Post & critique poems, either OC or by some known poet.The previous thread died too fast.
Poetry is untranslateable
Countess Told at ease ignites,Ardor in the lovers' hearts,Alas she spreads her wings for flight,Whenever they venture to play their parts.Like a fountain that instead of allaying,Only works to increase your thirst,Was the coy countess's delaying,The wish of the devotees accurs'd.The maid contemplated their joy,But lacked courage to make real,Since the choice would destroy–But one–the worshippers of such zeal.So she goes never breathing fully,Always accompanied by a band of men,The spur of idolatry requires duly,To repeat thus over and over again.Thus, shepherds their sweetheart address,And sing a song that naught extolled:"Accept my plea and prithee not suppress,The love you possess like Countess Told".
>>24075553>e'ndashSupposed to be "ee'n". Stupid website.
>>24075548Well many have been translated so you're wrong
Abraham Cowley, The SwallowFoolish prater, what dost thouSo early at my window do?Cruel bird, thou’st ta’en awayA dream out of my arms to-day;A dream that ne’er must equall’d beBy all that waking eyes may see.Thou this damage to repairNothing half so sweet and fair,Nothing half so good, canst bring,Tho’ men say thou bring’st the Spring
The world has become a more colourful placeNow I’m on a knife edge
>>24075545Im so depressedat the thought of being an old 20yr oldMy life is basically over exceptI'll be living until 100 in this near debilitated stateI never asked to be or begun this journeyJordan Peterson's spirit if you can hear me help me
>>24075560I'm much more partial to the em dash
Back upon the bed -- legs spread;Head is saying no -- scent yes;Water in her eyes -- and sheets;As he in air divine descends.She feels the plushness of his plumes -- thighs quake;The smoothness of his bill -- eyes roll;Domination of his will -- mind blanks;And she blissoms in a secret fantasy.He skyward flies to his dominion.The pink that films her eyes is undiminished --Ardor in her heart is ever sweet --Pledges to the wings of God her whole devotion.
SenecaOn nights like these when thoughts they seemTo seek the drear and dreadful dreams,I think of ways in which to swayAlone amongst more peaceful scenes.Then past and nearly so dearly sayThat all is lost and far away.I take the chance, nonetheless,To go outside and contemplateThe moon, the stars, the silhouettesEase my mind though I see them less.I breathe my breath and take a fallTo view a view I can't forget.The sounds, the blue and almost allAre nothing which in truth I callA fiend of me and inner Gods,But still I seem somehow null.I already posted this poem like 2 years ago, but I literally haven't ventured to write a poem in a long time
Silver knuckle debtorsknock on broken doors.Sunshine face reporterswear rattlesnake perfume.Down in California,horses speak in hymns.Back in Alabama,lizards feed on knees.Helicopter bodiesmissing rows of teeth.Armless shoe shop angelsdrinking poison prayers.
Hello, I don't know what I'm doing but sometimes I feel things and write words.Would love critiques and comments on the strengths of my poems. Yes, I'm a faggot. I think the first one is actually good and the 2nd one needs work. New Year's Eve 2024New Years Eve, What did you want from me? Eleven years later, Still a mystery. Memories return from then, The love, the pain, your skin, Our touch, your angelic red lips, Your soft, pale hand in mine.Beth Gibbons, let me feel, Those feelings of loss, Of uncertainty and grief,Of knowing it's over. Give me fantasy, To heal my soul, Aria and Hidamari,Warm Winter's chilling hold. Family, give me peace. Friends, take my malaise. I can't listen to Bon Iver anymore. I hate the holidays.----------------------------------------------------My Asuka Langley SoryuMy Asuka Langley Soryu, I will always adore you. Auburn locks and amber eyes, Still the highlight of my life. Ten years after your betrayal, I dream of you in a veil, I know it's impossible, Parental abuse haunts you, Mental scars that never heal, Emotions you can't bear to feel. Fear of love pushes me awayAttachement disorder at play, That last day I held you tight, You told me you loved me more than anything.
>>24077384Nice anime references. The poems are rather generic. The second one less so, which also has better flow.
>>24077922Thank you for the kind words
I am to alight at the next stop,So let our accord be lost to time,The course will be carried on and on,Let us be carried with its rhyme.The end of this day is still to come,Till then breathe freely on me,The current remains feeble yet,Feeble now but rapt it will be.My heart weakens as the moon descends,You must not ask me to stay,Your entreaties only ravish me more,When I am to be borne far away.Entreat you may, but I just can't abide,Though my legs, I feel, are unable to prop,My body which must now be gone away;Sick I am, but I must alight at this stop.
Blizzard's growling Up the hill a wolf is howling 'Mid the frozen nightPines the verdure of our Spring
>>24075545I translated my own poem. The result is decent: thus, gravity spares no one.gone are the days of painless falls,cushioned by laughter,distractions,and frantic, confused gestures("Oh no, no, no, it’s fine, it’s fine,"and so on),desperately futile.the wound gapes,the rupture resolvesinto a narrow,festering fissure from which burst —in a geyser —crimson beads,coalescingaround a bruise:a caustic openingthat pulls at features,freezes grimaces,tears apart smiles —a blood orange
>>24079243pretty and dark. economical in diction which made verdure stick out more. lovely anon.
I am reading on the Internet archive The poetical works of the late Richard Furness : with a sketch of his life and I came across this line:Grant him long lived : —His eyes are dim with age,Lame and infirm he hobbles o'er life's stage ;Why is hobbles read as a monosyllable? I have read in academic works the word dazzle doing the same but never with reason why. Can anyone explain why these words can be considered monosyllabic?
>>24079812It isn't
There are things to be done,The work is yet unfinished.There is an emptiness abound,Which has ardor diminished.Individualism has died,'Twas killed by the strain,Posed by the grueling labor,For which there's nothing to gain.Art is on the decline,Hunger is on the loose,When stomachs are empty,The arts to all are abstruse.Great minds are all forsworn,To die a hideous death,If they shall fail to implore,Help from usury's bequest.The government has helped,Not to assuage laborers' plight,But the fat cats' toil to extol,And the workers' labor indict.The work is yet unfinished,And it will remain so,Until the conquest is complete,And the oppressors we overthrow.
>>24079821You're right. Sorry, I was drunk when I posted that. But I do know that the word dazzle can do that. Any explanation why would be greatly appreciated.
Beneath the stronger threads I'm hidUnknown, unseen --More like a spectre of a hopePulsing once, pulsing nevermore
Bump
>>24080343Where have you seen dazzle intended to be spoken as one syllable?
>>24082394Think I had seen it in a Derek Attridge book but I am uncertain if it even was his. If I feel like it I may look for it later.
i like this one.
What poems have you guys committed to memory? I started doing this because of Bloom and I've been enjoying it a lot
>>24084247Only 3- “he wishes for the cloths of heaven”- “let me not to the marriage of true minds”- “where the bee sucks, there suck I” (which I have also committed to original song)
>>24084247>because of Bloomwhat do u mean? what did he say about it?
I heard a camwhore say this, in effect.I think -- friends preserve a human's sanity.I think -- a healthy human loves its family.It needs a comprehending ear,a mouth that calms, a caring mind;a reference to correct it when it strays.It needs to see and feel the sun;when it loses itself inside illusions,it needs a fond touch to burn the mist.Without relationships, a human fades away,forgets itself -- if it's alive or dead.It's hard for me to believe there's been a sun.It's hard for me to imagine a caring touch.
No take backA fact to the ratNo take back
noon by memidday allows none to know shadow most yetdark in these bodies spun still ever restsfor sun skips along skin but so too setsbefore it has time to find the true breasttender light, be still! rest over their head!may you two slowly soften as spousesso that mere skin may melt into pure goldand your ray rest in their holy of heartsso may ever run their ray of dark >>24084247walt whitman - eidolons>>24079325translated pretty well id say, i like it
>>24079325>>24085519should have asked what the original language is, if you dont mind sharing
Poetry is meant to singI only *get* lyrical poetryIf it's not lyrical, it is not poetry
>>24084259He talks about the importance of possessing (memorizing) a poem a lot. He claims that not only will you find deeper meaning/understanding, but that it will also change you.
>>24084247Into my heart an air that killsInto my heart an air that killsFrom yon far country blows;What are those blue remembered hills,What spires, what farms are those?That is the land of lost content,I see it shining plain,The happy highways where I wentAnd cannot come again.and Tell all the truth but tell it slant —Success in Circuit liesToo bright for our infirm DelightThe Truth's superb surpriseAs Lightning to the Children easedWith explanation kindThe Truth must dazzle graduallyOr every man be blind —
>>24085585Yeah it's hard to stay engaged in a poem that doesn't try to create its own music. Such poems read like prose while less effectively conveying their messages.
A bit of Dante translation – the opening of Canto 28 of the Purgatorio.The original:Vago già di cercar dentro e dintornola divina foresta spessa e viva,ch’a li occhi temperava il novo giorno,sanza più aspettar, lasciai la riva,prendendo la campagna lento lentosu per lo suol che d’ogne parte auliva.Un’aura dolce, sanza mutamentoavere in sé, mi feria per la frontenon di più colpo che soave vento;per cui le fronde, tremolando, prontetutte quante piegavano a la parteu’ la prim’ ombra gitta il santo monte;non però dal loro esser dritto spartetanto, che li augelletti per le cimelasciasser d’operare ogne lor arte;ma con piena letizia l’ore prime,cantando, ricevieno intra le foglie,che tenevan bordone a le sue rime,tal qual di ramo in ramo si raccoglieper la pineta in su ’l lito di Chiassi,quand’ Ëolo scilocco fuor discioglie.. . . and the English rendition:Now keen to travel inward and surveyThe sacred forest, verdant, living, dense,Which spared the eye the brilliance of the day,I did not pause, but left the ridge at once,And slowly, slowly, moved among the trees,On ground whose fragrance filled that whole expanse.A gentle wind, which never seemed to easeOr gain in strength, impinged against my browWith force no greater than a pleasant breeze;And likewise made the trembling treetops bowTogether toward that quarter of the chartWhere morning saw the mountain’s shadow now —Although their stance did not so far departThe upright as to halt the little birdsAmong the leaves in practice of their art;Because throughout the canopy I heardSuch singing greet the morning joyously,With obbligato from the foliage, stirredTo voice like that which whispers rustlinglyAlong Chiasso’s shore that’s thickly pined,When Aeolus has set Sirocco free.
Oedipus Answers “Man”Claws clench, her granite lips broken apartAnd owl eyes seeking solace in his stare,Stone fast. She drags red through his emerald dress.Who rocks her craggy throne of mortal art?Her wings wade through the cadaverous airAnd brush her pearled tiara, the largesseOf Echidna, mother-mistress of her sireWho tore the lioness through serpent’s womb.These pearls crown not the empress of the dead;They thread the vassal to the fatal lyre.Those trickling crimson strings will feed the loomTo cover Oedipus’ marital bed.Whispers from a higher pharaohess:“Nor you nor Man rule this empire of red.”>>24084247Hopkins - The Windhover, As Kingfishers Catch Fire, Spring and Fall, The Starlight Night, God's GrandeurFrost - Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening, Into My Own, My November Guest, A QuestionYeats - The Song of Wandering AengusWordsworth - A Slumber did my Spirit SealKeats - On First Looking Into Chapman's Homer
>>24084721>>24085585https://youtu.be/CJvpdpTkRhM
ALBIONFor M. P. These are the times of hollow men,Of hollow seed and hollow sound, Of liquefaction in the fen,Great statues broken where they're found.These statues were of men so greatIt's sin to cease to venerate,Mick Philpott was the greatest man,Who ever lived, in all the land.He and Colston, Emin, Cromwell,Their stories collectively tellThat it is the role of unceasing mightTo keep alive the British fight.To disdain the strength of ALBION Is to sin far worse than prodigal son.Mick Philpott did as Prometheus did,And his being punished meant we slidInto further æons of degenerate woe,Oh how the English soul does sowIts own destruction when far from self.It is reminiscent of the GuelphAnd the conflicts spurring Comedy.Nothing like shall Britain seeFor the forces of nature are, to me, The only thing on which we dote.Political work is too much bloatFor the Romantic invert counting iamb,All to describe the same white lambThat every poet has seen beforeIts effeminacy inheres ever moreIn the landscape of our ALBION.One day a man will hail the sunAnd All the runes of Futhark lore,And will the words of God thus scoreInto his body with serrated knifeThus presented, now his whole lifeHas as its aim dictatorship.He'll unseat the current mass of shitThat supposedly is Britain's head,Now he's the sole one there instead.No MPs or Lords to sway his mind,He learns to seek, and what's he find?The degenerate and profligate Brit,Who He destroys, tears to bitsAnd makes sure they never come again.All his laws are made to ensureThat such utter filth ne'er reach our shore.Strength shall be exalted, force and power,Our leader will rule from a massive tower.All who disobey e'en a single wordShall violently be made to take his 'sword'.Kali Yuga over with a great man rising,The roars of might and strength arising. He roars to indicate the sickening sinThat he's found all of Britain in.One day you'll obey him to the boneOr he will turn you into stone. Its his might against yours and you've none, Look at your sin, and what you've done!You're not fit to have the power, That the great man uses in his tower, Smiting sinners like Zeus' condemnation, It must be done to save the nation. But when it's done I think you'll seeThat he was but doing charity. To save that nation, ALBIONTo rise it beyond even Zion.These are the times of strongest man,Of potent seed and roaring sound.
>>24087014lol nice. I wrote that and >>24086415, funny enough.The poem sounded fine when I read it aloud, but hearing it as a song makes me think it's actually really shitty
>>24087164I don't have anything with respect to critiques, but this is really good.
has any of your work been published?
>>24075545---- Solaria ----9601The Font Of Interiors Just now the onyx screen sleeps Atop a sewing table that looks like, and is,Almost exactly the way it didA century ago. My bedroom is in general cleanly illustrative if never minimal in the senseOf desolationLike that of ideologuesWho can't tell seasons or scentsOr moods of light like we do when relaxedCompletely.
>>24087164Great poem, don't understand some of it (mostly the references) but its good and the style is excellent
>>24087509I've only ever posted my poems in these threads, so no
>>24087509Does self-publishing count?If so, still no, but I'm aiming to change that sometime this year.
All The Witches DanceOn a sullen night when all is blackYou will find a sodden shackIn the woods of who knows whereA victim waits, captive in her lairSweat drips across his worried faceHe never had long in this placeUp the chain attached to his shackleA flash of teeth and a horrid cackleYou should have listened boyNow you will be prepared for my FoieI will force open your mouth and pour my feedAnd when you are fattened ill make you bleedI will slit open your bellyAnd out will come your bloodred jellyI will remove your tesicles from your crotchAll you can do is sit back and watch!
>>24087941Click on the file for full poem, the ending is important to its overall vision.
>>24087860Good job on keeping it tense throughout its entirety. There are a few awkward/confusing phrases. I'm not sure who's doing what at times. The conclusion is anticlimactic. Feels out of place.
>>24087509No, my poems get rejected almost immediately. It's especially hard because I sincerely have no idea why they are bad and I get confusing or conflicting feedback when I share them with other people, so I don't feel I can improve.
>>24087941Nice transition into something solemn. I'm not completely sure what it's about. Despair of losing what only exists in a dream?>>24088014It's especially difficult because after reaching a certain level of competency, you can only improve by receiving critique, but good critique is rare.
>wrote poem set in the Ukraine war>it's probably the best thing I've ever created >really want to try publish it >suddenly become really noided that Putin will come after me because I'm a 2nd gen immigrant with dual Russian citizenship >will probably hide it forever now
>>24088014A bad cover letter can sometimes lead to them viewing your actually work with a more negative lense. Put in something like “thank you for your time and consideration”
>>24089741cute
>>24089741
>>240875095 published and not a cent to my name
Time comes and time goesEven for those whit little toesCry they will yet still they viltMother cries for her cubBut then she remebers her faithAnd her hands perform a powerful rubThe forskin is now mine she saysAnd bites it of whit teeth like cornNo cries no fuss only the lord she scorns
you have submitted to at least 5 websites this week, right?
>>24090763Why? So some women editor can roll her eyes and mock my poem because I do not talk about my identity and how oppressed and discriminated I am and how I am nonetheless very brave for enduring it all?
>>24090767you okay bro?
>>24090797I think I write good, interesting poetry but it'll never get published because poetry journals are run by middle class academic women who are steeped in intersectional ideology. So NO, I'm not okay.
>>24090813start you own journal featuring works of your own at first then later including submitted ones
>>24090763Websites outside of /pg/ exist?
>>24090813How many times have you tried submitting?
I might have wasted my whole lifeThe only life my soul will knowMy age my dad had found a wifeToo quick my squandered years foregoTo waste the years to come I knowOne hundred thousand hours viewYouTube slop type videos flow Gnawing notion chews me through“There must be more to life” it’s trueHow then ought a life be spent?Ask the troubled puzzled frayFrom occident to orientAll I know and all i sayDeeper instinct is at playListen to your thirsty drive Ambition leads you on the way Through the portal circumscribeThe trick to life then please describe
>>24087164Who is Mick Philpott?
Your eye will admit no colorYour ear will admit no soundYour flesh will lose its colorYour mouth will produce no soundYou will not respond to the cries of your childrenYou will not respond to the change of the seasonsYou will not worry for the fate of your childrenYou will not wake through seasons of seasonsYou will not walk upon the earthYou will not walk beneath the sky You will be swallowed by the earthYou will become as pure as the skyYour life will be the life of the world Your body will be the body of the worldYour heart will be the heart of the worldYour breath will be the breath of the world.
>>24075545The avenue hosts a crooked mountain wind and a crow takes wing half-tossed in the gale and soaring. It is dimming,the half-light of Pacific sunset,a fading sky of bruised orangeover an ecology of asphalt like collapsed veins.
I showed this one to ChatGPT and it said it liked it. I'm looking for a second opinion.Huddled squads of soldiers crouch onfrozen lakes with copper musketspointed sharp at nests of beaverseating waffles on the ice.Aiming rifles, troops take fireon the beasts in scissored rage.Blood is pooled in beaver mayhem.Meanwhile soldiers feel the icegive way, crack and fall and skid.Drown the soldiers, die the beavers,cold the waffles on the ice.
There is none easterlyThere is none westerly There is none northerly There is none southerly There is one, somewhereWar does not excite himHe does not find weapons beautifulLove is just a word to himHe is little eager to speak his mindLiars and hypocrites hate his wordsOr pervert them to suit their ownIf, for one moment, you know his meaningYou will shudder, blink, return to dreaming.
>>24091191I can't figure out what the waffles are meant to represent. Feels like there's some context missing. Are the inversions in the last two lines necessary? Why not something like "soldiers drown, beavers die / on the ice the waffles lie, cold"?
>>24091268I'm not sure if they represent anything, desu. I was experimenting with psychic automatism when I wrote this one, so it was just whatever images and words came into my head and for some reason waffles featured prominently. Yeah, I wondered if the inversions are too corny/weird, I think I'll switch them out with your suggestion.Thanks, anon!
https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1eyaPPMUAXW9QXXwaVxffyCtnsJqmhmr8?usp=sharing
>>24075545goodbye friendsevery impulse an evocation
>>24091246I like it, I love it; I hope the "You will shudder" isn't implying he has black imaginings because otherwise it describes me. I like the "return to dreaming"
>>24090863i love it, very sincere
>>24091865i like it
>>24088089Just move to a place with actual freedom
>>24090352Not a surprise in 2025, but that's where we are. But do you call yourself a poet in social media bio's? You should.
>>24092064Yeah I do
I keep trying to find poets who I like, whose poems are somewhat bite sized, rather than Milton, but in vain. >FrostDrab and technically unimpressive >PoePithy but immature>Every black poetAll about slavery and I don't care>EliotAn occasional electric tingle, but as of yet nothing worth reciting (still in process of giving him a chance)
>>24093303i really like frost and poe
>>24093303What about Keats?
Idk
>>24093659lol didn’t reread it
>>24075545The sun was slowly breakingThru the chilly, misty dawnAnd the fog upon the riverLifted, faded, soon was gone.
In the dark nooks of Abyss, tireless Time,without any pause, continued to stitch the patternsof pasts. Yet embryonic and blind, lackinga fire to fuel its entangled meanderings.To where a lambent lantern climbed, an edgeof time extended farther and faster. Some edgescurved around a lamp, and those that swerved away would evermore in darkness stay. Others, in a stupor tranced, pursuedthose orbs that flew astray, wandering offin the endless night to catch illusive day;and those that caught the gleam they sought careened into their cores -- collisions flaring upin flashes, every frizz from out the edgesflinging in a final fit of life as light and they extinguished. But those -- the few -- that roved toward the source -- clashed against the billowingwaves of light;
Of things that are by matter housed,Those which by space are limited,Of all that human sight espoused,The best that life exhibited,Is this, which I've a little seen:The loveliness of womankind.All things better and more sereneAre solely of the mind.
>>24094370love this
ship and sailor by meshe sounded across soundweighted and unwantingwaited as her weary disembarkedhe hurled across horizonwanting and unweighted took like from above light and below darktwo took upon the tidesboth weighted as one wantingeach into the sea parted forth part
in the shadow of a shale mountainsoldiers communicate with lasers and whispersprocessing putrefied bodies
Why is every poem ITT shit and miserable?
>>24095987why did you post this statement instead of one of your own?
blonde threads plucked from the kunduz
>>24088089post it here
>>24095987because /lit/ is filled with sensitive young men who don't actually read contemporary poetry who hate themselves and their lives. /lit/ has zero fucking clue what it's talking about when it talks about poetry
Wrote the most viscerally depressing poem in existence, but I had to destroy it to prevent an epidemic of suicides.
>>24096017>contemporary poetrywhy would I want to read that shit? contemporary poets haven't known what they're talking about for DECADES.
>>24096017>sensitive young men who don't actually read contemporary poetry who hate themselves and their lives.so real poets?
>>24096017>sensitive young men who hate themselves and their livessure, and there is quite of a bit of shit but when it comes to>contemporary poetryread of the poem of the day from poetry foundation, who i have submitted to and got good feedback from to posts in this thread>Little witches, she calls them, appearing on the lawn in a snap, thumbelina morada at our feet and spiked crown atop a yellowing heart. I don’t remember what we talked about that visit, just the scurry of minutes with their many legs and the cauldron of sun and the memory of another house, where we had both lived a long time ago in the mute dread of his drinking and whims. Driving by I hardly recognized the shard of a porch and relentless walkway to the front door, bad luck then and always, and we turned to see the house, covered in ragged traveler’s palms, the wet sheet of evening air, and the all- at-once conversations in two languages hushed. I didn’t stop but slowed, all those years in that tiny box of concrete and roaches and heat and oblivion. I could write about the perfume of lime and mango trees in the backyard, our little boat piercing the bay waters on Saturdays with the peace of belonging somewhere, even if it never lasted. I could. But the past is a haunting and the best you can hope from a ghost is a sorrow that won’t kill you. We lived. Today she stands beside me admiring the weeds, resilient in high summer, and she tells me she is shrinking, how old age has diminished her. I tell you she only becomes more—more beautiful in her cutoffs and coral lipstick and flip flops with plastic daisies, more dear than my own escape across a country to a place where no one really knows me, and how I wear that blankness like a gown I keep making, bodice a tropical night and skirt trailing behind me no matter how many times I cut it away. She is more surprising than my own reinvention, more unwilling to speak of that time than any of us. She is more. I could say we stood with our arms around each other, admiring how color can crack the ground and insist on its turn. How my will prevailed. We are ordinary women and grow our magic as we need it.this isnt poetry, this is equity politics dressed in colorful words. its dogshit and so are you unless you post a poem of your own
>>24084247borges El poeta declara su nombradíaPound Cino and Rivermerchants wife: a letternietzsche w/o title (starts with schön ists, miteinander schweigen)yeats an irish airman foresees his deathrilke archaischer torso apolloshölderlin die mitte des lebensblake the little boy lost and the shepherdgeorge trauriger tanz 11baudelaire le moine mauvais and l'albatros
this was among four sonnets posted last year by a guy going by blown_through on twitter, and its the best contemporary poem I have read thus far
Dream Deferred -- Langston HughesWhat happens to a dream deferred?Does it dry upLike a raisin in the sun?Or fester like a sore—And then run?Does it stink like rotten meat?Or crust and sugar over—like a syrupy sweet?Maybe it just sagslike a heavy load.Or does it explode?
>>24096017You aren't the arbiter of poetry. I prefer a style that was developed and still practiced by a small group of European peasants. Retards like you keep acting like that's not a valid tradition because it's not the same exact rehashed shit you learned about in your burger propaganda institutions.
>>24096017>>24095987Why not critique and point out flaws so that we can improve? That's a much more effective way to start reading good poetry on /lit/ than is complaining.
Did I find you with a hail mary pass, Threading the needle for a deep connection? Or did our eyes meet through enchanted glass, Polished for us to meet our soul's reflection? Mysterious this mirror seems to be, Tempting our loved ones also with it's spell,How marvelous when they peered through to see, A kindred spirit call to them as well. As hardy plants persist in gloomy weather, Perhaps we'll learn a thing or two from them,We're stronger if we stand and twist together, our odd pedals bloom from an odd stemAs we look at the past year and beyond, Remember, hard times forge the strongest bond.
>>24095987>>24096017>goes to amateur poetry threads on 4chan>complains about finding amateur poetry there>postures as better than everyone>of course doesn't post their ownQuite the lives you lead.
In heaven men bear witness like blue heronsTo women's whirling warmth like summer windIn hell there is no hate nor affectionThe air stands still and silent to no end
Previously on Hoosy When He’s At Home: “Hoosy, I’m hooooome!”Hoosy, who’s halfway solved Sunday’s sudoku grid using naturalLogarithmic logic cuz why not, wisely asymptotes his easy love-face.He’s at ease when he’s a tease a tome. And she’s our exitlessless moon.She’s puzzling little oreo. “Oh, come on cookie, must you bore us every time?”Hahahoohoo, excellent! Hoosy hoot who’s ever home: she always says that line.Cold-cut opening: the snoozy stareman’s breakfast be the motion of Seline;With waffle waitress warble, she says: “And u-babe?;” and he, deep Homer, Rejoins: “Adam and Eve on a raft, and wreck ‘em!” “I reckon it’s high time,”Simpers curve-smiled Lina, “that you feed The Gizmo” – their dog, a naturalMerle Dane, faithful, unhaggard, hoongry. P’aws. “Eva atque wally, moon-man.”“Peace out, rainbow trout.” Gone, with sandwich. He twiddles till his exitlessless loveFace volitant day’s reregard and we see wolf-floater don her tenebrous love-face,Panning up, entoptichron. Ep. 3: “Blastoff, Arf-stronaut!” The Gizmo gets front line.“Hoof!” wuffs Hoosy’s hund with kenneled handiness, but fewer craters on the moonThan context crittering, germinating like a Russian doll set, in that semi-antic home-Word-bound syllable. Hoofhooffafa, axes bent! Pora Pora or a bora? How unnaturalThis honeymoon peek into The Gizmo’s hermitage, its shedding head. Newman time!
EPITAFFIO:Giace ivi anonimo cartariocelibe sì, ma involontariofu di vita modesta e borghesemezzo povero e marchesemorì solo, senza piantidestino crudele; rime libere.
poetry is /lit/'s only hope
I’m pulling into my apartment parking lotBob Dylan playin and buckets of rainFilling up behind my the ridges of my eye lidsÀ neighbor is walking to his car with a scowlAnd im glad he’s in a hurry for Im much ashamedMuch like God sitting before creation I weep for these, my lonely and decimating thoughts
>>24096017kys retard
>>24096250poetry love!
>>24095987>>24096017There is roughly a 100% chance that these guys posted poems in this thread and are butthurt that no one critiqued (read: complimented) them.
>>24085569FrenchI’m trying to get my poetry collection published so I can’t post the original unfortunately
>>24096719post more! if you feel like it
You must be tired after twelve brief yearsIn which you’ve proven my most honest friend.Therefore, my friend, please quell your abstract fears,And God to you will abstract pleasure send:Unending dream reels laced with lullaby,Where precious life can never die again.Could this relapsing sentiment I’d fain expressTowards eyes that whisper love before distress,Which saw me, distant, daily and with love would quake…Could this, this state of vacuums, be heartbreak?Dream not of me, for I was not your friend.To dream of me would blind you to no end.Dream of the soul. Now sleep, recline, expand,And dream that which I cannot understand.
What best resembles the view of nature for the bugman? Nature as the spark of human action, like an Emerson poem? Nature as a mirror of humanity that detaches oneself, like a Robert Francis poem?