verses in various meters about sundry themes.
Monday, September 3, 2007
From Psalm 3 with Emily Dickinson # 141
and somethings' wrong
The crickets start now one by one
They swarm with drum and song.
Old troubles settle with the dew
While visions march as soldiers do
I’m all alone except for you
So linger, do not go.
I did not ask for wine or grain.
Show not your face or give your name.
That you are here lights up this home,
and sleep comes like a train.
Is science wrong?
About the sun?
Two stars stay up, but one is gone.
I’ll dream until the dawn.
My adversary with his crew
with broken teeth all rotting through
Runs in retreat for fear of you
So linger, do not go.
The roof will hold, you will sustain.
You went down and up you came.
Some nights I shiver to the bone
In anger or with shame.
When rain is none I gather dew
And squeeze the earth as oak-trees do.
Your offer stands, your word is true.
The time will come to go.
My ticket’s come
and one by one
My bags are packed and work is done
The time it soon will come.
Sunday, September 2, 2007
Double Sonnet on Psalm 2
the conspiracies they cover up and make
their chains and fetters, treaties that they break
their guarded borders are such fragile things.
Who see insult where injury is none
who grind and kill and torment without fear
whose flattering dwarfs say what they want to hear
their downcast dogs will live to see them hung.
And Iron will crush those kings, they're only clay
Porcelain dropped so careless on a floor
when Someone Big comes strolling in the door
They took and took and now they'll have to pay
From atop the stairs they hear a merry laugh
They piss their pants in the presence of His wrath
What awful shock came when He read the will;
the lines and markers he switched them all around
the Youngest Son’s the Only One in town
They hold their tongues and take their bitter pill
One city under water black with mold
While miles away we see another fall
In this confusion you can’t place a call
Beware, my dear, false stories will be told
They judge the man who stammers when he talks
They speak so sleekly calumny and scorn,
call evil pretty to glorify their porn,
They suck and siphon but they never walk.
Their glasses drop—they hear that merry laugh
And soil themselves in the shadow of his wrath.
Saturday, September 1, 2007
BRAIDED HAIR
Hang down your hair out the window
Hang out your tears to dry
He’s banging on your brass, dear
He’s got a long-bow on his knee
The time it being late, dear
The rain it being cold
Don’t let him wait too long dear
Let him into your fold
You’ve cut off all access
with your Scandinavian knife
So no he must try harder
If he’ll take you as his wife
He met her under moonbeams
He held the string to her kite
And then she closed her eyes
before he could say good-night
The stair-case it goes downstairs
and goes right up again
The doorway it leads out
but doesn’t come in the same
Two travellers come on stubborn mules
a cat is ringing a bell
but the mice don’t seem so worried
as far as she can tell
She sees the promenade
and looks down to the pond
He sits there feeding pigeons
and the grey goose sings a song
She walks away from the window
and open the lock on her book
and holds the final chapter
with a curious furrowed look
He paces by the river
and catches a rusty bus
and goes back to the desert
for he knows he’s had enough
Hang down your hair out the window
Hang out your tears to dry
He’s banging on your brass, dear
He’s got a long-bow on his knee
(the end)
Commentary: Sure, there is some sort of plot
and references are oblique to real things,
but obviously it is mere nonsense and
simply goes with the music.
MISTY
‘til the earth is soft and melts the snow
Then I’ll vanish under my favorite tree
and leave you with my memory
I played the role of your best friend
I stuck by you to the bitter end
People will ask for half a year
Where I’ve gone but it’s not clear
They say that He makes all things new
What will I be when I next see you?
What will I say, will I have hands?
I’ve done no wrong, but I’m not a man
Will we stand by side on a sunlit plane?
Or will I look down with blame?
I know you wept, I smelled your tears
I was finally blind, but still could hear
I lingered ’til the moment was true
‘til five o'clock I waited for you
The stairs went up and so did you
You know it's true, I waited for you
So now you visit your talking friends
and what we had has come to an end
You don’t need to check on me
as I vanish under the ancient tree.
(the end)
Commentary: The dog died on the first day of spring
at five o'clock. “I” who is speaking here, of course, refers to the dog.
Double Sonnet on Psalm 1
while water runs, those leaves will never fade
Its constancy the wind can’t drive away
The strong roots of my tree hold fast the land
Small scraps and coupons tumble down the walk
Grey dust is spreading blocking out the sun
Don't let the darkness fall—my works' not done
I listen, learn, rememb'ring not to talk
The herd is thinning out, each year a few
Some turn a corner and they slip from view.
You may have noticed nothing going on
My tree is busy growing to the clouds
Sometimes alone, sometimes amid the crowds
But constantly my tree is growing strong
The land is sailing, skies are standing still
The wheels of mem’ry go around again
The river running in my mind needs rain
The river never stops—it never will
The herd is thinning—every week a few
As I turn another slips from view.
Tuesday, August 28, 2007
Sonnet on Psalm 36
They have no God to fear before their eyes
For they beguile themselves with twisted thoughts
their guilt will not be found out or despised
Empty and false words are in his mouth
No longer knowing how to do what’s right
Before sleep comes he plans his evil out
with not a care for what or how he’ll fight
Up there where the blue sky and the air are thin
Love moves the wind and thickens welcome rain
I stand in happy water to my chin
And children’s laughter echoes in my brain
The busy feet of pride cannot stay still
A time of rest they call more time to kill
Sonnet on the Tale of One Who was Once a Mariner
Many and brave the men who fought the flames
And five died terrible and slow
The voices still I hear—forgot the names
All was lost, the chief came up on deck
“Prepare yourself for she is going down”
And from the flame he lit a cigarette
We’re gonna get wet he said with a frown
T’was sixty years ago this very day
I close my half-blind eyes—I still can hear
Those voices branded on my memory
They sound so awful close and much too clear
Two ships went down in hungry waves
The deeps hold five more young and unmarked graves
Sonnet on Psalm 107
and tramped in pointless circles of despair
reciting tattered pages in my hands
But no one picks up signals way down there
I climbed an ancient rock to look around
I strained through holes in rolling mist and saw
the pathway of the long gone and a town
its well-fed folk respectful of the law
And all I longed for and my hunger too
were satisfied—my thoughts were all set right
The drums beat not too fast and not to slow
As I lie down sleep comes to me at night
Like random drums the distant thunders roll
But love commands and fear has lost control.
Thursday, August 2, 2007
RISEN
When I a-woke I made my bed
and I folded the linen that held my head
I moved the rock and lifted the sun
I said let it be and the night was done
All my garments they were gambled away
but I found some well-worn clothes to wear
I lingered and two women came
They saw me but did not know my name
They came to the cave expecting to weep
People speak of still ones as only asleep
They'd left behind what others hold dear
But all they'd gained had vanished in thin air
When I a-woke I made my bed
and I folded the linen that held my head
I moved the rock and lifted the sun
I said let it be and the night was done
People walk around in shock, confusion in their eyes
It turns everything around when its death itself that dies
But skeleton trees grow new green leaves
And there's honest folk who once were thieves
And the office of crime has empty chairs
And the forests abound with empty snares
And through the nights and day to day
A mother sings her infant's praise
When I a-woke I made my bed
and I folded the linen that held my head
I moved the rock and lifted the sun
I said let it be and the night was done
(the end)
Tuesday, July 24, 2007
State super vias et videte
et interrogate de semitis antiquis, quae sit bona
et ambulate in ea, et invenietis refrigerium animabus vestris
Jeremiah 6, 16
Quod in mente habeo scribo ad legendum nobis.
Voluisti ardenter quandam loggiam retialem legere, sed porta clausa est mihi. Scivi autem possibile esse loggiam retialem componere cui quidam permittuntur, alii excluduntur. Propter hoc qui haec verba legere desiderat, debet quaerere humiliter.
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