical touch

left in an artist’s fingers and soul

though reduced to sculpting mashed potatoes-

because an artist will do what an artist does.

 

I thank the Lord for allowing my family

for tolerating what this artist has been,

for when the creative spirit frolics free

the artist is not mindful of practicality

quite the way the others will be-

therein lies to price that is paid

for an artist to do what an artist does.

 

Never losing the twinkle in the eye,

always seeing the world in ways that defy

the imaginations of more practical minds-

though set low on the rungs of social strata

because their lives are strewn in disarray

artists will do what artists do

just because they've been shaped that way…

 

Even as I write, life conspires

to pull me away from this unwritten page,

from the virgin canvas begging a scene,

from the musical staves that shout in silence

for thoughts emotions, ecstasies, pain,

for visions and paths not yet imagined...

and yet I do what an artist does

at a sacrifice to myself and those in my life-

so I do understand, and thank them for their silent support

as this artist does what an artist does.

 

On a lighter note, for one can take

only so much sober, solemn fare-

an artist does funny things to one's hair…

 

So if those close are having a challenge

perceiving you as the artist you are-

just light up their lives with some artist’s hair…

they will then understand that an artist will do

whatever it is an artist does

without further questions, though with reserved stares…

 

Yes, you may eventually be locked away,

but they’ll always come around to see what you've done

as you do that which an artist will do

as a yet-living artist who still actively does…

 

Now with your new-found artist’s hair

you’ve created new-found expectations-

all art-bound, which is great for you-

as you inevitably do what an artist does

with whatever you have at your disposal-

be it knives and spoons, or mashed potatoes,

or bed sheets, brooms, carts, tray tables…

an artist’s palette is never bare

when an artist is doing what an artist does...

 

Well, I have just fifteen more minutes

to continue doing what an artist does,

then Practicality will haul me away

thinking I’ll hold off being an artist for another day…

little does it know how an artist does

the creative little things that an artist does

at whatever life-sustaining task the artist must do

that seemingly takes away the creative time

in which an artist does what an artist will do-

for no one is just an artist alone,

isolated, creating within a box-

as life seeps in, art comes out

in the creations that result from what an artist will do.

 

So time ticks on, bringing an end

to this end-result of what an artist does…

I bid thee adieu, my artist friend,

next time we meet it will be in a place

where artists are doing what an artist does.

 


Check him out.     

  

 


Tuesday, March 11, 2008

from British Columbia comes Regis Auffray ...

with some homespun truths.   You can find him here:

http://www.authorsden.com/regisjauffray


In Her Sunday Best

                                          

          ©Regis Auffray

                                         

There she is in her Sunday 

best blue dress 

she said she was 

saving for a special day


At last she's wearing it 

though she did not put it on 

herself 


They've closed her blue eyes 

blue like the dress 

she never wore 

blue like the sea 

she never saw 


Sleeping there 

in her velvet-lined skiff 

She'll float away 

across the bright gravestones 

like whitecaps 

in the sun of August 

towards the infinite sea 

of the sky




In his own words:



Regis Auffray came to Earth in Peace River, Alberta, Canada. He gives credit for that to his parents who had just come over from Brittany, France. He is of Celtic descent. Bretons are not of "French" ancestry thus, as far as he is concerned, not French although at least one of his siblings disagrees. But he loves all nationalities and origins of people. He is convinced that "compassion" is the answer to all of this gem of a planet's problems. He admits that he just does not have a clue how to make it happen. His first language is French but he learned English when his family moved to a town 100 kilometers (60 miles) east of Vancouver, British Columbia. The first poem he can remember writing was in grade 9 in English class. It rhymed and had the proper rhythm. His English teacher thought it was good and encouraged him to continue to write. (Thank you, Mr. Stolee). Regis is a graduate of the University of British Columbia with an Education Degree majoring in French and English.  He has also done some post graduate work in counseling psychology.  He is an educator in a senior high school. He has been greatly influenced by the romantic poets and the symbolists (in French) but many others - Baudelaire, Verlaine, Rimbaud, Lamartine, Frost, Keats, Dickinson, and so many others who don't come to mind at the moment. He says that he appreciates this site because it has allowed him to share with others what is in his soul and he has made new friends whom he greatly values. He thanks all of you who take the time to read and to comment on his creative endeavors.


Be sure to drop by and check him out.

Monday, March 10, 2008

Peteskid also comes to us from Michigan ...

which is, evidently, a hotbed of poetic abilities.   He can be reached at (PKPoetry)@hotmail.com .
(Remove the parentheses of course), and can be found here:

http://allpoetry.com/Peteskid


now, on to the poem --



moving waters




Rivers hold stories,

traces of things done.

Toes in muddied silt

lovers on shore,

rise and fall of cities;

patience teaching child

to swim.


Swirling around 

fallen limbs, trunks

seeming souls of forest greatness 

now left to hide minnows from big fish,

reaching river grown greatness.


Calm waters make lazy days, 

slowing to wait a bit 

for use of sun and breezes

when words make music

and soft eyes forget flowing streams;


and rivers know these things

but keep silence, holding

secrets like melted soil

and pieces of leafy sunshine;

all those noisy murmurs 

and happy squeals of life, there 

roaming beneath the glassy top

of moving waters.


Do check him out.  


Friday, March 7, 2008

Nicole Hanna, from Michigan, USA ...

can be found here:   
 

http://allpoetry.com/Nicole%20Hanna



Midnight. Bedtime. Deliverance.


tal-like

curled in the warm lips of sheets-

the cracked mouth of at least seven

dark Arabians swaddled, a camel caravan

three days deep in the desert. The center

in its palm, struggling and wet,

hefted as a Jupiter mount

below the left index.


The static of my house coat sparks

like May, its last great lightning, and the moon

beckoning one flesh to one flesh.

I am serious

when I say: let's strip off our clothes

pull at my hair and your hair like long

coconut fibers. Lean into me, subside

in my skin, hook your fingers

in my swift and flowing water.




Check her out.

Thursday, March 6, 2008

A.J. Morelli, from New York City, New York, USA ...

with a new way to state a truisim.    You can find here:   

http://allpoetry.com/AJ%20Morelli




the grinding wheel

 

 

 

the dark air fills
with points
of light
thrown from
the grinding wheel

smell of rising smoke
and stars
and everything it steals

blinding light,
transforming heat

the single lesson plain

when something
touches something else


neither stays
the same

 


Check him out.   All visitors welcome.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

Di is shy, so we have no last name ...

but she's known as masterblaster on Allpoetry.com:

http://allpoetry.com/masterblaster




Walk Gently Through Your Mind


That narrow path we walk within our mind,

We often feel we're swaying on the edge.

We seek alternatives, and hope to find

Solutions that will keep us on that ledge.

Each day we know we're wrestling with time

That battle that we fight, we fight alone,

We often pass from silly to sublime,

To wonder, if our sanity has flown.

The mind is like a river, it must flow,

The constant problems often raise a dam,

But strength and courage down it blow by blow,

We use them to the last and dwindling gram.

Walk gently through your mind,and do not fear,

For many times we're harsh, and too severe.



Drop by and check her out.   She writes marvelous sonnets.     ;)


Today we have Ryan Wicks, New York, USA ...

also known as ryanosauruswrecks on Allpoetry.com.  You can find him here: http://allpoetry.com/RyanosaurusWrecks#




Switches


Externally, the reactions are fluid

Synapses collapse with inward movements

Soothing condolences from glands undiscovered

Just cover the pain derived from another


Excretion of rivers to expose the issue

But dexterity is developed to utilize boxed tissues

Making shopping list complete, ending with chocolates

Salivating through dentals commences with talks of it


Noticing edging on hardwood floors

Unaware of testosterone when slamming doors

Payment for labor delivers you to the teller

Wishing you could tell her the definition of stellar


Endorphins commanding the pain of sharp blotter

When getting inked to pay tribute to Father

Speaking and reading, listening and demanding

Bi-lingual, uni-lateral, omnipotent, and branded.


Come check him out.


Monday, March 3, 2008

Robin Ouzman Hislop is co editor of Poetry Life and Times ..

with his Spanish wife and poet Amparo Arospide. He lives in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, UK, much of his work these days and further information can be found at 

www.poetrylifeandtimes.com/current.html, 

a bi-monthly online poetry ezine, submissions welcome.


Naomi Draw His Eyes

Naomi draw his eyes away.
He thought, as he sat there,
Before you with his lyre,
In the light of your golden hair.

He saw his shadow to the fire
Fleet & fly on flame like lightning
Struck. Naomi draw his eyes
Away, lay his head to rest,

Upon your honey dewy breast.
He is your lover, beloved & king,
Yet self has strange dreams to revile,
So lead him on to his sepulchral isle.


Check him out by visiting Poetry Life & Times.