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		 (07-29-2016, 07:52 AM)next Wrote:   (07-29-2016, 04:36 AM)lizziep Wrote:  I thought that you might be waiting out of timidity, and I was trying to encourage you > < The world's in need of empathetic people; consider yourself needed.
 
 
 Now here's a woman to be reckoned with:
 
Are you saying I'm not to be reckoned with?    Joking.
 
Thank you for your kind words >  <   
Always appreciated with me    
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I don't remember if I've posted this before.  I will again anyway. Quote:CHARLES BAUDELAIRE’S GRAVEby Dorothy Porter
 
 How do you bury a poet?
 
 Surely not
 how they buried Baudelaire
 thrown in with his parents
 like an infant death.
 
 It stretches
 to a ghastly irony
 Pasternak’s remark
 that poets should remain
 children.
 
 Do poets really want to trade
 the lingering savour
 of experience
 for guileless eyes?
 
 There’s something
 repulsive
 about an empty fresh
 adult face.
 
 Such baby faces
 can be seen in uniform
 or with a foot
 on a slaughtered tiger.
 
 They can be capable
 of anything
 or a long lullaby
 of nothing.
 
 I want to exhume Baudelaire
 and give him his own
 magnificent mercurial vault.
 
 From one angle
 an arching ebony cat.
 From another
 sneering black marble
 spleen.
 
 No poet
 dead or alive
 should rot
 with their parents.
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		(Don't let this one put you off because of its length. It's worthwhile.)
 The Erotic Philosophers
 
 
 It’s a spring morning; sun pours in the window
 As I sit here drinking coffee, reading Augustine.
 And finding him, as always, newly minted
 From when I first encountered him in school.
 Today I’m overcome with astonishment
 At the way we girls denied all that was mean
 In those revered philosophers we studied;
 Who found us loathsome, loathsomely seductive;
 Irrelevant, at best, to noble discourse
 Among the sex, the only sex that counted.
 Wounded, we pretended not to mind it
 And wore tight sweaters to tease our shy professor.
 
 We sat in autumn sunshine “as the clouds arose
 From slimy desires of the flesh, and from
 Youth’s seething spring.” Thank you, Augustine.
 Attempting to seem blasé, our cheeks on fire,
 It didn’t occur to us to rush from the room.
 Instead we brushed aside “the briars of unclean desire”
 And struggled on through mires of misogyny
 Till we arrived at Kierkegaard, and began to see
 That though Saint A. and Søren had much in common
 Including fear and trembling before women,
 The Saint scared himself, while Søren was scared of us.
 Had we, poor girls, been flattered by their thralldom?
 
 Yes, it was always us, the rejected feminine
 From whom temptation came. It was our flesh
 With its deadly sweetness that led them on.
 Yet how could we not treasure Augustine,
 “Stuck fast in the bird-lime of pleasure”?
 That roomful of adolescent poets manqué
 Assuaged, bemused by music, let the meaning go.
 Swept by those psalmic cadences, we were seduced!
 Some of us tried for a while to be well-trained souls
 And pious seekers, enmeshed in the Saint’s dialectic:
 Responsible for our actions, yet utterly helpless.
 A sensible girl would have barked like a dog before God.
 
 We students, children still, were shocked to learn
 The children these men desired were younger than we!
 Augustine fancied a girl about eleven,
 The age of Adeodatus, Augustine’s son.
 Søren, like Poe, eyed his girl before she was sixteen,
 To impose his will on a malleable child, when
 She was not equipped to withstand or understand him.
 Ah, the Pygmalion instinct! Mold the clay!
 Create the compliant doll that can only obey,
 Expecting to be abandoned, minute by minute.
 It was then I abandoned philosophy,
 A minor loss, although I majored in it.
 
 But we were a group of sunny innocents.
 I don’t believe we knew what evil meant.
 Now I live with a well-trained soul who deals with evil,
 Including error, material or spiritual,
 Easily, like changing a lock on the kitchen door.
 He prays at set times and in chosen places
 (At meals, in church), while I
 Pray without thinking how or when to pray,
 In a low mumble, several times a day,
 Like running a continuous low fever;
 The sexual impulse for the most part being over.
 Believing I believe. Not banking on it ever.
 
 It’s afternoon. I sit here drinking kir
 And reading Kierkegaard: “All sin begins with fear.”
 (True. We lie first from terror of our parents.)
 In, I believe, an oblique crack at Augustine,
 Søren said by denying the erotic
 It was brought to the attention of the world.
 The rainbow curtain rises on the sensual:
 Christians must admit it before they can deny it.
 He reflected on his father’s fierce repression
 Of the sexual, which had bent him out of shape;
 Yet he had to pay obeisance to that power:
 He chose his father when he broke with his Regina.
 
 Søren said by denying the erotic
 It is brought to the attention of the world.
 You must admit it before you can deny it.
 So much for “Repetition”—another theory
 Which some assume evolved from his belief
 He could replay his courtship of Regina
 With a happy ending. Meanwhile she’d wait for him,
 Eternally faithful, eternally seventeen.
 Instead, within two years, the bitch got married.
 In truth, he couldn’t wait till he got rid of her,
 To create from recollection, not from living;
 To use the material, not the material girl.
 
 I sip my kir, thinking of Either/Or,
 Especially Either, starring poor Elvira.
 He must have seen Giovanni a score of times,
 And Søren knew the score.
 He took Regina to the opera only once,
 And as soon as Mozart’s overture was over,
 Kierkegaard stood up and said, “Now we are leaving.
 You have heard the best: the expectation of pleasure.”
 In his interminable aria on the subject
 S.K. insisted the performance was the play.
 Was the overture then the foreplay? Poor Regina
 Should have known she’d be left waiting in the lurch.
 
 Though he chose a disguise in which to rhapsodize,
 It was his voice too: Elvira’s beauty
 Would perish soon; the deflowered quickly fade:
 A night-blooming cereus after Juan’s one-night stand.
 Søren, eyes clouded by romantic mist,
 Portrayed Elvira always sweet sixteen.
 S.K.’s interpretation seems naive.
 He didn’t seem to realize that innocent sopranos
 Who are ready to sing Elvira, don’t exist.
 His diva may have had it off with Leporello
 Just before curtain time, believing it freed her voice
 (So backstage legend has it), and weakened his.
 
 I saw La Stupenda sing Elvira once.
 Her cloak was larger than an army tent.
 Would Giovanni be engulfed when she inhaled?
 Would the boards shiver when she stamped her foot?
 Her voice of course was great. Innocent it was not.
 Søren, long since, would have fallen in a faint.
 When he, or his doppelgänger, wrote
 That best-seller, “The Diary of a Seducer,”
 He showed how little he knew of true Don Juans:
 Those turgid letters, machinations, and excursions,
 Those tedious conversations with dull aunts,
 Those convoluted efforts to get the girl!
 
 Think of the worldly European readers
 Who took Søren seriously, did not see
 His was the cynicism of the timid virgin.
 Once in my youth I knew a real Don Juan
 Or he knew me. He didn’t need to try,
 The characteristic of a true seducer.
 He seems vulnerable, shy; he hardly speaks.
 Somehow, you know he will never speak of you.
 You trust him—and you thrust yourself at him.
 He responds with an almost absentminded grace.
 Even before the consummation he’s looking past you
 For the next bright yearning pretty face.
 
 Relieved at last of anxieties and tensions
 When your terrible efforts to capture him are over,
 You overflow with happy/unhappy languor.
 But S.K’s alter-ego believes the truly terrible
 Is for you to be consoled by the love of another.
 We women, deserted to a woman, have a duty
 To rapidly lose our looks, decline, and die,
 Our only chance of achieving romantic beauty.
 So Augustine was sure, when Monica, his mother,
 Made him put aside his nameless concubine
 She’d get her to a nunnery, and pine.
 He chose his mother when he broke with his beloved.
 
 In Søren’s long replay of his wrecked romance,
 “Guilty/Not Guilty,” he says he must tear himself away
 From earthly love, and suffer to love God.
 Augustine thought better: love, human therefore flawed,
 Is the way to the love of God. To deny this truth
 Is to be “left outside, breathing into the dust,
 Filling the eyes with earth.” We women,
 Outside, breathing dust, are still the Other.
 The evening sun goes down; time to fix dinner.
 “You women have no major philosophers.” We know.
 But we remain philosophic, and say with the Saint,
 “Let me enter my chamber and sing my songs of love.”
 
 ~Carolyn Kizer
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		The Minefield
 He was running with his friend from town to town.
 They were somewhere between Prague and Dresden.
 He was fourteen. His friend was faster
 and knew a shortcut through the fields they could take.
 He said there was lettuce growing in one of them,
 and they hadn't eaten all day. His friend ran a few lengths ahead,
 like a wild rabbit across the grass,
 turned his head, looked back once,
 and his body was scattered across the field.
 
 My father told us this, one night,
 and then continued eating dinner.
 
 He brought them with him—the minefields.
 He carried them underneath his good intentions.
 He gave them to us— in the volume of his anger,
 in the form of a stick, a belt,
 in the bruises we covered up with sleeves,
 In the way he threw anything against the wall,
 a radio, that wasn't even ours,
 a melon, once, opened like a head.
 In the way we still expect, years later and continents away,
 that anything might explode at any time,
 and we would have to run on alone
 with a vision like that
 only seconds behind.
 
 — Diane Thiel
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		This might just be my new favorite.    I'm working on committing it to memory. 
Beach Whispers 
In the night wind astir 
The pale dune grasses sing 
"We are what we always whirr, 
Food for ruminant thought," 
Soft, neither out of tune 
Nor in it as their commotion 
Mingles with the hiss 
Of water falling all over 
Itself to claim the sand. 
Ears open and eyes shut 
We barely understand 
What they could be said to say 
About the neap and spring 
Of tides and even more 
About how to uncover 
The orders of all this: 
The crown of the bright moon, 
The fiefdom of the ocean, 
The serfdom of the shore, 
(Such dark politics) and, 
Nightly feigning his role 
Of deus absconditus, sole 
Absentee landlord of it all, 
Some otherwhere the sun 
Reigns from his distant hall. 
 
~John Hollander
	
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 Theory of Memory  - Louise Glück
 
 Long, long ago, before I was a tormented artist, afflicted with longing yet
 incapable of forming durable attachments, long before this, I was a glorious
 ruler uniting all of a divided country -- so I was told by the fortune-teller
 who examined my palm.  Great things, she said, are ahead of you, or perhaps
 behind you; it is difficult to be sure.  And yet, she added, what is the difference?
 Right now you are a child holding hands with a fortuneteller.  All the
 rest is hypothesis and dream.
 
 
 
 
 The Couple in the Park   - Louise Glück
 
 A man walks alone in the park and beside him a woman walks, also alone.
 How does one know?  It is as though a line exists between them, like a line on a
 playing field.  And yet, in the photograph they might appear a married couple,
 weary of each other and of the many winters they have endured together.
 At another time, they might be strangers about to meet by accident.  She
 drops her book; stooping to pick it up, she touches, by accident, his hand and
 her heart springs open like a child's music box.  And out of the box comes
 a little ballerina made of wood.  I have created this, the man thinks; though
 she can only whirl in place, still she is a dancer of some kind, not simply a
 block of wood.  This must explain the puzzling music coming from the trees.
 
 
 
 
  
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		"Distant mountains approach my heart" that is the bee's knees right there.   (07-29-2016, 07:52 AM)next Wrote:   (07-29-2016, 04:36 AM)lizziep Wrote:  I thought that you might be waiting out of timidity, and I was trying to encourage you > < The world's in need of empathetic people; consider yourself needed.
 
 
 Now here's a woman to be reckoned with:
 
 
 Golden Rice Sheaves   - Zheng Min - Translated from Chinese by poetryeastwest.com
 
 Golden rice stands in sheaves
 in the newly cut autumn field.
 I think of many exhausted mothers,
 I see rugged faces along the road at dusk.
 On the day of harvest, a full moon hangs
 atop the towering trees,
 and in the twilight, distant mountains
 approach my heart.
 Nothing is more quiet than this, a statue,
 shouldering so much weariness –
 you lower your head in thought
 in the autumn field that stretches afar.
 Silence. Silence. History is nothing
 but a small stream flowing under your feet.
 And you stand over there,
 becoming a thought of humanity.
 
 
 
 
 A Glance    - Zheng Min - Translated from Chinese by poetryeastwest.com
 
 —While contemplating Rembrandt's Young girl at a half-open door
 
 What’s beautiful are the two shoulders sinking
 into the shadows locking the chest, rich as an orchard.
 Only the radiant face, a dream suddenly appearing,
 corresponds to the slim fingers that rest on the low
 
 gate. River of time carries away another leaf.
 From her half lowering eyes, sphinxlike, flows out a tranquility
 that dazzles. Her unchangeable calm is facing a limited life
 when in a chance evening she casts a long glance
 at this changing world.
 
 
 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (08-03-2016, 11:56 AM)lizziep Wrote:  The Erotic PhilosophersIf I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am become sounding brass, or a clanging cymbal. And if I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. And if I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and if I give my body to be burned, but have not love, it profiteth me nothing.
 ~Carolyn Kizer
 
Lovely, lovely poem.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Loving against Love
 Entering into the intimate cruelty
 of revising one with two,
 but not with three.
 Taking care of the trunk more than the fruit
 and nesting, if necessary,
 on the fallen trunk
 in its bare root.
 Insisting sometimes on the flower,
 but without the theft of cutting it
 or seizing its perfume.
 
 And when two no longer revise one,
 recapturing the cruelty of loving against love
 and traveling toward zero,
 only toward zero.
 
 -Roberto Juarroz
 translated by Mary Crow
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (08-25-2016, 01:26 AM)RiverNotch Wrote:   (08-03-2016, 11:56 AM)lizziep Wrote:  The Erotic PhilosophersIf I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, but have not love, I am become sounding brass, or a clanging cymbal. And if I have the gift of prophecy, and know all mysteries and all knowledge; and if I have all faith, so as to remove mountains, but have not love, I am nothing. And if I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and if I give my body to be burned, but have not love, it profiteth me nothing.
 ~Carolyn Kizer
 
 Lovely, lovely poem.
 
Oh, yay!!! I'm glad you liked it!        
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (05-07-2015, 10:08 AM)Todd Wrote:  YolaSM, that was a nice one from Bukowski especially how he closed it. Here's my favorite from him. It was one of the ones that starting me reading and writing more poems.
 Dreamlessly
 
 Old, grey-haired waitresses
 in cafes at night
 have given it up,
 and as I walk down sidewalks of
 light and look into windows
 of nursing homes
 I can see that it is no longer
 with them.
 I see people sitting on park benches
 and I can see by the way they
 sit and look
 that it is gone.
 
 I see people driving cars
 and I see by the way
 they drive their cars
 that they neither love nor are
 loved -
 nor do they consider
 sex. It is all forgotten
 like an old movie.
 
 I see people in department stores and
 supermarkets
 walking down aisles
 buying things
 and I can see by the way their clothing
 fits them and by the way they walk
 and by their faces and their eyes
 that they care for nothing
 and that nothing cares
 for them.
 
 I see a hundred people a day
 who have given up
 entirely.
 
 If I go to the racetrack
 or a sporting event
 I can see thousands
 that feel for nothing or
 no one
 and get no feeling
 back.
 
 Everywhere I see those who
 crave nothing but
 food, shelter, and
 clothing; they concentrate
 on that,
 dreamlessly
 
 I do not understand why these people do not
 vanish
 I do not understand why these people do not
 expire
 why the clouds
 do not murder them
 or why the dogs
 do not murder them
 or why the flowers and the children
 do not murder them,
 I do not understand.
 
 I suppose they are murdered
 yet I can’t adjust to the
 fact of them
 because they are so many.
 
 Each day,
 each night,
 there are more of them
 in the subways and
 in the buildings and
 in the parks
 
 they feel no terror
 at not loving
 or at not
 being loved
 
 so many many many
 of my fellow
 
 creatures
 
 --Charles Bukowski
 
GREAT one Todd. Brilliant. My favorite bit is the "I do not understand" stanza.
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		The Dogs at Live Oak Beach, Santa CruzBY ALICIA OSTRIKER
As if there could be a world
 Of absolute innocence
 In which we forget ourselves
 
 The owners throw sticks
 And half-bald tennis balls
 Toward the surf
 And the happy dogs leap after them
 As if catapulted—
 
 Black dogs, tan dogs,
 Tubes of glorious muscle—
 
 Pursuing pleasure
 More than obedience
 They race, skid to a halt in the wet sand,
 Sometimes they'll plunge straight into
 The foaming breakers
 
 Like diving birds, letting the green turbulence
 Toss them, until they snap and sink
 
 Teeth into floating wood
 Then bound back to their owners
 Shining wet, with passionate speed
 For nothing,
 For absolutely nothing but joy.
You may disagree, but there's nothing like a good praise poem to unwind.  Forget the intense search for devices for a minute and just enjoy poetry.
   
Thanks to this Forum  
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I Love Bukowski, I have been a tireless proponent of his for years. This poem is and example of one of the things I dislike (along with the misogyny): 
His rampant egotism. Here a false dichotomy. He, of course, putting himself firmly in the category of "feeling people". Such hubris. But I love his left-wing 
politics, depiction of life, romanticism. Most of all his honesty, his succinct style. (And that his real first name is Heinrich.    )
 One of my favorite Bukowski poems:
        The Blackbirds Are Rough Today       -    Charles Bukowski 
          
         lonely as a dry and used orchard 
         spread over the earth 
         for use and surrender.
          
         shot down like an ex-pug selling 
         dailies on the corner.
          
         taken by tears like 
         an aging chorus girl 
         who has gotten her last check.
          
         a hanky is in order your lord your 
         worship.
          
         the blackbirds are rough today 
         like 
         ingrown toenails 
         in an overnight 
         jail--- 
         wine wine whine, 
         the blackbirds run around and 
         fly around 
         harping about 
         Spanish melodies and bones.
          
         and everywhere is 
         nowhere--- 
         the dream is as bad as 
         flapjacks and flat tires:
          
         why do we go on 
         with our minds and 
         pockets full of 
         dust 
         like a bad boy just out of 
         school--- 
         you tell 
         me, 
         you who were a hero in some 
         revolution 
         you who teach children 
         you who drink with calmness 
         you who own large homes 
         and walk in gardens 
         you who have killed a man and own a 
         beautiful wife 
         you tell me 
         why I am on fire like old dry 
         garbage.
          
         we might surely have some interesting 
         correspondence. 
         it will keep the mailman busy. 
         and the butterflies and ants and bridges and 
         cemeteries 
         the rocket-makers and dogs and garage mechanics 
         will still go on a 
         while 
         until we run out of stamps 
         and/or 
         ideas.
          
         don't be ashamed of 
         anything; I guess God meant it all 
         like 
         locks on 
         doors.
          
             - - -
	
                                                                                                                           a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Why are brilliant people always such pricks      
Makes me feel icky for still loving them. 
 
Thanks for sharing, Ray   
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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                                                                                                                           a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		I think misogyny or racism are very minor personality issues in a writer. It can limit their work and its appeal, which is punishment enough.But what would be really interesting is if there was a writer who was so far gone to the other side, that redemption was impossible, and yet wrote powerfully. Like a serial paedophile or Nazi war criminal. Or a KKK grand master personally implicated in several lynchings. Now that would be a real test of how well we can separate the dancer from the dance.
 
 Religious books not counting, obviously, because God does all of these things regularly.
 
~ I think I just quoted myself - Achebe
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (09-11-2016, 08:37 PM)Achebe Wrote:  I think misogyny or racism are very minor personality issues in a writer. It can limit their work and its appeal, which is punishment enough.But what would be really interesting is if there was a writer who was so far gone to the other side, that redemption was impossible, and yet wrote powerfully. Like a serial paedophile or Nazi war criminal. Or a KKK grand master personally implicated in several lynchings. Now that would be a real test of how well we can separate the dancer from the dance.
      Two famous examples:  
D.W. Griffith, one of the seminal directors of film. His film "The Birth of a Nation" is considered to be in the top 10  
of every film ever made. In his film, where he pretty much created the basics for all films after it, he brilliantly  
portrayed the Ku Klux Klan as heroes who save a white woman from being raped by subhuman blacks.
 
Leni Riefenstahl was a pioneering woman film director who made extraordinary propaganda films ("Triumph of the Will"  
her most famous) for the Nazis. And she did so willingly and fervently. Her compositional/editing techniques are  
considered groundbreaking.
 
So, yeah, people (at least critics) seem to be able to separate art from artist.  
  (09-11-2016, 08:37 PM)Achebe Wrote:  Religious books not counting, obviously, because God does all of these things regularly.      Funny how, most of the time, authors come out looking like the good guys.
	 
                                                                                                                           a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions 
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Hogs get the last laugh
 'The Pig'
 by Roald Dahl
 
 In England once there lived a big
 And wonderfully clever pig.
 To everybody it was plain
 That Piggy had a massive brain.
 He worked out sums inside his head,
 There was no book he hadn’t read,
 He knew what made an airplane fly,
 He knew how engines worked and why.
 He knew all this, but in the end
 One question drove him round the bend:
 He simply couldn’t puzzle out
 What LIFE was really all about.
 What was the reason for his birth?
 Why was he placed upon this earth?
 His giant brain went round and round.
 Alas, no answer could be found,
 Till suddenly one wondrous night,
 All in a flash, he saw the light.
 He jumped up like a ballet dancer
 And yelled, “By gum, I’ve got the answer!”
 “They want my bacon slice by slice
 “To sell at a tremendous price!
 “They want my tender juicy chops
 “To put in all the butchers’ shops!
 “They want my pork to make a roast
 “And that’s the part’ll cost the most!
 “They want my sausages in strings!
 “They even want my chitterlings!
 “The butcher’s shop! The carving knife!
 “That is the reason for my life!”
 Such thoughts as these are not designed
 To give a pig great peace of mind.
 Next morning, in comes Farmer Bland,
 A pail of pigswill in his hand,
 And Piggy with a mighty roar,
 Bashes the farmer to the floor . . .
 Now comes the rather grizzly bit
 So let’s not make too much of it,
 Except that you must understand
 That Piggy did eat Farmer Bland,
 He ate him up from head to toe,
 Chewing the pieces nice and slow.
 It took an hour to reach the feet,
 Because there was so much to eat,
 And when he’d finished, Pig, of course,
 Felt absolutely no remorse.
 Slowly he scratched his brainy head
 And with a little smile, he said,
 “I had a fairly powerful hunch
 “That he might have me for his lunch.
 “And so, because I feared the worst,
 “I thought I’d better eat him first.”
 
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		I love this poem - you can hear it read here by the author https://soundcloud.com/phantom-pen/snowy 
Snowy
 
On Monday morning she brought me tea 
well-stirred, no hint of honey, but 
the tang of gum smoked to my fingertips 
as they drummed high country hoofbeats 
in snowtime dreaming.
 
There are words, secret echoes, 
that only a melting river knows.
 
I heard, leftwards, a breast open to 
shadows. I have no eyes for tender glances, 
coy silk bouncing from kindled wicks, 
petals soft and insipid on the stoop.
 
On Mondays I drink my tea 
and stare directly into the sun.
 
~Leanne Hanson
	
		
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