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  • Olá! Você mora em São Paulo, Brasil? Venha sair amanhã. E-mail moot@4chan.org

    File : 1313552838.png-(87 KB, 475x394, Ulysses.png)
    87 KB Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:47 No.2015992  
    I'm personally interested in shorter poems (< 20 lines), but anything and everything is welcome here.
    >> The Jewel - James Wright Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:48 No.2015997
    There is this cave
    In the air behind my body
    That nobody is going to touch:
    A cloister, a silence
    Closing around a blossom of fire.
    When I stand upright in the wind,
    My bones turn to dark emeralds.
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:50 No.2016004
    I do not like them in a box.
    I do not like them with a fox.
    I do not like them in a house.
    I do not like them with a mouse.
    I do not like them here or there.
    I do not like them anywhere.
    I do not like green eggs and ham.
    I do not like them, Sam I am.
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:50 No.2016008
    W.B Yeats - An Irish Airman Forsees his Death
    >> The Cabbage - Ruth Stone Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:51 No.2016010
    You have rented an apartment.
    You come to this enclosure with physical relief,
    your heavy body climbing the stairs in the dark,
    the hall bulb burned out, the landlord
    of Greek extraction and possibly a fatalist.
    In the apartment leaning against one wall,
    your daughter's painting of a large frilled cabbage
    against a dark sky with pinpoints of stars.
    The eager vegetable, opening itself
    as if to eat the air, or speak in cabbage
    language of the meanings within meanings;
    while the points of stars hide their massive
    violence in the dark upper half of the painting.
    You can live with this.

    >The only reason I like it is the sentence beginning with "The eager vegetable."
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:51 No.2016011
    >>2015992
    Poetry is dead. It has been killed by inauthentic, lazy liberals who like hitting the return key too much.
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:52 No.2016015
    >>2016011
    it was killed by postmodern faggots who thought they could make it absolute shit
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:53 No.2016021
    >>2016008
    I know that I shall meet my fate
    Somewhere among the clouds above;
    Those that I fight I do not hate,
    Those that I guard I do not love;
    My country is Kiltartan Cross,
    My countrymen Kiltartan's poor,
    No likely end could bring them loss
    Or leave them happier than before.
    Nor law, nor duty bade me fight,
    Nor public men, nor cheering crowds,
    A lonely impulse of delight
    Drove to this tumult in the clouds;
    I balanced all, brought all to mind,
    The years to come seemed waste of breath,
    A waste of breath the years behind
    In balance with this life, this death.
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:54 No.2016024
    >>2016015
    >>2016011
    Whatever your opinions on the matter, surely you must have a poem which you enjoy.
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:55 No.2016025
    THE DEATH OF GENERAL GRANT
    by Walt Whitman

    As one by one withdraw the lofty actors,
    From that great play on history's stage eterne,
    That lurid, partial act of war and peace--of old and new contending,
    Fought out through wrath, fears, dark dismays, and many a long suspense;
    All past--and since, in countless graves receding, mellowing,
    Victor's and vanquish'd--Lincoln's and Lee's--now thou with them,
    Man of the mighty days--and equal to the days!
    Thou from the prairies!--tangled and many-vein'd and hard has been thy
    part,
    To admiration has it been enacted!
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:56 No.2016032
    I have eaten
    the plums
    that were in
    the icebox

    and which
    you were probably
    saving
    for breakfast

    Forgive me
    they were delicious
    so sweet
    and so cold
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:58 No.2016039
    >>2016025
    >added to list of poems to memorize
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:59 No.2016041
    >>2016024
    fuck WCW that poem blows "hurr plums" kiss my ass

    Flash'd all their sabres bare,
    Flash'd as they turn'd in air,
    Sabring the gunners there,
    Charging an army, while
    All the world wonder'd:
    Plunged in the battery-smoke
    Right thro' the line they broke;
    Cossack and Russian
    Reel'd from the sabre stroke
    Shatter'd and sunder'd.
    Then they rode back, but not
    Not the six hundred.

    5.

    Cannon to right of them,
    Cannon to left of them,
    Cannon behind them
    Volley'd and thunder'd;
    Storm'd at with shot and shell,
    While horse and hero fell,
    They that had fought so well
    Came thro' the jaws of Death
    Back from the mouth of Hell,
    All that was left of them,
    Left of six hundred.

    6.

    When can their glory fade?
    O the wild charge they made!
    All the world wondered.
    Honor the charge they made,
    Honor the Light Brigade,
    Noble six hundred.
    >> Anonymous 08/16/11(Tue)23:59 No.2016042
    >>2016032
    I did that to someone once. I found the poem after and I think it fits the action perfectly.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:03 No.2016043
    fucking yeats is fucking awesome. glad someone put irish airman up in this bitch.

    that said, my favorite poem of all time is probably "Ulysses" by Lord Tennyson, with some of Kamau Brathwaite's stuff coming in a close second.

    excerpt from Ulysses:

    "Life piled on life
    Were all too little, and of one to me
    Little remains: but every hour is saved
    From that eternal silence, something more,
    A bringer of new things; and vile it were
    For some three suns to store and hoard myself,
    And this grey spirit yearning in desire
    To follow knowledge like a sinking star,
    Beyond the utmost bound of human thought."
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:05 No.2016045
    >>2016032
    I have put
    some plums
    in your
    icebox

    so you can
    have plums
    while you eat plums
    for breakfast

    Forgive me
    but I heard
    you like plums
    dawg
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:09 No.2016051
    od'et amo. quare id faciam, fortasse requiris?
    nescio, sed fieri sentio et excrucior.
    >> 1/2 Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:11 No.2016056
    White-coiffed, white-boned, white-eyed,
    This is a strange love.
    I am the goatman
    To your ice nymph,
    You sculptress
    Of petals
    Of salt.
    Yet I am drawn toward you
    As the red thread is drawn
    Through the eye of the needle.
    A drop of sweat
    Hangs from that needlepoint.
    My sweat,
    Goat sweat.
    And in that droplet
    You are reflected
    Like a naked woman
    In a distant window
    All can see,
    And see nothing.
    What is all this stuff about “the gods”?
    What are they to you,
    A modern woman?
    Did you escape from the Athens National Museum?
    Are you a cave-cricket?
    Do you have no tan-lines?
    Do you eat only crushed ice?
    Do you even listen
    To the questions
    Of men?
    Are they all liars, betrayers, faithless,
    Cruel to the fragile, breakers of hymens,
    Piercers of beauty?
    Do you really have
    Their skins on your wall?
    If this is possible in the mind
    Could it be modern?
    I dont know. I do not.
    This is like french-kissing a mummy
    Or building a snowman
    In a blacksmith’s shop
    Hopeless.
    >> 2/2 Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:11 No.2016058
    >>2016056

    I ache like testicles
    After five hours of necking
    When I read your stark
    Poems. Each one a white
    Petal veined
    With purple, untouchable,
    Easily bruised.
    And I a proponent
    Of the colloquial.
    There is no Hell.
    There is only separation
    And selfish fear, there’s only
    Difference, that delicious pull
    Of the opposite
    For its poisonous prey.
    I eat you out.
    Yes! blasphemous! I do it!
    The light and ice
    Of you that drip
    Down my beard
    Taste like rosewater
    Of kulfi icecream.
    You do not move a muscle.
    My erection seems suddenly
    Animalian and comic.
    I seem an inferior being,
    Fixed in time,
    Prior to ideas.
    Gross, violent, pitiable,
    I slobber and grunt, a hog,
    While you gaze at space
    In pain, in the red
    Claws of a thought.
    Stiff as coral, runny as brie.
    White-coiffed, white-boned, white-eyed,

    >this is a good poem
    >it was written by Anne Rice's husband
    >> Los Justos - Jorge Luis Borges Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:13 No.2016060
    Un hombre que cultiva su jardín, como quería Voltaire.
    El que agradece que en la tierra haya música.
    El que descubre con placer una etimología.
    Dos empleados que en un café del Sur juegan un silencioso ajedrez.
    El ceramista que premedita un color y una forma.
    El tipógrafo que compone bien esta página, que tal vez no le agrada.
    Una mujer y un hombre que leen los tercetos finales de cierto canto.
    El que acaricia a un animal dormido.
    El que justifica o quiere justificar un mal que le han hecho.
    El que agradece que en la tierra haya Stevenson.
    El que prefiere que los otros tengan razón.
    Esas personas, que se ignoran, están salvando el mundo.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:26 No.2016085
    >>2016060
    >>2016060
    Translation por favor!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:27 No.2016087
    >>2016045
    That's almost as good as the original.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:33 No.2016100
    >>2016085
    Translator is Alastair Reid.

    A man who cultivates his garden, as Voltaire wished.
    He who is grateful for the existence of music.
    He who takes pleasure in tracing an etymology.
    Two workmen playing, in a café in the South, a silent game of chess.
    The potter, contemplating a color and a form.
    The typographer who sets this page well, though it may not please him.
    A woman and a man, who read the last tercets of a certain canto.
    He who strokes a sleeping animal.
    He who justifies, or wishes to, a wrong done to him.
    He who is grateful for the existence of Stevenson.
    He who prefers others to be right.
    These people, unaware, are saving the world.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:36 No.2016105
    >>2016100
    mucho gracias. me gusta
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:40 No.2016116
    >>2016100
    >>2016060
    borgesfags confirmed for self-absorbed cunts
    >> shorter poems, you say? Sherlock Holmes Guy 08/17/11(Wed)00:40 No.2016119
    Artichoke
    by Joseph Hutchinson

    O heart weighed down by so many wings
    >> not quite so short Sherlock Holmes Guy 08/17/11(Wed)00:44 No.2016125
    Fabrication of Ancestors
    by Alan Dugan

    For old Billy Dugan, shot in the ass in the Civil War, my father said.

    The old wound in my ass
    has opened up again, but I
    am past the prodigies
    of youth’s campaigns, and weep
    where I used to laugh
    in war’s red humors, half
    in love with silly-assed pains
    and half not feeling them.
    I have to sit up with
    an indoor unsittable itch
    before I go down late
    and weeping to the storm-
    cellar on a dirty night
    and go to bed with the worms.
    So pull the dirt up over me
    and make a family joke
    for Old Billy Blue Balls,
    the oldest private in the world
    with two ass-holes and no
    place more to go to for a laugh
    except the last one. Say:
    The North won the Civil War
    without much help from me
    although I wear a proof
    of the war’s obscenity.
    >> E. E. Cummings Sherlock Holmes Guy 08/17/11(Wed)00:45 No.2016131
    Me up at does
    out of the floor
    quietly Stare
    a poisoned mouse

    still who alive
    is asking What
    have i done that
    You wouldn't have
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)00:47 No.2016133
    >>2015992

    Do not go gentle into that good night,
    Old age should burn and rave at close of day;
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

    Though wise men at their end know dark is right,
    Because their words had forked no lightning they
    Do not go gentle into that good night.

    Good men, the last wave by, crying how bright
    Their frail deeds might have danced in a green bay,
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

    Wild men who caught and sang the sun in flight,
    And learn, too late, they grieved it on its way,
    Do not go gentle into that good night.

    Grave men, near death, who see with blinding sight
    Blind eyes could blaze like meteors and be gay,
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

    And you, my father, there on the sad height,
    Curse, bless, me now with your fierce tears, I pray.
    Do not go gentle into that good night.
    Rage, rage against the dying of the light.

    --Dylan Thomas
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:14 No.2016167
    >>2016085
    >2011
    >thinking poetry can be translated
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:16 No.2016170
    I can't believe no one has recommended him yet, but read any of Stephen Crane's poetry. His poems are short, simple, and elegant
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:22 No.2016179
         File1313558525.png-(172 KB, 478x278, thelastexpress rf3.png)
    172 KB
    THAT is no country for old men. The young
    In one another's arms, birds in the trees
    - Those dying generations - at their song,
    The salmon-falls, the mackerel-crowded seas,
    Fish, flesh, or fowl, commend all summer long
    Whatever is begotten, born, and dies.
    Caught in that sensual music all neglect
    Monuments of unageing intellect.

    An aged man is but a paltry thing,
    A tattered coat upon a stick, unless
    Soul clap its hands and sing, and louder sing
    For every tatter in its mortal dress,
    Nor is there singing school but studying
    Monuments of its own magnificence;
    And therefore I have sailed the seas and come
    To the holy city of Byzantium.

    O sages standing in God's holy fire
    As in the gold mosaic of a wall,
    Come from the holy fire, perne in a gyre,
    And be the singing-masters of my soul.
    Consume my heart away; sick with desire
    And fastened to a dying animal
    It knows not what it is; and gather me
    Into the artifice of eternity.

    Once out of nature I shall never take
    My bodily form from any natural thing,
    But such a form as Grecian goldsmiths make
    Of hammered gold and gold enamelling
    To keep a drowsy Emperor awake;
    Or set upon a golden bough to sing
    To lords and ladies of Byzantium
    Of what is past, or passing, or to come.
    >> Sherlock Holmes Guy 08/17/11(Wed)01:29 No.2016194
    >>2016170
    <3

    Should the wide world roll away,
    Leaving black terror,
    Limitless night,
    Nor God, nor man, nor place to stand
    Would be to me essential,
    If thou and thy white arms were there,
    And the fall to doom a long way.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:46 No.2016246
    >>2016194
    oh I love you :)
    I discovered him in college and my entire opinion of poetry was changed forever
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:53 No.2016270
    >>2016032
    so simple yet so...beautiful

    I tasted the plums as i read
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:55 No.2016276
    >>2016270
    you have officially made my night
    now if only you were a woman
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)01:59 No.2016290
    They cut it down, and where the pitch-black aisles
    Of forest night had hid eternal things,
    They scaled the sky with towers and marble piles
    To make a city for their revellings.

    White and amazing to the lands around
    That wondrous wealth of domes and turrets rose;
    Crystal and ivory, sublimely crowned
    With pinnacles that bore unmelting snows.

    And through its halls the pipe and sistrum rang,
    While wine and riot brought their scarlet stains;
    Never a voice of elder marvels sang,
    Nor any eye called up the hills and plains.

    Thus down the years, till on one purple night
    A drunken minstrel in his careless verse
    Spoke the vile words that should not see the light,
    And stirred the shadows of an ancient curse.

    Forests may fall, but not the dusk they shield;
    So on the spot where that proud city stood,
    The shuddering dawn no single stone revealed,
    But fled the blackness of a primal wood.
    >> tamiki hara Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:08 No.2016309
         File1313561285.jpg-(43 KB, 445x321, drawings_pict07a.jpg)
    43 KB
    This is a human being?
    Look how the atom bomb changed it.
    Flesh swells fearfully.
    All men and women take one shape.
    The voice that trickles from swollen lips on the festering, charred-black
    face whispers the thin words, "Please help me."
    This, this is a human being.
    This is the face of a human being.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:09 No.2016313
    >>2016309
    damn...
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:16 No.2016329
    Say what you will about 4chan, but it has a way of displaying words in such a way that they may speak for themselves
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:25 No.2016353
    Read this first:

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Clare

    Then read this, which he wrote in the asylum:

    I AM, by John Clare.

    I am: yet what I am none cares or knows,
    My friends forsake me like a memory lost;
    I am the self-consumer of my woes,
    They rise and vanish in oblivious host,
    Like shades in love and death's oblivion lost;
    And yet I am! and live with shadows tost

    Into the nothingness of scorn and noise,
    Into the living sea of waking dreams,
    Where there is neither sense of life nor joys,
    But the vast shipwreck of my life's esteems;
    And e'en the dearest--that I loved the best--
    Are strange--nay, rather stranger than the rest.

    I long for scenes where man has never trod;
    A place where woman never smil'd or wept;
    There to abide with my creator, God,
    And sleep as I in childhood sweetly slept:
    Untroubling and untroubled where I lie;
    The grass below--above the vaulted sky.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:32 No.2016382
    >>2016119
    >>2016125
    >>2016131
    >>2016194
    OP here. Sherlock Holmes Guy, you are the only namefag I like.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:37 No.2016393
    >>2016353
    >god
    damn it
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:45 No.2016421
    http://snd.sc/lFls9F
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:45 No.2016423
    >>2016393
    does the mention of god ruin things for you?
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:46 No.2016427
    >>2016421
    I was gonna bitch, but good contribution. Nice mood.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:48 No.2016428
    >>2016423
    With words like that attached to it? Not really.

    The problem is that I live smack dab in the middle of the bible belt and the mention of God brings up a horrible feeling.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)02:48 No.2016429
    >>2016418
    This. All the 'modern art' poets don't realize the value of what they sacrificed to achieve the gimmicky originality they treasure so.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)03:53 No.2016550
    Bump for POEMS.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)03:55 No.2016555
    Fine, Dumping more Yeats (just because Eliot is too long). Also, can anyone hit me with some good Blake reccs?
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


    If I make the lashes dark
    And the eyes more bright
    And the lips more scarlet,
    Or ask if all be right
    From mirror after mirror,
    No vanity's displayed:
    I'm looking for the face I had
    Before the world was made.

    What if I look upon a man
    As though on my beloved,
    And my blood be cold the while
    And my heart unmoved?
    Why should he think me cruel
    Or that he is betrayed?
    I'd have him love the thing that was
    Before the world was made.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)04:46 No.2016649
    you know who I like? Federico Garcia Lorca. But I'm too lazy to type out my favorite poem since I can't find it online.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)04:47 No.2016650
    >>2016649
    nigga whut dat sheet be kall?
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)05:12 No.2016677
    he Last Word
    Jim Simmerman

    You can have the bright
    Face of the full moon
    If I can have the dark
    One it keeps out of sight.

    You can have the circles
    We chased ourselves in
    If I can have the empty
    Tunnels inside.

    You can have the past
    And the future to boot
    If I can have the nick
    Of time in between.

    You can have the warmth
    From the bridges we burned
    If I can have the ashes
    Drifting downstream.

    You can have the music
    That marshaled the waltz
    If I can have the echo
    That dies in the rafters.

    You can have the last
    Word, whatever it is,
    If I can have
    The silence thereafter
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:35 No.2016770
    Helen, thy beauty is to me
    Like those Nicean barks of yore
    That gently, o'er a perfumed sea,
    The weary, way-worn wanderer bore
    To his own native shore.

    On desperate seas long wont to roam,
    Thy hyacinth hair, thy classic face,
    Thy Naiad airs have brought me home
    To the glory that was Greece,
    And the grandeur that was Rome.

    Lo, in yon brilliant window-niche
    How statue-like I see thee stand,
    The agate lamp within thy hand,
    Ah! Psyche, from the regions which
    Are Holy Land!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:44 No.2016774
    >>2016735
    What the fuck? That is hilarious.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:48 No.2016776
    Sic Vita

    Like to the falling of a Starre;
    Or as the flights of Eagles are;
    Or like fresh springs of gawdy hew;
    Or silver drops of morning dew;
    Or like a wind that chafes a flood;
    Or bubbles which on water stood;
    Even such is man, whose borrow’d light
    Is streight call’d in, and paid to night.

    The Wind blows out; The Bubble dies;
    The Spring entomb’d in Autumn lies;
    The Dew dries up; the Starre is shot;
    The Flight is past; and Man forgot.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:50 No.2016779
    And the afternoon, the evening, sleeps so peacefully!
    Smoothed by long fingers,
    Asleep ... tired ... or it malingers,
    Stretched on the floor, here beside you and me.
    Should I, after tea and cakes and ices,
    Have the strength to force the moment to its crisis?
    But though I have wept and fasted, wept and prayed,
    Though I have seen my head (grown slightly bald) brought in upon a platter,
    I am no prophet—and here's no great matter;
    I have seen the moment of my greatness flicker,
    And I have seen the eternal Footman hold my coat, and snicker,
    And in short, I was afraid.

    And would it have been worth it, after all,
    After the cups, the marmalade, the tea,
    Among the porcelain, among some talk of you and me,
    Would it have been worth while,
    To have bitten off the matter with a smile,
    To have squeezed the universe into a ball
    To roll it toward some overwhelming question,
    To say: "I am Lazarus, come from the dead,
    Come back to tell you all, I shall tell you all"—
    If one, settling a pillow by her head,
    Should say: "That is not what I meant at all;
    That is not it, at all."

    And would it have been worth it, after all,
    Would it have been worth while,
    After the sunsets and the dooryards and the sprinkled streets,
    After the novels, after the teacups, after the skirts that trail along the
    floor—
    And this, and so much more?—
    It is impossible to say just what I mean!
    But as if a magic lantern threw the nerves in patterns on a screen:
    Would it have been worth while
    If one, settling a pillow or throwing off a shawl,
    And turning toward the window, should say:
    "That is not it at all,
    That is not what I meant, at all."
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:52 No.2016783
    One day I was walking, I heard a complaining
    And saw an old woman the picture of gloom
    She gazed at the mud on her doorstep, ‘twas raining
    And this was her song as she wielded her broom

    O life is a toil, and love is a trouble
    Beauty will fade and riches will flee
    Pleasures they dwindle and prices they double
    And nothing is as I would wish it to be

    There’s too much of worriment goes to a bonnet
    There’s too much ironing goes to a shirt,
    There’s nothing that pays for the time that you waste on it
    There’s nothing that lasts but trouble and dirt

    In march it is mud, it is slush in December
    The mid-summer breezes are loaded with dust.
    In fall the leaves litter, in muddy September
    The wallpaper rots and the candlesticks rust.

    It’s sweeping at six and it’s dusting at seven.
    It’s victuals at eight and it’s dishes at nine.
    It’s potting and panning from ten to eleven.
    We’ve scarce finished breakfast, we’re ready to dine.

    Last night in my dreams I was stationed forever
    On a far little rock in the midst of the sea.
    My one chance at life was a ceaseless endeavour
    To sweep of the waves as they swept over me.

    Alas! ‘Twas no dream; ahead I behold it,
    I see I am helpless my fate to avert
    She lay down her broom, her apron she folded,
    She lay down and died, and was buried in dirt.

    'all that you've learnt, you will unlearn
    All that you've made, will be unmade
    and when you’re done, you will be undone'
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:53 No.2016784
    Say not the struggle nought availeth,
    The labour and the wounds are vain,
    The enemy faints not, nor faileth,
    As things have been, things remain.

    If hopes were dupes, fears may be liars;
    It may be, in yon smoke concealed,
    Your comrades chase e’en now the fliers,
    And, but for you, possess the field

    For while the tired waves, vainly breaking,
    Seem here no painful inch to gain,
    Far back through creeks and inlets making
    Came, silent, flooding in, the main,

    And not by eastern windows only,
    When daylight comes, comes in the light,
    In front the sun climbs slow, how slowly,
    But westward look, the land is bright.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:53 No.2016785
    Question not, but live and labour
    Til yon goal be won,
    Helping every feeble neighbour,
    Seeking help from none;
    Life is mostly froth and bubble,
    Two things stand like stone,
    Kindness in another’s trouble,
    Courage in your own.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:54 No.2016787
    I strove with none, for none was worth my strife:
    Nature I loved, and next to Nature, Art:
    I warm’d both hands before the fire of life;
    It sinks; and I am ready to depart.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:55 No.2016788
    Thrice toss these oaken ashes in the air,
    Thrice sit thou mute in this enchanted chair;
    Then thrice-three times tie up this true love’s knot,
    And murmur soft ‘she will or she will not.’

    Go burn these poisonous weeds in yon blue fire,
    These screech owl’s feathers and this prickling brier,
    This cypress gathered at a dead man’s grave,
    That all thy fears and cares an end may have

    Then come, you fairies! Dance with me a round!
    Melt her hard heart with your melodious sound! -
    In vain are all the charms I can devise:
    She hath an art to break them with her eyes.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:55 No.2016789
    Fall, leaves, fall; die, flowers, away
    Lengthen night and shorten day;
    Every leaf speaks bliss to me,
    Fluttering from the autumn tree.

    I shall smile when wreaths of snow
    Blossom where the rose should grow;
    I shall sing when night’s decay
    Ushers in a drearier day
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:56 No.2016790
    Quinquereme from Nineveh from distant Ophir
    Rowing home to heaven in sunny Palestine
    With a cargo of ivory,
    And apes, and peacocks,
    Sandalwood, cedarwood, and sweet white wine

    Stately Spanish Galleon coming from the Isthmus
    Dipping through the tropics by the palm-green shores,
    With a cargo of diamonds,
    Emeralds, amethysts,
    Topazes, and cinnamon, and gold moidores

    Dirty British coaster with a salt-caked smoke stack
    Butting through the channel in the mad March days
    With a cargo of Tyne coal,
    Road-rail, pig-lead,
    Firewood, ironware, and cheap tin trays
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:57 No.2016791
    Hark’ee wagtail: mend your ways;
    Life is brief, Anacreon says,
    Brief it’s joys, it’s ventures toilsome;
    Wine befriends ‘em - water spoils ‘em
    Who’s for water? Wagtail, you?
    Give me wine! I’ll drink for two.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)06:58 No.2016793
    Nobody heard him, the dead man,
    But still he lay moaning:
    I was much further out than you thought
    And not waving but drowning.

    Poor chap, he always loved larking
    And now he’s dead
    It must have been too cold for him his heart gave way,
    They said.

    Oh, no no no, it was too cold always
    (Still the dead one lay moaning)
    I was much too far out all my life
    And not waving but drowning.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)07:04 No.2016799
    I just read this poem of Shelley's:

    The Fountains mingle with the river
    And the rivers with the ocean,
    The winds of heaven mix for ever
    With a sweet emotion;
    Nothing in the world is single,
    All things by a law devine
    In one another's being mingle -
    Why not I with thine?

    See the mountains kiss high heaven
    And the waves clasp one another;
    No sister-flower would be forgiven
    If it disdain'd its brother:
    And the sunlight clasps the earth,
    And the moonbeams kiss the sea -
    What are all these kissings worth,
    If thou kiss not me?
    >> Behemoth !!Twl3DmqEY/B 08/17/11(Wed)07:06 No.2016800
    I am a parcel of vain strivings tied
    By a chance bond together,
    Dangling this way and that, their links
    Were made so loose and wide,
    Methinks,
    For milder weather.

    A bunch of violets without their roots,
    And sorrel intermixed,
    Encircled by a wisp of straw
    Once coiled about their shoots,
    The law
    By which I'm fixed.

    A nosegay which Time clutched from out
    Those fair Elysian fields,
    With weeds and broken stems, in haste,
    Doth make the rabble rout
    That waste
    The day he yields.

    And here I bloom for a short hour unseen,
    Drinking my juices up,
    With no root in the land
    To keep my branches green,
    But stand
    In a bare cup.

    Some tender buds were left upon my stem
    In mimicry of life,
    But ah! the children will not know,
    Till time has withered them,
    The woe
    With which they're rife.

    But now I see I was not plucked for naught,
    And after in life's vase
    Of glass set while I might survive,
    But by a kind hand brought
    Alive
    To a strange place.

    That stock thus thinned will soon redeem its hours,
    And by another year,
    Such as God knows, with freer air,
    More fruits and fairer flowers
    Will bear,
    While I droop here.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)07:12 No.2016804
    >>2016800
    I fucking love nosegays
    >> /lit/ Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)07:14 No.2016806
    William Blake, Auguries of Innocence

    To see a world in a grain of sand,
    And a heaven in a wild flower,
    Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
    And eternity in an hour.
    >> "Morning Song" by Sylvia Plath Franz Liszt !!ixFboNvY7Y1 08/17/11(Wed)07:19 No.2016808
    Love set you going like a fat gold watch.
    The midwife slapped your footsoles, and your bald cry
    Took its place among the elements.

    Our voices echo, magnifying your arrival. New statue.
    In a drafty museum, your nakedness
    Shadows our safety. We stand round blankly as walls.

    I'm no more your mother
    Than the cloud that distills a mirror to reflect its own slow
    Effacement at the wind's hand.

    All night your moth-breath
    Flickers among the flat pink roses. I wake to listen:
    A far sea moves in my ear.

    One cry, and I stumble from bed, cow-heavy and floral
    In my Victorian nightgown.
    Your mouth opens clean as a cat's. The window square

    Whitens and swallows its dull stars. And now you try
    Your handful of notes;
    The clear vowels rise like balloons.
    >> "L'Infinito" by Giacomo Leopardi Franz Liszt !!ixFboNvY7Y1 08/17/11(Wed)07:20 No.2016809
    Sempre caro mi fu quest'ermo colle
    E questa siepe che da tanta parte
    Dell' ultimo orrizonte il guardo esclude.
    Ma sedendo e mirando interminati
    Spazi di là da quella, e sovrumani
    Silenzi, e profondissima quiete,
    Io nel pensier mi fingo, ove per poco
    Il cor non si spaura. E come il vento
    Odo stormir tra queste piante, io quello
    Infinito silenzio a questa voce
    Vo comparando; e mi sovvien l'eterno,
    E le morte stagioni, e la presente
    E viva, e il suon di lei. Così tra questa
    Immensità s'annega il pensier mio:
    E il naufragar m'è dolce in questo mare.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)09:11 No.2016908
    >>2016774
    >>2016774

    Lovecraft was a tad racist to say the least.
    >> Porphyria's Lover Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)09:26 No.2016933
    The rain set early in tonight,
    The sullen wind was soon awake,
    It tore the elm-tops down for spite,
    And did its worst to vex the lake:
    I listened with heart fit to break.
    When glided in Porphyria; straight
    She shut the cold out and the storm,
    And kneeled and made the cheerless grate
    Blaze up, and all the cottage warm;
    Which done, she rose, and from her form
    Withdrew the dripping cloak and shawl,
    And laid her soiled gloves by, untied
    Her hat and let the damp hair fall,
    And, last, she sat down by my side
    And called me. When no voice replied,
    She put my arm about her waist,
    And made her smooth white shoulder bare,
    And all her yellow hair displaced,
    And, stooping, made my cheek lie there,
    And spread, o'er all, her yellow hair,
    Murmuring how she loved me — she
    Too weak, for all her heart's endeavor,
    To set its struggling passion free
    From pride, and vainer ties dissever,
    And give herself to me forever.
    But passion sometimes would prevail,
    Nor could tonight's gay feast restrain
    A sudden thought of one so pale
    For love of her, and all in vain:
    So, she was come through wind and rain.
    Be sure I looked up at her eyes
    Happy and proud; at last I knew
    Porphyria worshiped me: surprise
    Made my heart swell, and still it grew
    While I debated what to do.
    >> Porphyria's Lover Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)09:27 No.2016934
    That moment she was mine, mine, fair,
    Perfectly pure and good: I found
    A thing to do, and all her hair
    In one long yellow string I wound
    Three times her little throat around,
    And strangled her. No pain felt she;
    I am quite sure she felt no pain.
    As a shut bud that holds a bee,
    I warily oped her lids: again
    Laughed the blue eyes without a stain.
    And I untightened next the tress
    About her neck; her cheek once more
    Blushed bright beneath my burning kiss:
    I propped her head up as before,
    Only, this time my shoulder bore
    Her head, which droops upon it still:
    The smiling rosy little head,
    So glad it has its utmost will,
    That all it scorned at once is fled,
    And I, its love, am gained instead!
    Porphyria's love: she guessed not how
    Her darling one wish would be heard.
    And thus we sit together now,
    And all night long we have not stirred,
    And yet God has not said a word!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)09:35 No.2016947
    Might need to know a bit of Canadian history to understand this one: W.L.M.K by F.R. Scott

    How shall we speak of Canada,
    Mackenzie King dead?
    The Mother's boy in the lonely room
    With his dog, his medium and his ruins?

    He blunted us.

    We had no shape
    Because he never took sides,
    And no sides
    Because he never allowed them to take shape.

    He skilfully avoided what was wrong
    Without saying what was right,
    And never let his on the one hand
    Know what his on the other hand was doing.

    The height of his ambition
    Was to pile a Parliamentary Committee on a Royal Commission,
    To have "conscription if necessary
    But not necessarily conscription,"
    To let Parliament decide--
    Later.

    Postpone, postpone, abstain.

    Only one thread was certain:
    After World War I
    Business as usual,
    After World War II
    Oderly decontrol.
    Always he led us back to where we were before.

    He seemed to be in the centre
    Because we had no centre,
    No vision
    To pierce the smoke-screen of his politics.

    Truly he will be remembered
    Wherever men honour ingenuity,
    Ambiguity, inactivity, and political longevity.

    Let us raise up a temple
    To the cult of mediocrity,
    Do nothing by halves
    Which can be done by quarters.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)10:05 No.2016990
    Fergus and the Druid, by WB Yeats

    {Fergus} This whole day have I followed in the rocks,
    And you have changed and flowed from shape to shape,
    First as a raven on whose ancient wings
    Scarcely a feather lingered, then you seemed
    A weasel moving on from stone to stone,
    And now at last you wear a human shape,
    A thin grey man half lost in gathering night.

    {Druid} What would you, king of the proud Red Branch kings?

    {Fergus} This would I Say, most wise of living souls:
    Young subtle Conchubar sat close by me
    When I gave judgment, and his words were wise,
    And what to me was burden without end,
    To him seemed easy, So I laid the crown
    Upon his head to cast away my sorrow.

    {Druid} What would you, king of the proud Red Branch kings?

    {Fergus} A king and proud! and that is my despair.
    I feast amid my people on the hill,
    And pace the woods, and drive my chariot-wheels
    In the white border of the murmuring sea;
    And still I feel the crown upon my head.

    {Druid} What would you, Fergus?

    {Fergus} Be no more a king
    But learn the dreaming wisdom that is yours.

    {Druid} Look on my thin grey hair and hollow cheeks
    And on these hands that may not lift the sword,
    This body trembling like a wind-blown reed.
    No woman's loved me, no man sought my help.

    {Fergus} A king is but a foolish labourer
    Who wastes his blood to be another's dream.

    {Druid} Take, if you must, this little bag of dreams;
    Unloose the cord, and they will wrap you round.

    {Fergus} I See my life go drifting like a river
    From change to change; I have been many things --
    A green drop in the surge, a gleam of light
    Upon a sword, a fir-tree on a hill,
    An old slave grinding at a heavy quern,
    A king sitting upon a chair of gold --
    And all these things were wonderful and great;
    But now I have grown nothing, knowing all.
    Ah! Druid, Druid, how great webs of sorrow
    Lay hidden in the small slate-coloured thing!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)10:06 No.2016992
    Ich irre umher, jung noch, mit silbernem Bogen,
    locke die erblühten Kirschen aus dem Hinterhalt,
    doch hinter den Bergen schon ahn’ ich die Heimat,
    dort werde ich das Lachen begraben,
    dort, unter den Pappeln.

    Kalt ist der Frühlingsabend, auch hier,
    als würde die Donau im Tal versteckt fließen.
    Wo aber die Wolken dem Arno bis auf den Grund sinken,
    und hart flackert das Grüne empor,
    sehe ich, über den Horizont führt eine Brücke
    in die schwere Finsternis der Fruška Gora.

    Statt mich zu verbeugen vor dem toskanischen Mond,
    der im Fluss glänzt, eine weiße Lilie,
    weiß ich, dass ich in diesem Frühling schwer erkranke,
    und ich sehe eine schlanke Gestalt, die sich,
    treu und traurig,
    mit ihrem Schatten und ihrem Schritt
    ins Wasser stürzt, welches läutet,
    in den klaren Himmel hinein.

    Und ahnend,
    dass sich die Seele bald trübt,
    lebe ich verwirrt
    an diesen Flüssen, den taubenhaft-grauen.

    Lange führte ich mit mir
    diesen krummen Schatten,
    und hätte ich es gewollt, auf diesem Berg,
    hätte ich kennen gelernt den Wein, die Nacht, das Gelage
    und den Bach, der jetzt an unser Statt murmelt.

    Und so traure ich nicht.
    Krankheit hat meine Augen getrübt.
    Und so, frei von Unkeuschheit,
    färbt bittere Fäulnis meine Lippen rot.

    Ich irre umher, jung noch, mit silbernem Bogen,
    locke die erblühten Kirschen aus dem Hinterhalt,
    doch hinter den Bergen schon ahn’ ich die Heimat,
    dort werde ich das Lachen begraben,
    dort, hinter den Pappeln.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)10:27 No.2017027
    Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me
    I’m not sleepy and there is no place I’m going to
    Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me
    In the jingle jangle morning I’ll come followin’ you

    Though I know that evenin’s empire has returned into sand
    Vanished from my hand
    Left me blindly here to stand but still not sleeping
    My weariness amazes me, I’m branded on my feet
    I have no one to meet
    And the ancient empty street’s too dead for dreaming

    Take me on a trip upon your magic swirlin’ ship
    My senses have been stripped, my hands can’t feel to grip
    My toes too numb to step
    Wait only for my boot heels to be wanderin’
    I’m ready to go anywhere, I’m ready for to fade
    Into my own parade, cast your dancing spell my way
    I promise to go under it

    Though you might hear laughin’, spinnin’, swingin’ madly across the sun
    It’s not aimed at anyone, it’s just escapin’ on the run
    And but for the sky there are no fences facin’
    And if you hear vague traces of skippin’ reels of rhyme
    To your tambourine in time, it’s just a ragged clown behind
    I wouldn’t pay it any mind
    It’s just a shadow you’re seein’ that he’s chasing

    Then take me disappearin’ through the smoke rings of my mind
    Down the foggy ruins of time, far past the frozen leaves
    The haunted, frightened trees, out to the windy beach
    Far from the twisted reach of crazy sorrow
    Yes, to dance beneath the diamond sky with one hand waving free
    Silhouetted by the sea, circled by the circus sands
    With all memory and fate driven deep beneath the waves
    Let me forget about today until tomorrow

    Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me
    I’m not sleepy and there is no place I’m going to
    Hey! Mr. Tambourine Man, play a song for me
    In the jingle jangle morning I’ll come followin’ you
    >> Behemoth !!Twl3DmqEY/B 08/17/11(Wed)10:37 No.2017044
    They fuck you up, your mum and dad.
    They may not mean to, but they do.
    They fill you with the faults they had
    And add some extra, just for you.

    But they were fucked up in their turn
    By fools in old-style hats and coats,
    Who half the time were soppy-stern
    And half at one another's throats.

    Man hands on misery to man.
    It deepens like a coastal shelf.
    Get out as early as you can,
    And don't have any kids yourself.
    >> Arseny Tarkovsky Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)10:40 No.2017052
    Now summer is gone.
    And might never have been.
    In the sunshine it’s warm.
    But there has to be more.

    It all came to pass,
    All fell into my hands
    Like a five-petalled leaf,
    But there has to be more.

    Nothing evil was lost,
    Nothing good was in vain,
    All ablaze with clear light
    But there has to be more.

    Life gathered me up
    Safe under its wing,
    My luck always held,
    But there has to be more.

    Not a leaf was burnt up
    Not a twig ever snapped …
    Clean as glass is the day,
    But there has to be more.
    >> Byzantium by Yeats Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)10:42 No.2017056
    The unpurged images of day recede;
    The Emperor's drunken soldiery are abed;
    Night resonance recedes, night walkers' song
    After great cathedral gong;
    A starlit or a moonlit dome disdains
    All that man is,
    All mere complexities,
    The fury and the mire of human veins.

    Before me floats an image, man or shade,
    Shade more than man, more image than a shade;
    For Hades' bobbin bound in mummy-cloth
    May unwind the winding path;
    A mouth that has no moisture and no breath
    Breathless mouths may summon;
    I hail the superhuman;
    I call it death-in-life and life-in-death.

    Miracle, bird or golden handiwork,
    More miracle than bird or handiwork,
    Planted on the star-lit golden bough,
    Can like the cocks of Hades crow,
    Or, by the moon embittered, scorn aloud
    In glory of changeless metal
    Common bird or petal
    And all complexities of mire or blood.

    At midnight on the Emperor's pavement flit
    Flames that no faggot feeds, nor steel has lit,
    Nor storm disturbs, flames begotten of flame,
    Where blood-begotten spirits come
    And all complexities of fury leave,
    Dying into a dance,
    An agony of trance,
    An agony of flame that cannot singe a sleeve.

    Astraddle on the dolphin's mire and blood,
    Spirit after Spirit! The smithies break the flood.
    The golden smithies of the Emperor!
    Marbles of the dancing floor
    Break bitter furies of complexity,
    Those images that yet
    Fresh images beget,
    That dolphin-torn, that gong-tormented sea.

    See also: its more famous half-brother, 'Sailing to Byzantium' for another take on the same ideas
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:01 No.2017092
         File1313593314.jpg-(18 KB, 276x400, sassoon.jpg)
    18 KB
    ‘Good-morning; good-morning!’ the General said
    When we met him last week on our way to the line.
    Now the soldiers he smiled at are most of ’em dead,
    And we’re cursing his staff for incompetent swine.
    ‘He’s a cheery old card,’ grunted Harry to Jack
    As they slogged up to Arras with rifle and pack.

    But he did for them both by his plan of attack.
    >> Augeries of Innocence - William Blake Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:16 No.2017118
    To see a world in a grain of sand,
    And a heaven in a wild flower,
    Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
    And eternity in an hour.

    A robin redbreast in a cage
    Puts all heaven in a rage.

    A dove-house fill'd with doves and pigeons
    Shudders hell thro' all its regions.
    A dog starv'd at his master's gate
    Predicts the ruin of the state.

    (...)
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:22 No.2017131
    >>2016131

    I love you /lit/.
    >> Mirror Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:26 No.2017147
    I am silver and exact. I have no preconceptions.
    Whatever I see, I swallow immediately.
    Just as it is, unmisted by love or dislike
    I am not cruel, only truthful –
    The eye of a little god, four-cornered.
    Most of the time I meditate on the opposite wall.
    It is pink, with speckles. I have looked at it so long
    I think it is a part of my heart. But it flickers.
    Faces and darkness separate us over and over.

    Now I am a lake. A woman bends over me.
    Searching my reaches for what she really is.
    Then she turns to those liars, the candles or the moon.
    I see her back, and reflect it faithfully
    She rewards me with tears and an agitation of hands.
    I am important to her. She comes and goes.
    Each morning it is her face that replaces the darkness.
    In me she has drowned a young girl, and in me an old woman
    Rises toward her day after day, like a terrible fish.
    >> Sherlock Holmes Guy 08/17/11(Wed)11:34 No.2017170
    >>2016382
    Aw, thanks!
    ---

    A Blockhead
    by Amy Lowell

    Before me lies a mass of shapeless days,
    Unseparated atoms, and I must
    Sort them apart and live them. Sifted dust
    Covers the formless heap. Reprieves, delays,
    There are none, ever. As a monk who prays
    The sliding beads asunder, so I thrust
    Each tasteless particle aside, and just
    Begin again the task which never stays.
    And I have known a glory of great suns,
    When days flashed by, pulsing with joy and fire!
    Drunk bubbled wine in goblets of desire,
    And felt the whipped blood laughing as it runs!
    Spilt is that liquor, my too hasty hand
    Threw down the cup, and did not understand.
    >> Sherlock Holmes Guy 08/17/11(Wed)11:36 No.2017172
         File1313595382.jpg-(60 KB, 540x540, catfive.jpg)
    60 KB
    >>2017147
    haha! i have that one written down in my notebook right next to "A Blockhead"
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:37 No.2017182
    >>2017044
    High Windows
    By Philip Larkin

    When I see a couple of kids
    And guess he’s fucking her and she’s
    Taking pills or wearing a diaphragm,
    I know this is paradise

    Everyone old has dreamed of all their lives—
    Bonds and gestures pushed to one side
    Like an outdated combine harvester,
    And everyone young going down the long slide

    To happiness, endlessly. I wonder if
    Anyone looked at me, forty years back,
    And thought, That’ll be the life;
    No God any more, or sweating in the dark

    About hell and that, or having to hide
    What you think of the priest. He
    And his lot will all go down the long slide
    Like free bloody birds. And immediately

    Rather than words comes the thought of high windows:
    The sun-comprehending glass,
    And beyond it, the deep blue air, that shows
    Nothing, and is nowhere, and is endless.
    >> Dover Beach Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:48 No.2017205
    The sea is calm to-night.
    The tide is full, the moon lies fair
    Upon the straits;--on the French coast the light
    Gleams and is gone; the cliffs of England stand,
    Glimmering and vast, out in the tranquil bay.
    Come to the window, sweet is the night-air!
    Only, from the long line of spray
    Where the sea meets the moon-blanch'd land,
    Listen! you hear the grating roar
    Of pebbles which the waves draw back, and fling,
    At their return, up the high strand,
    Begin, and cease, and then again begin,
    With tremulous cadence slow, and bring
    The eternal note of sadness in.

    Sophocles long ago
    Heard it on the Aegean, and it brought
    Into his mind the turbid ebb and flow
    Of human misery; we
    Find also in the sound a thought,
    Hearing it by this distant northern sea.

    The Sea of Faith
    Was once, too, at the full, and round earth's shore
    Lay like the folds of a bright girdle furl'd.
    But now I only hear
    Its melancholy, long, withdrawing roar,
    Retreating, to the breath
    Of the night-wind, down the vast edges drear
    And naked shingles of the world.

    Ah, love, let us be true
    To one another! for the world, which seems
    To lie before us like a land of dreams,
    So various, so beautiful, so new,
    Hath really neither joy, nor love, nor light,
    Nor certitude, nor peace, nor help for pain;
    And we are here as on a darkling plain
    Swept with confused alarms of struggle and flight,
    Where ignorant armies clash by night.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:49 No.2017208
    Gyllenlakk, før du din glans har tapt,
    da er jeg det hvorav alt er skapt;
    ja, før du mister din krones gull,
    da er jeg muld.

    Idet jeg roper; med vinduet opp!
    mitt siste blikk får din gyllentopp.
    Min sjel deg kysser idet forbi
    den flyver fri.

    To ganger jeg kysser din søte munn.
    Ditt er det første med rettens grunn.
    Det annet give du - kjære, husk! -
    min rosenbusk!

    Utsprungen får jeg den ei å se;
    ti bring min hilsen når det vil skje;
    og si jeg ønsker at på min grav
    den blomstrer av.

    Ja, si jeg ønsker at på mitt bryst
    den rose lå du fra meg har kyst;
    og, gyllenlakk, vær i dødens hus
    dens brudebluss!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)11:50 No.2017209
    >>2017172
    Poemmind
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)12:54 No.2017281
    A man walked out of his house
    with a bag and a walking stick
    And to a distant path,
    and to a distant path,
    set off on foot.

    He walked straight and true,
    and straight and true he looked ahead,
    Not sleeping, not drinking,
    not drinking, not sleeping,
    not sleeping, not drinking, not eating.

    And then one morning at dawn
    He entered a dark forest.
    And since that day,
    and since that day,
    and since that day he's been gone.

    If you hear something about him,
    then at once, then at once,
    come and tell us!

    -Из дома вышел человек, Daniel Harms, 1937

    not the best translation, it was off the top of my head, but it's still a good poem and pretty creepy when you consider it was written while Stalin was 'disappearing' people. The author himself, who only ever wrote children's poetry like this, was later taken by the Soviets and never heard from again.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)13:09 No.2017297
    >>2017208
    Det er et smukt digt!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)13:20 No.2017311
    DEATH be not proud, though some have called thee
    Mighty and dreadfull, for, thou art not so,
    For, those, whom thou think'st, thou dost overthrow,
    Die not, poore death, nor yet canst thou kill me.
    From rest and sleepe, which but thy pictures bee,
    Much pleasure, then from thee, much more must flow,
    And soonest our best men with thee doe goe,
    Rest of their bones, and soules deliverie.
    Thou art slave to Fate, Chance, kings, and desperate men,
    And dost with poyson, warre, and sicknesse dwell,
    And poppie, or charmes can make us sleepe as well,
    And better then thy stroake; why swell'st thou then;
    One short sleepe past, wee wake eternally,
    And death shall be no more; death, thou shalt die.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)14:18 No.2017438
         File1313605114.jpg-(307 KB, 802x540, 1302909469406.jpg)
    307 KB
    e.e. cummings

    since feeling is first
    who pays any attention
    to the syntax of things
    will never wholly kiss you;
    wholly to be a fool
    while Spring is in the world

    my blood approves,
    and kisses are a better fate
    than wisdom
    lady i swear by all flowers. Don't cry
    —the best gesture of my brain is less than
    your eyelids' flutter which says

    we are for each other: then
    laugh, leaning back in my arms
    for life's not a paragraph

    And death i think is no parenthesis
    >> Deep&Edgy !pSkjEcB9sQ 08/17/11(Wed)14:40 No.2017471
    I asked if i got sick and died, would you
    With my black funeral go, walking too,
    If you'd stand close to hear them talk or pray
    While I'm let down in that steep bank of clay.

    And, No, you said, for if you saw a crew
    Of living idiots pressing round that new
    Oak coffin - they alive, I dead beneath
    That board - you'd rave and rend them with your teeth.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)16:11 No.2017596
    When I cannot look at your face
    I look at your feet.
    Your feet of arched bone,
    your hard little feet.
    I know that they support you,
    and that your sweet weight
    rises upon them.
    Your waist and your breasts,
    the doubled purple
    of your nipples,
    the sockets of your eyes
    that have just flown away,
    your wide fruit mouth,
    your red tresses,
    my little tower.
    But I love your feet
    only because they walked
    upon the earth and upon
    the wind and upon the waters,
    until they found me.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)17:44 No.2017737
    >>2017297
    Ett av de beste!
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)17:47 No.2017743
    There was a man called Dave
    Who kept a dead whore in a cave
    He said "I admit
    I am a bit of a shit
    But think of the money I save".
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)17:52 No.2017751
    I want to sleep the sleep of the apples,
    I want to get far away from the busyness of the cemeteries.
    I want to sleep the sleep of that child
    who longed to cut his heart open far out at sea.

    I don't want them to tell me again how the corpse keeps all its blood,
    how the decaying mouth goes on begging for water.
    I'd rather not hear about the torture sessions the grass arranges for
    nor about how the moon does all its work before dawn
    with its snakelike nose.

    I want to sleep for half a second,
    a second, a minute, a century,
    but I want everyone to know that I am still alive,
    that I have a golden manger inside my lips,
    that I am the little friend of the west wind,
    that I am the elephantine shadow of my own tears.

    When it's dawn just throw some sort of cloth over me
    because I know dawn will toss fistfuls of ants at me,
    and pour a little hard water over my shoes
    so that the scorpion claws of the dawn will slip off.

    Because I want to sleep the sleep of the apples,
    and learn a mournful song that will clean all earth away from me,
    because I want to live with that shadowy child
    who longed to cut his heart open far out at sea.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)18:02 No.2017765
    Emily Dickinson - 561
    >> I heard a Fly Buzz, Emily Dickenson Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)18:05 No.2017769
    I heard a Fly buzz – when I died –
    The Stillness in the Room
    Was like the Stillness in the Air –
    Between the Heaves of Storm –

    The Eyes around – had wrung them dry –
    And Breaths were gathering firm
    For that last Onset – when the King
    Be witnessed – in the Room –

    I willed my Keepsakes – Signed away
    What portions of me be
    Assignable – and then it was
    There interposed a Fly –

    With Blue – uncertain stumbling Buzz –
    Between the light – and me –
    And then the Windows failed – and then
    I could not see to see –
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)18:18 No.2017781
    There was a man in Peru who dreamt he was eating his shoe
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)18:21 No.2017783
    To get the last poems of Yeats,
    One needn't mug up on dates.
    All one requires
    Is a knowledge of gyres,
    And the sort of persons he hates.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)18:21 No.2017784
    As the poets have mournfully sung,
    Death takes the innocent young,
    The rolling-in-money,
    The screamingly-funny,
    And those who are very well-hung.
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)20:05 No.2017918
    Some say the world will end in fire
    Some say in ice
    From what I’ve tasted of desire
    I hold with those who favour fire
    But if it had to perish twice
    I think I know enough of hate
    To say that for destruction ice
    Is just as great
    And would suffice
    >> Anonymous 08/17/11(Wed)21:58 No.2018137
    >>2017596
    That's a beautiful way of saying
    honey, don't freak out, but I really should tell you, I kind of have a... thing for... for feet.

    >uncle dies of cancer
    >captcha reads 'tumor'
    Thanks for your sensitivity, captcha
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)00:29 No.2018410
    >>2016011
    Just ignore them and keep writing.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)00:34 No.2018418
    I will put Chaos into fourteen lines
    And keep him there; and let him thence escape
    If he be lucky; let him twist, and ape
    Flood, fire, and demon --- his adroit designs
    Will strain to nothing in the strict confines
    Of this sweet order, where, in pious rape,
    I hold his essence and amorphous shape,
    Till he with Order mingles and combines.
    Past are the hours, the years of our duress,
    His arrogance, our awful servitude:
    I have him. He is nothing more nor less
    Than something simple not yet understood;
    I shall not even force him to confess;
    Or answer. I will only make him good.

    Edna St. Vincent Millay
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)00:40 No.2018432
    Bavarian Gentians
    Not every man has gentians in his house
    in soft September, at slow, sad Michaelmas.

    Bavarian gentians, big and dark, only dark
    darkening the daytime, torch-like, with the smoking blueness of Pluto's
    gloom,
    ribbed and torch-like, with their blaze of darkness spread blue
    down flattening into points, flattened under the sweep of white day
    torch-flower of the blue-smoking darkness, Pluto's dark-blue daze,
    black lamps from the halls of Dis, burning dark blue,
    giving off darkness, blue darkness, as Demeter's pale lamps give off
    light,
    lead me then, lead the way.

    Reach me a gentian, give me a torch!
    let me guide myself with the blue, forked torch of this flower
    down the darker and darker stairs, where blue is darkened on blueness
    even where Persephone goes, just now, from the frosted September
    to the sightless realm where darkness is awake upon the dark
    and Persephone herself is but a voice
    or a darkness invisible enfolded in the deeper dark
    of the arms Plutonic, and pierced with the passion of dense gloom,
    among the splendor of torches of darkness, shedding darkness on
    the lost bride and her groom.

    D H Lawrence
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)01:48 No.2018572
    >>2016992
    >>2016992
    Sauce please
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)01:56 No.2018583
    In a town named Joliet
    A man sat upon a toliet
    His ass gaping wide
    He felt something slipping inside
    His heart was aflutter
    Blood he began to sputter
    He fell over dead
    A snake crawled out of his head
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)02:26 No.2018626
    http://glenavalon.com/peopleyes.html
    >> "Бессонница. Гомер. Тугие паруса." by Osip Mandelstam Franz Liszt !!ixFboNvY7Y1 08/18/11(Thu)02:35 No.2018634
    Бессонница. Гомер. Тугие паруса.
    Я список кораблей прочел до середины:
    Сей длинный выводок, сей поезд журавлиный,
    Что над Элладою когда-то поднялся.
    Как журавлиный клин в чужие рубежи—
    На головах царей божественная пена—
    Куда плывете вы? Когда бы не Елена,
    Что Троя вам одна, ахейские мужи?

    И море, и Гомер — всё движется любовью.
    Кого же слушать мне? И вот Гомер молчит,
    И море черное, витийствуя, шумит
    И с тяжким грохотом подходит к изголовью.
    >> Franz Liszt !!ixFboNvY7Y1 08/18/11(Thu)02:36 No.2018635
    >>2018634
    translation:

    Insomnia... Homer... taut sails.
    To midpoint have I read the catalog of ships:
    That long, that drawn-out brood, those cranes, a crane procession
    That over Hellas rose how many years ago,
    Cranes like a wedge of cranes aimed at an alien shore—
    A godly foam spread out upon the heads of kings—
    Where are you sailing to? If Helen were not there,
    What would Troy be to you, mere Troy, Achaean men?

    Both Homer and the sea—everything moves by love.
    Who shall I listen to? Homer is silent now,
    And a black sea, a noisy orator, resounds,
    And with a grinding crash comes up to the bed's head.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)04:48 No.2018795
    I am desolate in dimension
    circling the sky
    like a rainy bird,

    wet from toe to crown
    wet from bill to wing.

    I feel like a drowned king
    at the pomegranate circus.

    I vowed last year
    that I wouldn’t go again
    but here I sit in my usual seat,
    dripping and clapping

    as the pomegranates go by
    in their metallic costumes.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)04:52 No.2018801
    Lyn Lifshin is the only female poet I have ever enjoyed. Actually, she's the only female-perspective in any sort of literature that I find palatable.


    Lace grows in her eyes like
    fat wedding,
    she is pretty, has been baking

    bisquits of linen to stuff into his mouth
    all her life,

    waiting for him. The hallways
    under her skin are thick with dreamchildren.

    Who he is hardly matters, her rooms
    stay for him,

    her body crying to be taken
    with rings and furniture, tight behind doors

    in a wave of green breath and wild rhythm,
    in a bed of
    lost birds and feathers,

    smiling, dying
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)17:21 No.2019819
    MOAR
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)17:28 No.2019830
    These three angels used to be attorneys
    It is such a serious thing to me
    Oh, how i search through the memories
    Such an experience for me
    Silence creating bold letters
    Like not and better
    [ Find more Lyrics on http://mp3lyrics.org/PRw8 ]
    These three devils used to be apologies
    These three angels used to be monuments
    I tried to find that
    feeling from that letter
    For my consistencies
    It was such a painful thing to see
    When the shadows didnt bend
    Like now and then
    These three devils used to be apostrophes
    So I destroyed a monument
    So what

    From a song, but it's read as a poem in the song. It's one of the few poems that I've actually enjoyed in my life, with the exception of a Robert Browning poem that is to long for this.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)17:30 No.2019835
    >>2019830
    whoops, I didn't notice that ad in there, sorry about that

    And yes I know grim dark heart ache bull shit, but I thought it was interesting.
    >> God, give us men! JamesBond !!JAU/DZkp95n 08/18/11(Thu)17:45 No.2019860
    GOD, give us men! A time like this demands
    Strong minds, great hearts, true faith and ready hands;
    Men whom the lust of office does not kill;
    Men whom the spoils of office can not buy;
    Men who possess opinions and a will;
    Men who have honor; men who will not lie;
    Men who can stand before a demagogue
    And damn his treacherous flatteries without winking!
    Tall men, sun-crowned, who live above the fog
    In public duty, and in private thinking;
    For while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds,
    Their large professions and their little deeds,
    Mingle in selfish strife, lo! Freedom weeps,
    Wrong rules the land and waiting Justice sleeps.

    --Josiah Gilbert Holland
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)17:52 No.2019871
    >>2019860
    "For while the rabble, with their thumb-worn creeds,
    Their large professions and their little deeds,"

    What does the first line mean?
    >> JamesBond !!JAU/DZkp95n 08/18/11(Thu)18:02 No.2019892
    >>2019871
    The two lines are connected:

    They mean," while the rabble with their moldy beliefs professes grandiose schemes but does little in reality".
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)18:03 No.2019901
    >>2016045
    this is absolute genius
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)18:13 No.2019911
    INCOMING:

    I saw the best minds of my generation destroyed by
    madness, starving hysterical naked,
    dragging themselves through the negro streets at dawn
    looking for an angry fix,
    angelheaded hipsters burning for the ancient heavenly
    connection to the starry dynamo in the machinery of night,
    who poverty and tatters and hollow-eyed and high sat
    up smoking in the supernatural darkness of
    cold-water flats floating across the tops of cities
    contemplating jazz,
    who bared their brains to Heaven under the El and
    saw Mohammedan angels staggering on tenement roofs illuminated,
    who passed through universities with radiant cool eyes
    hallucinating Arkansas and Blake-light tragedy
    among the scholars of war,
    who were expelled from the academies for crazy &
    publishing obscene odes on the windows of the skull,
    who cowered in unshaven rooms in underwear,
    burning their money in wastebaskets and listening
    to the Terror through the wall,
    who got busted in their pubic beards returning through
    Laredo with a belt of marijuana for New York,
    who ate fire in paint hotels or drank turpentine in
    Paradise Alley, death, or purgatoried their
    torsos night after night
    with dreams, with drugs, with waking nightmares,
    alcohol and cock and endless balls,
    incomparable blind; streets of shuddering cloud and
    lightning in the mind leaping toward poles of Canada & Paterson,
    illuminating all the motionless world of Time between,
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)18:14 No.2019913
    >>2019871

    The actual sentence is: "while the rabble mingle, freedom weeps"
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)18:15 No.2019917
    my favorite of Anne Sexton
    and it makes me RANDY as a pair of nude legs

    On the southwest side of Capri
    we found a little unknown grotto
    where no people were and we
    entered it completely
    and let our bodies lose all
    their loneliness.

    All the fish in us
    had escaped for a minute.
    The real fish did not mind.
    We did not disturb their personal life.
    We calmly trailed over them
    and under them, shedding
    air bubbles, little white
    balloons that drifted up
    into the sun by the boat
    where the Italian boatman slept
    with his hat over his face.

    Water so clear you could
    read a book through it.
    Water so buoyant you could
    float on your elbow.
    I lay on it as on a divan.
    I lay on it just like
    Matisse's Red Odalisque.
    Water was my strange flower,
    one must picture a woman
    without a toga or a scarf
    on a couch as deep as a tomb.

    The walls of that grotto
    were everycolor blue and
    you said, "Look! Your eyes
    are seacolor. Look! Your eyes
    are skycolor." And my eyes
    shut down as if they were
    suddenly ashamed.
    >> JamesBond !!JAU/DZkp95n 08/18/11(Thu)18:20 No.2019925
    >>2019913
    Yes. But I think he wanted the meaning of the Creeds part/
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)18:21 No.2019928
    This one excites a certain bone
    Anne SEXton: Barefoot
    Loving me with my shows off
    means loving my long brown legs,
    sweet dears, as good as spoons;
    and my feet, those two children
    let out to play naked. Intricate nubs,
    my toes. No longer bound.
    And what's more, see toenails and
    all ten stages, root by root.
    All spirited and wild, this little
    piggy went to market and this little piggy
    stayed. Long brown legs and long brown toes.
    Further up, my darling, the woman
    is calling her secrets, little houses,
    little tongues that tell you.

    There is no one else but us
    in this house on the land spit.
    The sea wears a bell in its navel.
    And I'm your barefoot wench for a
    whole week. Do you care for salami?
    No. You'd rather not have a scotch?
    No. You don't really drink. You do
    drink me. The gulls kill fish,
    crying out like three-year-olds.
    The surf's a narcotic, calling out,
    I am, I am, I am
    all night long. Barefoot,
    I drum up and down your back.
    In the morning I run from door to door
    of the cabin playing chase me.
    Now you grab me by the ankles.
    Now you work your way up the legs
    and come to pierce me at my hunger mark
    >> Only Men JamesBond !!JAU/DZkp95n 08/18/11(Thu)18:25 No.2019935
    What makes a nation's pillars high
    And it's foundations strong?
    What makes it mighty to defy
    The foes that round it throng?
    It is not gold. Its kingdoms grand
    Go down in battle shock;
    Its shafts are laid on sinking sand,
    Not on abiding rock.
    Is it the sword? Ask the red dust
    Of empires passed away;
    The blood has turned their stones to rust,
    Their glory to decay.
    And is it pride? Ah, that bright crown
    Has seemed to nations sweet;
    But God has struck its luster down
    In ashes at his feet.
    Not gold but only men can make
    A people great and strong;
    Men who for truth and honor's sake
    Stand fast and suffer long.
    Brave men who work while others sleep,
    Who dare while others fly...
    They build a nation's pillars deep
    And lift them to the sky.

    --Ralph Waldo Emerson

    This one's a bit longer, but every word is golden.
    >> KOALA !BEAR/B2lgo 08/18/11(Thu)19:05 No.2020002
    when life is quite through with
    and leaves say alas,
    much is to do
    for the swallow,that closes
    a flight in the blue;

    when love's had his tears out,
    perhaps shall pass
    a million years
    (while a bee dozes
    on the poppies,the dears;

    when all's fone and said,and
    under the grass
    lies her head
    by oaks and roses
    deliberated.)
    >> Richard Cory by Edwin Arlington Robinson Behemoth !!Twl3DmqEY/B 08/18/11(Thu)19:11 No.2020008
    Whenever Richard Cory went down town,
    We people on the pavement looked at him:
    He was a gentleman from sole to crown,
    Clean-favoured and imperially slim.

    And he was always quietly arrayed,
    And he was always human when he talked;
    But still he fluttered pulses when he said,
    "Good Morning!" and he glittered when he walked.

    And he was rich, yes, richer than a king,
    And admirably schooled in every grace:
    In fine -- we thought that he was everything
    To make us wish that we were in his place.

    So on we worked and waited for the light,
    And went without the meat and cursed the bread,
    And Richard Cory, one calm summer night,
    Went home and put a bullet in his head.
    >> Shine, Perishing Republic by Robinson Jeffers Behemoth !!Twl3DmqEY/B 08/18/11(Thu)19:13 No.2020013
    While this America settles in the mould of its vulgarity, heavily thickening
    to empire
    And protest, only a bubble in the molten mass, pops and sighs out, and the
    mass hardens,
    I sadly smiling remember that the flower fades to make fruit, the fruit rots
    to make earth.
    Out of the mother; and through the spring exultances, ripeness and deca-
    dence; and home to the mother.

    You making haste haste on decay: not blameworthy; life is good, be it stub-
    bornly long or suddenly
    A mortal splendor: meteors are not needed less than mountains:
    shine, perishing republic.
    But for my children, I would have them keep their distance from the thick-
    ening center; corruption
    Never has been compulsory, when the cities lie at the monster's feet there
    are left the mountains.
    And boys, be in nothing so moderate as in love of man, a clever servant,
    insufferable master.
    There is the trap that catches noblest spirits, that caught--they say--
    God, when he walked on earth.
    >> KOALA !BEAR/B2lgo 08/18/11(Thu)19:19 No.2020021
    "next to of course god america i
    love you land of the pilgrims' and so forth oh
    say can you see by the dawn's early my
    country 'tis of centuries come and go
    and are no more what of it we should worry
    in every language even deafanddumb
    thy sons acclaim your glorious name by gorry
    by jingo by gee by gosh by gum
    why talk of beauty what could be more beat-
    iful than these heroic happy dead
    who rushed like lions to the roaring slaughter
    they did not stop to think they died instead
    then shall the voice of liberty be mute?"

    He spoke. And drank rapidly a glass of water
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)19:26 No.2020035
    Lines Written on the Eve of His Execution
    Sir Walter Raleigh

    Even such is Time, which takes in trust
    Our youth, our joys, and all we have,
    And pays us but with age and dust;
    Which in the dark and silent grave,
    When we have wandered all our ways,
    Shuts up the story of our days!
    But from this earth, this grave, this dust,
    My God shall raise me up, I trust.

    >Boy, I done sure sent one o' this to Robby Lee before I kicked'im in the drawers at Appomattox, hyeck hyeck hyeck.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:27 No.2020170
    It's four in the morning, the end of December
    I'm writing you now just to see if you're better
    New York is cold, but I like where I'm living
    There's music on Clinton Street all through the evening.

    I hear that you're building your little house deep in the desert
    You're living for nothing now, I hope you're keeping some kind of record.

    Yes, and Jane came by with a lock of your hair
    She said that you gave it to her
    That night that you planned to go clear
    Did you ever go clear?

    Ah, the last time we saw you you looked so much older
    Your famous blue raincoat was torn at the shoulder
    You'd been to the station to meet every train
    And you came home without Lili Marlene

    And you treated my woman to a flake of your life
    And when she came back she was nobody's wife.

    Well I see you there with the rose in your teeth
    One more thin gypsy thief
    Well I see Jane's awake --
    She sends her regards.

    And what can I tell you my brother, my killer
    What can I possibly say?
    I guess that I miss you, I guess I forgive you
    I'm glad you stood in my way.

    If you ever come by here, for Jane or for me
    Your enemy is sleeping, and his woman is free.

    Yes, and thanks, for the trouble you took from her eyes
    I thought it was there for good so I never tried.

    And Jane came by with a lock of your hair
    She said that you gave it to her
    That night that you planned to go clear
    Sincerely, L. Cohen
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:34 No.2020176
         File1313714040.jpg-(30 KB, 281x375, Lord_Byron.jpg)
    30 KB
    Titan! to whose immortal eyes
    The sufferings of mortality,
    Seen in their sad reality,
    Were not as things that gods despise;
    What was thy pity's recompense?
    A silent suffering, and intense;
    The rock, the vulture, and the chain,
    All that the proud can feel of pain,
    The agony they do not show,
    The suffocating sense of woe,
    Which speaks but in its loneliness,
    And then is jealous lest the sky
    Should have a listener, nor will sigh
    Until its voice is echoless.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:34 No.2020178
    >>2020176

    Titan! to thee the strife was given
    Between the suffering and the will,
    Which torture where they cannot kill;
    And the inexorable Heaven,
    And the deaf tyranny of Fate,
    The ruling principle of Hate,
    Which for its pleasure doth create
    The things it may annihilate,
    Refus'd thee even the boon to die:
    The wretched gift Eternity
    Was thine—and thou hast borne it well.
    All that the Thunderer wrung from thee
    Was but the menace which flung back
    On him the torments of thy rack;
    The fate thou didst so well foresee,
    But would not to appease him tell;
    And in thy Silence was his Sentence,
    And in his Soul a vain repentance,
    And evil dread so ill dissembled,
    That in his hand the lightnings trembled.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:35 No.2020179
    >>2020178

    Thy Godlike crime was to be kind,
    To render with thy precepts less
    The sum of human wretchedness,
    And strengthen Man with his own mind;
    But baffled as thou wert from high,
    Still in thy patient energy,
    In the endurance, and repulse
    Of thine impenetrable Spirit,
    Which Earth and Heaven could not convulse,
    A mighty lesson we inherit:
    Thou art a symbol and a sign
    To Mortals of their fate and force;
    Like thee, Man is in part divine,
    A troubled stream from a pure source;
    And Man in portions can foresee
    His own funereal destiny;
    His wretchedness, and his resistance,
    And his sad unallied existence:
    To which his Spirit may oppose
    Itself—and equal to all woes,
    And a firm will, and a deep sense,
    Which even in torture can descry
    Its own concenter'd recompense,
    Triumphant where it dares defy,
    And making Death a Victory.
    >> Frederico Garcia Lorca - City that Never Sleeps Dr. Seussicide (SLAF) 08/18/11(Thu)20:38 No.2020185
    In the sky there is nobody asleep. Nobody, nobody.
    Nobody is asleep.
    The creatures of the moon sniff and prowl about their cabins.
    The living iguanas will come and bite the men who do not dream,
    and the man who rushes out with his spirit broken will meet on the
    street corner
    the unbelievable alligator quiet beneath the tender protest of the
    stars.

    Nobody is asleep on earth. Nobody, nobody.
    Nobody is asleep.
    In a graveyard far off there is a corpse
    who has moaned for three years
    because of a dry countryside on his knee;
    and that boy they buried this morning cried so much
    it was necessary to call out the dogs to keep him quiet.

    Life is not a dream. Careful! Careful! Careful!
    We fall down the stairs in order to eat the moist earth
    or we climb to the knife edge of the snow with the voices of the dead
    dahlias.
    But forgetfulness does not exist, dreams do not exist;
    flesh exists. Kisses tie our mouths
    in a thicket of new veins,
    and whoever his pain pains will feel that pain forever
    and whoever is afraid of death will carry it on his shoulders.

    One day
    the horses will live in the saloons
    and the enraged ants
    will throw themselves on the yellow skies that take refuge in the
    eyes of cows.
    >> part deuce Dr. Seussicide (SLAF) 08/18/11(Thu)20:39 No.2020186
    >>2020185

    Another day
    we will watch the preserved butterflies rise from the dead
    and still walking through a country of gray sponges and silent boats
    we will watch our ring flash and roses spring from our tongue.
    Careful! Be careful! Be careful!
    The men who still have marks of the claw and the thunderstorm,
    and that boy who cries because he has never heard of the invention
    of the bridge,
    or that dead man who possesses now only his head and a shoe,
    we must carry them to the wall where the iguanas and the snakes
    are waiting,
    where the bear's teeth are waiting,
    where the mummified hand of the boy is waiting,
    and the hair of the camel stands on end with a violent blue shudder.

    Nobody is sleeping in the sky. Nobody, nobody.
    Nobody is sleeping.
    If someone does close his eyes,
    a whip, boys, a whip!
    Let there be a landscape of open eyes
    and bitter wounds on fire.
    No one is sleeping in this world. No one, no one.
    I have said it before.

    No one is sleeping.
    But if someone grows too much moss on his temples during the
    night,
    open the stage trapdoors so he can see in the moonlight
    the lying goblets, and the poison, and the skull of the theaters.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:39 No.2020188
    I have always wanted to fly.
    And to hear the whistle in my wings as I plummet down..
    I want my last breath to sting with the salt in the sea. I want it to hurt.
    I want the breaking of my porous bones to ring.
    And if I should cry, let the ocean swallow me up and never tell a soul.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:41 No.2020191
    My footsteps falling over leaves
    echo lonely through the wood;
    Heard by none, but for the trees,
    I would but wish my footsteps could
    enjoin anothers, passion freed
    to dance beneath the harvest moon --
    to steal the night as deft as thieves
    and with the stars in brief commune.
    >> Anonymous 08/18/11(Thu)20:46 No.2020194
    Anagrammatically special poem. A personal favorite.

    A golden void, overheating entry.
    Hale west, it's here.
    A genuine sly riot, an iron eye's guilt.
    One revering, sequent hoist.
    Height took toll. Her smoke rafted.
    My ether arena — death owes you.
    Indemnify thou, on unified myth.
    Tease any touch. Face toying hours.
    Her sty became fate, a cherished misted inn.
    >> KOALA !BEAR/B2lgo 08/18/11(Thu)20:57 No.2020213
    I must admit it's been a while,
    please remind me of the passage
    in which Eve is asked gently about grief.

    Full title: science in retrospect;
    An after-art in reaching for/Labor of rising via
    the gravity of all outbound trains.

    Breathing is no metric, you've gasped testimonies of this,
    it was every beautified settlement after the bang,
    every implied condensation of dust,
    the things you said plainly in silence.

    I'm researching your heart
    I have a list of every sighting, as far as Moscow,
    sometimes the effigy an afterglow of endangered language,
    sometimes the memory falls like old lights

    In McVeigh's manifesto there is a twist:
    The attraction of particles is really a mirror,
    and everything is actually repulsed by everything else.

    But a girl who looked like you has supposed this,
    'we are the burden of optimists to prove all systems obsolete,
    to observe ourselves and not worry about the accuracy
    of any measurement of the space between bodies'

    There is distance now, this chaos seems aboriginal,
    miracles postdate extinctions and on T.V. voices coalesce
    into some kind of music.

    I've read that there are fires in Siberia that have not been discovered yet,
    this is how your story ends.
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)02:48 No.2020975
    This is a great thread BUMP
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)03:13 No.2021021
    >>2020213
    >>2020213
    FUCK YOU WHAT THE FUCK IS THIS I CAN'T FIND IT ONLINE GOOGLE DOESN'T HAVE IT AND I MUST FUCKING KNOW

    NOW!
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)06:56 No.2021379
    >>2021021
    WHAT THE FUCK IS IT
    YOU TELL ME THAT /lit/
    YOU TELL ME RIGHT NOW
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)07:07 No.2021402
    Factory windows are always broken.
    Somebody's always throwing bricks,
    Somebody's always heaving cinders,
    Playing ugly Yahoo tricks.

    Factory windows are always broken.
    Other windows are let alone.
    No one throws through the chapel-window
    The bitter, snarling, derisive stone.

    Factory windows are always broken.
    Something or other is going wrong.
    Something is rotten--I think, in Denmark.
    End of factory-window song.
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)07:37 No.2021440
    Lady Lazarus by Sylvia Plath
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sxft6nxU3KI
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)08:01 No.2021458
    I walked down
    The cobbled laneways
    And the thousand years ago
    Paths in the dirt
    Through old towns
    On the side of a hill
    And in the Spanish countryside
    Between fields
    Picking blackberries

    The streets
    With the latin murmur
    From one end to the other

    The moon coming out
    From behind a cloud
    Between the rooftops
    And balconies
    Of crumbling gothic buildings
    Facing each other
    A few metres apart
    Kept alive by the yellow streetlight
    On the merchants' annexes
    And the climbing ivy
    On the terrace walls

    The bars
    And galleries
    Dens
    Dense

    With gypsies
    Calling out
    Tears rolling over wrinkled cheeks
    Through weed smoke
    And the taste of cheap whisky
    In my mouth
    To the Virgin Mary

    And the dancers
    Draped
    In the shades of fire

    Their silk
    Pulled over their hips
    To the tiled floor
    Then up again

    Each taking turns
    Stomping
    Calling
    'Ole!'
    'Asa!'

    At a time of night
    Beginning with a one

    All of this
    To the gentle
    Spontaineous
    Strumming and tapping
    Of the tocaor

    And the man
    Howling 'Maria!'
    Thumping a wooden box
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)08:02 No.2021459
    And the circus
    In Valencia
    An absurd parade
    People and animals
    All doing their dance
    For the audience
    Who're hysterical

    Then walking through the city
    White
    Post-modern
    Architecture
    Made it feel
    Energetic but passionless

    Then hours
    Of climbing through mountains
    And hills
    To Mojarca, Guadalest
    Looking out across
    That cliched
    Mediterranean patchwork
    Of fields, castles and the perfect blue sea

    There was a time
    Driving back
    When we all
    For a second or two

    Saw a town
    White, moorish
    But golden in that
    Ray of sunlight
    In a valley
    Near the horizon
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)08:27 No.2021472
    1 The Ospreys Cry

    "Fair, fair," cry the ospreys
    On the island in the river.
    Lovely is this noble lady,
    Fit bride for our lord.

    In patches grows the water mallow;
    To left and right one must seek it.
    Shy was this noble lady;
    Day and night he sought her.

    Sought her and could not get her;
    Day and night he grieved.
    Long thoughts, oh, long unhappy thoughts,
    Now on his back, now tossing on to his side.

    In patches grows the water mallow;
    To left and right one must gather it.
    Shy is this noble lady;
    With with great zither and little we hearten her.

    In patches grows the water mallow;
    To the left and right one must choose it.
    Shy is this noble lady;
    With bells and drums we will gladden her.

    from The Book of Songs. Arthur Waley (Translator)
    >> Anonymous 08/19/11(Fri)10:11 No.2021534
    >>2018572

    Here:

    http://sites.google.com/site/projectgoethe/Home/milos-crnjanski/strazilovo



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