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  1. TopTop #1171
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Cleaning Up After the Poetry Salon

    It's not always easy.

    Proper nouns are manageable.
    They stack well.
    Biggest on the bottom -
    The Great Plains, Idaho, Mt. Rainier -
    then the smaller stuff left behind -
    Boxcars, photographs, you know.

    Adjectives are remarkably tough to clean up.
    The dry ones catch on the furniture,
    bury themselves in cracks
    hide in the pocket of an old sweater.
    They crumble to awkward, ungainly,
    unmanageable, yes fragile
    pieces …that somehow cunningly avoid
    the shedding broom some poet has
    left behind.
    And wet ones like sticky and slimy - yikes!

    Cleaning up the leavings of Wendell Berry?
    it's a grange meeting hall.
    Rich black dirt everywhere,
    corn stalks, the lingering thick odor of
    compost and just a hint of cow manure
    on your shoes and your best carpet.

    And Jesus! Those poems about stars -
    the poets have no idea.
    Whole constellations left behind -
    Watch it with the Pleides, they have sharp points
    And yes, the Dog Star does bite.

    My rule would be -
    you brought 'em, you take 'em home.

    Food is good in a poem.
    Mom's apple pie and romantic dinners for two
    are usually digested by the salon - no leftovers.
    It's the ethnic dishes with strange names
    luedafisk, sauerkraut, gefiltafish
    and anything made with hot peppers
    Well, you know.

    Poets - a little consideration -
    slip in some sponges, maybe
    a mop or really - just a mouthful of food,
    a spoonful -
    yes, spoons for everybody.

    And come on,
    no animals bigger than a cat or small dog.
    polar bears and coyotes are disasters.

    Oh I could go on…
    mixed metaphors sliding
    down the walls and tangled
    in the drapes.

    Cliches hiding their heads in the corners.
    shy, embarrassed marmots standing by dead seals.
    stinking sea weed and sharks behind the sofa
    And fish - fish beyond number -
    flopping on the floor.

    Verbs are easy - they move around
    so much - just
    open the door and they
    take care of themselves.

    But poets,
    It's the birds left behind…
    Egret, Robin, wrens, a flock of seagulls,
    a murder of crows…
    For God's sake leave a window open.

    But eagle, oh my friends, the eagle
    he glowers there
    from the chandelier
    Royally pissed!
    A moment in a poem
    then forgotten
    in the closed room.

    I know, I know.
    I'm making a new mess now -
    I'll need some help here with
    Idaho and that eagle.

    For the rest
    I brought 'em.
    I'll take 'em home.

    - Doug von Koss
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  3. TopTop #1172
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Let America Be America Again



    Let America be America again.
    Let it be the dream it used to be.
    Let it be the pioneer on the plain
    Seeking a home where it is free.


    (America never was America to me.)


    Let America be the dream the dreamers dreamed-
    Let it be that great strong land of love
    Where never kings connive nor tyrants scheme
    That anyone be crushed by one above.


    (It never was America to me.)


    O, let my land be a land where Liberty
    Is crowned with no false patriotic wreath,
    But opportunity is real, and life is free,
    Equality is in the air we breathe.


    (There's never been equality for me,
    Nor freedom in this "homeland of the free".)


    Say, who are you that mumbles in the dark?
    And who are you that draws your veil across the stars?


    I am the poor white, fooled and pushed apart,
    I am the Negro bearing slavery's scars.
    I am the red man driven from the land,
    I am the immigrant clutching the hope I seek-
    And finding only the same old stupid plan
    Of dog eat dog, of mighty crush the weak.


    I am the young man, full of strength and hope,
    Tangled in that ancient endless chain
    Of profit, power, gain, of grab the land!
    Of grab the gold! Of grab the ways of satisfying need!
    Of work the people! Of take the pay!
    Of owning everything for one's own greed!


    I am the farmer, bondsman to the soil.
    I am the worker sold to the machine.
    I am the Negro, servant to you all.
    I am the people, humble, hungry, mean-
    Hungry yet today despite the dream.
    Beaten yet today-O, Pioneers!
    I am the man who never got ahead,
    The poorest worker bartered through the years.


    Yet I'm the one who dreamt our basic dream
    In the Old World while still a serf of kings,
    Who dreamt a dream so strong, so brave, so true,
    That even yet its mighty daring sings
    In every brick and stone, in every furrow turned
    That's made America the land it has become.
    O, I'm the man who sailed those early seas
    In search of what I meant to be my home-
    For I'm the one who left dark Ireland's shore,
    And Poland's plain, and England's grassy lea,
    And torn from Black Africa's strand I came
    To build a "homeland of the free".


    The free?


    Who said the free? Not me?
    Surely not me? The millions on relief today?
    The millions shot down when we strike?
    The millions who have nothing for our pay?
    For all the dreams we've dreamed
    And all the songs we've sung
    And all the hopes we've held
    And all the flags we've hung,
    The millions who have nothing for our pay-
    Except the dream that's almost dead today.


    O, let America be America again-
    The land that never has been yet-
    And yet must be-the land where every one is free.
    The land that's mine-the poor man's, Indian's, Negro's, ME-
    Who made America,
    Whose sweat and blood, whose faith and pain,
    Whose hand at the foundry, whose plow in the rain,
    Must bring back our mighty dream again.


    Sure, call me any ugly name you choose-
    The steel of freedom does not stain.
    From those who live like leeches on the people's lives,
    We must take back our land again,
    America!


    O, yes,
    I say it plain,
    America never was America to me,
    And yet I swear this oath-
    America will be!


    Out of the rack and ruin of our gangster death,
    The rape and rot of graft, and stealth, and lies,
    We, the people, must redeem
    The land, the mines, the plants, the rivers.
    The mountains and the endless plain-
    All, all the stretch of these great green states-
    And make America again!


    - Langston Hughes
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  4. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  5. TopTop #1173
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Antepasados

    We are one
    because America is one continent
    tied by the slender curves of Panama.
    We are one people
    tied by the buried bones of ancestors
    the buried bones of ancestors
    from Asia to America
    from Africa to America
    from Europe to America
    Back to the first mothers and the first fathers
    back to the first gardens of flowers and fruits,
    where vegetables grew wild.
    The soft thick grasses
    cushioned their bodies
    when they lay down to love.
    Warm water gurgled up from the earth
    and spilled down into clear pools.
    Feathers waved their heads
    and floated across their bodies
    as they strutted in the afternoon
    But then the snake of greed grew
    like a weed planted
    the seed that
    made one person think that to fill their
    need or to succeed
    they had to use someone else's labor
    for their own profit.
    Wars came.
    Animals died.
    Women and cattle became property,
    Slaves were chained,
    put to work,
    endless work
    that finally built factories and smog,
    rich parts of town and poor
    built on the buried bones of antepasados
    the buried bones of ancestors.
    Shake the bones
    hear their ghostly moans.
    We learn from our past
    to build our future.

    - Nina Serrano
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  7. TopTop #1174
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Morning Prayers


    I have missed the guardian spirit
    of the Sangre de Cristos
    those mountains
    against which I destroyed myself
    every morning I was sick
    with loving and fighting
    in those small years.
    In that season I looked up
    to a blue conception of faith
    a notion of the sacred in
    the elegant border of cedar trees
    becoming mountain and sky.


    This is how we were born into the world:
    Sky fell in love with earth, wore turquoise,
    cantered in on a black horse.
    Earth dressed herself fragrantly,
    with regard for the aesthetics of holy romance.
    Their love decorated the mountains with sunrise,
    weaved valleys delicate with the edging of sunset.


    This morning I look toward the east
    and I am lonely for those mountains
    though I've said good-bye to the girl
    with her urgent prayers for redemption.
    I used to believe in a vision
    that would save the people
    carry us all to the top of the mountain
    during the flood
    of human destruction.


    I know nothing anymore
    as I place my feet into the next world
    except this:
    the nothingness
    is vast and stunning,
    brims with details
    of steaming, dark coffee
    ashes of campfires
    the bells on yaks or sheep
    sirens careening through a deluge
    of humans
    or the dead carried through fire,
    through the mist of baking sweet
    bread and breathing.


    This is how we will leave this world:
    on horses of sunrise and sunset
    from the shadow of the mountains
    who witnessed every battle
    every small struggle.




    - Joy Harjo
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  9. TopTop #1175
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Splendor

    One day it's the clouds,
    one day the mountains.
    One day the latest bloom
    of roses - the pure monochromes,
    the dazzling hybrids - inspiration
    for the cathedral's round windows.
    Every now and then
    there's the splendor
    of thought: the singular
    idea and its brilliant retinue -
    words, cadence, point of view,
    little gold arrows flitting
    between the lines.
    And too the splendor
    of no thought at all:
    hands lying calmly
    in the lap, or swinging
    a six iron with effortless
    tempo. More often than not
    splendor is the star we orbit
    without a second thought,
    especially as it arrives
    and departs. One day
    it's the blue glassy bay,
    one day the night
    and its array of jewels,
    visible and invisible.
    Sometimes it's the warm clarity
    of a face that finds your face
    and doesn't turn away.
    Sometimes a kindness, unexpected,
    that will radiate farther
    than you might imagine.
    One day it's the entire day
    itself, each hour foregoing
    its number and name,
    its cumbersome clothes, a day
    that says come as you are,
    large enough for fear and doubt,
    with room to spare: the most secret
    wish, the deepest, the darkest,
    turned inside out.

    - Thomas Centolella
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  10. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  11. TopTop #1176
    Sara S's Avatar
    Sara S
    Auntie Wacco

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Wow.
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  12. TopTop #1177
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Leaving Enterprise


    Walking away
    from the rental car
    feeling clean, finished,
    practice


    for a future walking
    away from all
    I thought I was.


    - Max Reif
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  14. TopTop #1178
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Skunk Cabbage


    Dust of fresh snow on frost heaved earth
    January's brown stalks flutter in the breeze.
    A quest in search of skunk cabbage,
    a plant both common and magical,
    first wildflower of spring
    using the stored energy in its roots
    to create a bubble of warmth
    in its strange purplish spathe
    like hands cradling a candle flame.


    Lots to see on the way.
    Flock of turkeys,
    marching single file across the trail.
    one, two, seventy-five, seventy-six.
    And the dark upright skeletons of cockle burr plants.
    Burr after burr, hooked barbs
    and double seeds inside every one,
    one will sprout this spring, and one the next,
    a natural insurance policy for survival.
    These fed the multitudes of Carolina parakeets,
    who fly no more in these faster paced days.


    Harley told me this plant biography,
    one long ago summer day
    as I painfully plucked the burrs from my dogs,
    sending an arrow of beauty into a dark, cussing moment.
    He seemed old then, full of jokes and
    facts he slipped in about how he loved this natural world.


    After the hike and the miracle of
    flowers in the frozen ground,
    we go to the hospital to see Harley, now ninety six,
    bruised arms and wasted body,
    swathed in sheets and confusion, and still
    a glimmer in his eyes.
    He takes the chocolate malt, and sips hard
    through his straw while we talk,
    old stories pulled from the cobwebs of memory,
    taking their last bow in the afternoon's pale light.


    "My hands are cold", he says as I take the cup,
    and wrap my hands around his,
    the strength and warmth of mine
    cradling what seems now so cold and frail.
    The strength and warmth of mine,
    hewn long ago from these shadowy roots I now hold,
    like the skunk cabbage,
    returning last summer's sun to this day.


    - Alan Cohen
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  15. TopTop #1179
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Notice


    This evening, the sturdy Levi's
    I wore every day for over a year
    & which seemed to the end
    in perfect condition,
    suddenly tore.
    How or why I don't know,
    but there it was: a big rip at the crotch.
    A month ago my friend Nick
    walked off a racquetball court,
    showered,
    got into his street clothes,
    & halfway home collapsed & died.
    Take heed, you who read this,
    & drop to your knees now & again
    like the poet Christopher Smart,
    & kiss the earth & be joyful,
    & make much of your time,
    & be kindly to everyone,
    even to those who do not deserve it.
    For although you may not believe
    it will happen,
    you too will one day be gone,
    I, whose Levi's ripped at the crotch
    for no reason,
    assure you that such is the case.
    Pass it on.

    - Steve Kowit
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  16. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  17. TopTop #1180
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    A Reminder To Myself


    Reading about writing
    is not writing.
    Having the perfect pen and paper
    or notebook
    is not writing.
    Thinking about writing
    is not writing.
    Procrastinating about writing
    is not writing.

    Mashing and wedging words
    and ideas and feelings
    and thoughts
    onto a flat surface
    then turning them on the wheel of time
    is writing.
    Centering the mass,
    shaping it with the
    hands of experience
    and its invisible playmate imagination,
    is writing.

    Opening the center,
    building the walls, feeling them
    thin against your fingers--
    but still hold--
    is writing.

    Cutting the pot free
    to stand on its own,
    to hint at its future as
    useful and beautiful,
    is writing.

    Trimming, carving, firing,
    glazing, and firing once more,
    are re-writing.

    Removing the work from the kiln
    and seeing that it is transformed
    yet whole, uncracked, unflawed,
    perfect in its inperfection,
    is writing "The End."


    - Jane Mickelson
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  18. TopTop #1181
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Circles


    See how the daughter cleanses her mother’s
    cracked mouth with lemon swabs
    feeds her tiny bites of ice cream from a plastic spoon
    as when the mother unhinges her bra and places her nipple
    between the child’s eager open lips


    how she strokes her arm with the tips
    of her fingers, rotates it slowly at the shoulder
    whispering that’s it, you can do it
    like the mother holds her child’s hands over
    her head and walks with her while she takes
    her first steps


    now she rolls the socks down her
    swollen ankles, applies cream to the cracked
    dry veins above the shin
    as the mother unwraps the diaper
    from the child’s hips, undoes the pins
    from the wet cotton and wipes the skin clean


    watch how she arranges the soft blanket
    around her mother’s wrinkled form, leans down to
    kiss her good-night, pulls the metal
    cord on the over head light
    fading blue linoleum to grey


    in the half light of the room the child sleeps
    with one hand against her cheek, the other on the
    white pillow, mouth open, lips moving
    as if speaking to God.




    - Claire Drucker
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  20. TopTop #1182
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The Excesses of God


    Is it not by his high superfluousness we know
    Our God? For to be equal a need
    Is natural, animal, mineral: but to fling
    Rainbows over the rain
    And beauty above the moon, and secret rainbows
    On the domes of deep sea-shells,
    And make the necessary embrace of breeding
    Beautiful also as fire,
    Not even the weeds to multiply without blossom
    Nor the birds without music:
    There is the great humaneness at the heart of things,
    The extravagant kindness, the fountain
    Humanity can understand, and would flow likewise
    If power and desire were perch-mates.


    - Robinson Jeffers
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  21. TopTop #1183
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Song Original
    A dream remembered on reading Denise Levertov's 'A Tree Telling of Orpheus'




    When the sun rays of the night
    first caress the insides of my body
    waking me from thick-wooded slumber
    faint notes begin to surge within my sap
    and as they swarm through my veins
    vibrating with the eddying air
    my roots stir to the strain of chords—
    dying to dance.


    My branches sway while
    out of my crown issue clear
    resonating sounds, the silent pulse
    of unfurling leaves
    high pitched melodies
    in an ancient tongue
    that know my name
    that know each atom of my being
    so sweet and wounding.


    All night I revel
    abandoned to its might
    even while my knotted trunk
    harbors a secret fear.


    All through that day I marvel—
    yet before three full moons
    steal over my limbs
    dewy mists dim my remembrance.


    Weighted by pelting rains
    blinding gales, dark snows
    countless weathered seasons
    one star-filled sky
    a slivered moon
    slides down a beam
    splintering my being.


    My screams tear at the frenzied air
    until high pitched notes
    driven deep within
    gush out
    echoing in rippling pools—
    in all you are and do
    my ancient song sings you.




    - Raphael Block
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  22. TopTop #1184
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The Good Man

    The good man.
    He is still enhancer, renouncer.
    In the time of detachment,
    in the time of the vivid heather and affectionate evil,
    in the time of oral
    grave grave legalities of hate - all real
    walks our prime registered reproach and seal.
    Our successful moral.
    The good man.
    Watches our bogus roses, our rank wreath, our
    love's unreliable cement, the gray
    jubilees of our demondom.
    Coherent
    Counsel! Good man.
    Require of us our terribly excluded blue.
    Constrain, repair a ripped, revolted land.
    Put hand in hand land over.
    Reprove
    the abler droughts and manias of the day
    and a felicity entreat.
    Love.
    Complete
    your pledges, reinforce your aides, renew
    stance, testament.


    - Gwendolyn Brooks
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  23. TopTop #1185
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The Shoelace

    a woman, a
    tire that’s flat, a
    disease, a
    desire: fears in front of you,
    fears that hold so still
    you can study them
    like pieces on a
    chessboard…
    it’s not the large things that
    send a man to the
    madhouse. death he’s ready for, or
    murder, incest, robbery, fire, flood…
    no, it’s the continuing series of small tragedies
    that send a man to the
    madhouse…
    not the death of his love
    but a shoelace that snaps
    with no time left …
    The dread of life
    is that swarm of trivialities
    that can kill quicker than cancer
    and which are always there -
    license plates or taxes
    or expired driver’s license,
    or hiring or firing,
    doing it or having it done to you, or
    roaches or flies or a
    broken hook on a
    screen, or out of gas
    or too much gas,
    the sink’s stopped-up, the landlord’s drunk,
    the president doesn’t care and the governor’s
    crazy.
    lightswitch broken, mattress like a
    porcupine;
    $105 for a tune-up, carburetor and fuel pump at
    sears roebuck;
    and the phone bill’s up and the, market’s
    down
    and the toilet chain is
    broken,
    and the light has burned out -
    the hall light, the front light, the back light,
    the inner light; it’s
    darker than hell
    and twice as
    expensive.
    then there’s always crabs and ingrown toenails
    and people who insist they’re
    your friends;
    there’s always that and worse;
    leaky faucet, christ and christmas;
    blue salami, 9 day rains,
    50 cent avocados
    and purple
    liverwurst.

    or making it
    as a waitress at norm’s on the split shift,
    or as an emptier of
    bedpans,
    or as a carwash or a busboy
    or a stealer of old lady’s purses
    leaving them screaming on the sidewalks
    with broken arms at the age of 80.

    suddenly
    2 red lights in your rear view mirror
    and blood in your
    underwear;
    toothache, and $979 for a bridge
    $300 for a gold
    tooth,
    and china and russia and america, and
    long hair and short hair and no
    hair, and beards and no
    faces, and plenty of zigzag but no
    pot, except maybe one to piss in
    and the other one around your
    gut.

    with each broken shoelace
    out of one hundred broken shoelaces,
    one man, one woman, one
    thing
    enters a
    madhouse.

    so be careful
    when you
    bend over.


    - Charles Bukowski
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  24. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  25. TopTop #1186
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Matins


    Now we are awake
    and now we are come together
    and now we are thanking the Lord.
    This is easy,
    for the Lord is everywhere.
    He is in the water and the air,
    He is in the very walls.
    He is around us and in us.
    He is the floor on which we kneel.
    We make our songs for him
    as sweet as we can
    for his goodness,
    and, lo, he steps into the song
    and out of it, having blessed it,
    having recognized our intention,
    having awakened us, who thought we were awake,
    a second time,
    having married us in the air and water,
    having lifted us in intensity,
    having lowered us in beautiful amiability,
    having given us
    each other,
    and the weeds, dogs, cities, boats, dreams
    that are the world.




    - Mary Oliver
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  27. TopTop #1187
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Making Peace


    A voice from the dark called out,
    "The poets must give us
    imagination of peace, to oust the intense, familiar
    imagination of disaster. Peace, not only
    the absence of war."
    But peace, like a poem,
    is not there ahead of itself,
    can't be imagined before it is made,
    can't be known except
    in the words of its making,
    grammar of justice,
    syntax of mutual aid.
    A feeling towards it,
    dimly sensing a rhythm, is all we have
    until we begin to utter its metaphors,
    learning them as we speak.
    A line of peace might appear
    if we restructured the sentence our lives are making,
    revoked its reaffirmation of profit and power,
    questioned our needs, allowed
    long pauses. . . .
    A cadence of peace might balance its weight
    on that different fulcrum; peace, a presence,
    an energy field more intense than war,
    might pulse then,
    stanza by stanza into the world,
    each act of living
    one of its words, each word
    a vibration of light--facets
    of the forming crystal.


    - Denise Levertov
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  28. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  29. TopTop #1188
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Even The Smallest Trees Have Tops




    Even the smallest trees
    have tops.


    Even the smallest hummingbirds
    have wings.


    Even the smallest rain drops
    Hold the sea.


    Even the faintest quail call
    is enough to open the heart.


    Even the Silence on top of Vision Mountain
    has Sounds


    Even the smallest ant
    has legs to go.


    Even the poorest of people
    hold life's riches.


    Even the damaged
    have curiosity.


    Even the tortured
    embraces a bit of peace.


    Even those who fail a thousand times
    still will come and come again.


    - Mary Morgan
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  30. TopTop #1189
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    A Diamond in the Rough


    A faint glimmer glitters under
    her hardened, dusty surface
    as the guy at the bike shop says
    "She's a diamond in the rough!"


    Rusty spokes on ancient wheels
    placated and worn
    still effortlessly spin
    willing to ride and be ridden
    like new!


    Tho' the world has made a mess
    of her paint job
    metal rubber aluminum hardware
    and skin, tough on sight...


    Her bristled curves turn smooth
    softening as she rides
    freedom's wind sweeping through
    pedals licking the air
    handle bars trembling in the quickening
    her frame firmly rooted
    steady open leaning
    into the distance


    Pushing forward wanting nothing
    less than
    this joy-ride
    through time and space
    holding firm
    holding true
    to the invisible force
    of God's Hand


    No more reckless far out deceptive
    "I'm doing it alone!"
    clanging beneath the surface
    I choose now to lean in
    to listen and to hear
    God's voice breathing life
    from the heart of creation
    into this breath of life
    called julie.


    - Julie Bennion
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  31. Gratitude expressed by:

  32. TopTop #1190
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Villanelle for Our Time




    From bitter searching of the heart,
    Quickened with passion and with pain
    We rise to play a greater part.


    This is the faith from which we start:
    Men shall know commonwealth again
    From bitter searching of the heart.


    We loved the easy and the smart,
    But now with keener hand and brain
    We rise to play a greater part.


    The lesser loyalties depart
    And neither race nor creed remain
    From bitter searching of the heart.


    Not steering by the venal chart
    that tricked the mass for private gain,
    We rise to play a greater part.


    Reshaping narrow law and art
    Whose symbols are the millions slain,
    From bitter searching of the heart
    We rise to play a greater part.


    - Frank Scott (1899 - 1985)
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  33. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  34. TopTop #1191
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    A word on statistics

    Out of every hundred people

    those who always know better:
    fifty-two.

    Unsure of every step:
    nearly all the rest.

    Ready to help,
    as long as it doesn't take long:
    forty-nine.

    Always good,
    because they cannot be otherwise:
    four--well, maybe five.

    Able to admire without envy:
    eighteen.

    Led to error
    by youth (which passes):
    sixty, plus or minus.

    Those not to be messed with:
    forty and four.

    Living in constant fear
    of someone or something:
    seventy-seven.

    Capable of happiness:
    twenty-some-odd at most.

    Harmless alone,
    turning savage in crowds:
    more than half, for sure.

    Cruel
    when forced by circumstances:
    it's better not to know
    not even approximately.

    Wise in hindsight:
    not many more
    than wise in foresight.

    Getting nothing out of life but things:
    thirty
    (although I would like to be wrong).

    Doubled over in pain,
    without a flashlight in the dark:
    eighty-three,
    sooner or later.

    Those who are just:
    quite a few at thirty-five.

    But if it takes effort to understand:
    three.

    Worthy of empathy:
    ninety-nine.

    Mortal:
    one hundred out of one hundred--
    a figure that has never varied yet.


    - Wislawa Szymborski

    (from the collection Miracle Fair, translated by Joanna Trzeciak)
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  35. Gratitude expressed by 3 members:

  36. TopTop #1192
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Hunting

    Hunter’s Moon – a full moon in October, rising at sunset and setting at sunrise, which facilitates the hunting of nocturnal animals
    One October evening, under the waning influence of a Hunter’s Moon, I went to hear three poets read in Occidental. They spoke of wisdom and doubt, their own and ours. Mike Tuggle read from his new book, What Lures the Foxes, but had nothing to say about foxes that night.

    Later, as I pulled out of the parking lot, a grey fox slipped from behind a bush and ran down the road alongside my car. The street lamps outshone the moon as the fox shape-shifted, adapting under some ancient instruction, now beaten silver, now beaten gold. Pitched between dream and waking, we traveled that road together, she with her wisdom – or so I like to think – I with my doubts – as I know only too well. She and I have met before and I pondered how diminished I would be without her. But as we reached the edge of the light, the fox dashed across the road and vanished.

    Under the night’s cool dappling of redwood and fir, having found what I had not sought, I drove on wondering what lures the foxes and how I could spread the news when some cowardice keeps me in this car, speaking in dead tongues.


    - Susan Lamont
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  37. Gratitude expressed by:

  38. TopTop #1193
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Keeping Cool While Being Transported




    The time will be here.
    I will be carried away like a fish,
    or a bird scooped up from a pond of sky.
    Winged creatures of mythical belief will assemble
    at one synaptic point, just for me.
    The time will be here
    when I will go hot and heavy,
    or coolly into the flowing night,
    into darkness or light carried by one nose hair.
    Perhaps I will be tethered to a bloodless back,
    new grown moth wings curled and singed
    as I pass through thestral drapes?
    The time will be here
    or over there, where I pause.
    The cold side of the moon may open
    like a pure Day-Lily,
    a ghost writing of God's best seller,
    reflecting at that time
    the white satin lining of funeral flowers,
    once more boxing me snugly in,
    against infinity.


    - Eric Ashford
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  39. Gratitude expressed by:

  40. TopTop #1194
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Benedicto


    May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous,
    leading to the most amazing view.
    May your rivers flow without end,
    meandering through pastoral valleys tinkling with bells,
    past temples and castles and poets' towers
    into a dark primeval forest
    where tigers belch and monkeys howl,
    through miasmal and mysterious swamps
    and down into a desert of red rock,
    and down again into a deep vast ancient unknown chasm
    where bars of sunlight blaze on profiled cliffs,
    where deer walk across the white sand beaches,
    where storms come and go
    as lightning clangs upon the high crags,
    where something strange and more beautiful
    and more full of wonder than
    your deepest dreams waits for you--
    beyond that next turning of the canyon walls.


    - Edward Abbey
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  41. Gratitude expressed by 2 members:

  42. TopTop #1195

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    God, I love Edward Abbey. At age 18 I went on a week long river rafting trip with Outward Bound, and during the slow parts where the river widened and we just let it carry us downstream, our guide would pull out Edward Abbey and read to us. Abbey's environmental activism and deep love of nature really spoke to me then and still does. What a passionate voice. Thanks for this poem Larry. It brings back those great memories.

    Quote Posted in reply to the post by Larry Robinson: View Post
    Benedicto


    May your trails be crooked, winding, lonesome, dangerous,
    leading to the most amazing view.
    May your rivers flow without end,
    meandering through pastoral valleys tinkling with bells,
    past temples and castles and poets' towers
    into a dark primeval forest
    where tigers belch and monkeys howl,
    through miasmal and mysterious swamps
    and down into a desert of red rock,
    and down again into a deep vast ancient unknown chasm
    where bars of sunlight blaze on profiled cliffs,
    where deer walk across the white sand beaches,
    where storms come and go
    as lightning clangs upon the high crags,
    where something strange and more beautiful
    and more full of wonder than
    your deepest dreams waits for you--
    beyond that next turning of the canyon walls.


    - Edward Abbey
    Opt-out of having a smart meter whether you have one now or not, anytime. 1-866-743-0263 24/7 Spread the word. More info here.
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  43. TopTop #1196
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Blue


    Picasso, the favored one, didn't suffer, but
    Knew some form of suffering should be
    Sought to leave the comfort of good-enough.
    Then, a friend's suicide spirals the world into winter. Blue
    Begins the path that belongs to those
    He'll never be, gifted as he is with genius.
    Suffering, for him, must be to be imagined
    Or sought. He begins the road
    That belongs to others, journeys
    Where none of them have ever been, nor
    Will ever be. Blue and beyond.


    - Rebecca del Rio


    (after visiting the Picasso Museum in Barcelona)
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  44. TopTop #1197
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Walking Ahead


    They'll walk ahead, they tell us, and my
    brother and I don't argue-we know the
    drill, and love it:
    our wives, two peas in a pod, walking
    ahead, husbands behind them
    surely and steadily
    losing ground, until behold the women
    are out of sight, but not before
    the men have studied their
    receding figures, backsides in a jiggling
    syncopation-bear cubs wrestling in
    gunny sacks, the one
    beside me says, and I nod. And now, the
    bear cubs having disappeared,
    we pause on a small bridge
    spanning a branch of the Republican.
    Early October, early afternoon,
    autumn flaunting itself
    one hundred thousand falling leaves at
    a time. Overhead, blueness
    accented by white clouds
    billowing. We lean on the wooden rail
    to study the clear running water:
    beneath it,
    pebbles too many to count, glistening.
    No aches, no requests, no
    complaints. And
    no one else to be seen. We therefore
    unzip and relieve ourselves
    into the river. Oh,
    it's a perfect day to be doing what we
    are doing, minnows at school
    in the clear running
    water, bird noises from a grandstand of
    branches above us cheering
    us on. And the girls?
    Lost somewhere in this wilderness, we
    say, and no doubt walking tirelessly in
    circles-bear
    cubs in gunny sacks, wrestling. So when
    the time is ripe, and the spoils of separation
    have been sweetly and equally
    depleted, we will leave
    this Elysium where
    we have found relief and, by the power
    derived from concern,
    we will join them.


    - Bill Kloefkorn
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  45. TopTop #1198
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    A Geography of Poets


    is all wrong, ed

    what poets now live
    where they say they do
    where they started out
    where they want to

    half the midwesterners
    did time in new york
    the other half in california

    only new yorkers write
    as if they are from new york
    and mostly they are not

    the ones in california
    were wounded elsewhere
    when they feel better
    or can't afford the rent
    they'll go back where
    they came from

    this is america
    you get hurt where you are born
    you make poetry out of it
    as far from home as you can get
    you die somewhere in between

    the only geography of poets
    is greyhound
    general motors rules them all
    ubi patria ibi bene
    or ibi bene ubi patria
    bread out of nostalgia
    not a lot of it either
    some of us came from very far
    maps don't help much


    - Andrei Codrescu
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  46. TopTop #1199
    ChristmasCarla's Avatar
    ChristmasCarla
     

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    Some of us come from just right here
    And hold our West Coast traumas dear ...


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  47. Gratitude expressed by:

  48. TopTop #1200
    Larry Robinson's Avatar
    WaccoBB Poet Laureate

    Re: Poem for the day from Larry Robinson

    The Powwow at the End of the World

    I am told by many of you that I must forgive and so I shall
    after an Indian woman puts her shoulder to the Grand Coulee Dam
    and topples it. I am told by many of you that I must forgive
    and so I shall after the floodwaters burst each successive dam
    downriver from the Grand Coulee. I am told by many of you
    that I must forgive and so I shall after the floodwaters find
    their way to the mouth of the Columbia River as it enters the Pacific
    and causes all of it to rise. I am told by many of you that I must forgive
    and so I shall after the first drop of floodwater is swallowed by that salmon
    waiting in the Pacific. I am told by many of you that I must forgive and so I shall
    after that salmon swims upstream, through the mouth of the Columbia
    and then past the flooded cities, broken dams and abandoned reactors
    of Hanford. I am told by many of you that I must forgive and so I shall
    after that salmon swims through the mouth of the Spokane River
    as it meets the Columbia, then upstream, until it arrives
    in the shallows of a secret bay on the reservation where I wait alone.
    I am told by many of you that I must forgive and so I shall after
    that salmon leaps into the night air above the water, throws
    a lightning bolt at the brush near my feet, and starts the fire
    which will lead all of the lost Indians home. I am told
    by many of you that I must forgive and so I shall
    after we Indians have gathered around the fire with that salmon
    who has three stories it must tell before sunrise: one story will teach us
    how to pray; another story will make us laugh for hours;
    the third story will give us reason to dance. I am told by many
    of you that I must forgive and so I shall when I am dancing
    with my tribe during the powwow at the end of the world.

    - Sherman Alexie
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  49. Gratitude expressed by:

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