Open Invitation

Ded Poet

Experienced
Joined
Jan 15, 2002
Posts
75
This thread is similar to the 'Poem of the Day' thread, except here we are not limited to poetry of an erotic nature, and all are encouraged to participate. These threads are inspired by the conviction that one of the best ways to improve as a poet is to read great poetry.

The only criterion is this: post poems that, in Emily Dickenson's words, make you feel like the top of your head has been blown off. It would be great to see who and what achieves this effect for different people. Step up the plate!(At the very least, comment on what you see here, okay?)

Here's my first submission.



SICK BIRD
Jim Carroll


The positions we use when making love
Determine the next day's weather


Tomorrow it will rain
Then heat lightning by evening


Every time the telephone rings
A green sea turtle dies
And phlegmatic guilt chants across your day


The side of your head
Where you part your hair
Dictates the direction
The trees lean
Left or right
In the yard out back


A poor Mexican teenager in the Texas Panhandle
Is suffering from a venereal disease
And as he urinates in his bathroom the pain
Is too much to bear, so he smashes his closed fist into the plaster
Leaving a hole there and he discovers a shelf within the wall
Filled with stacks fo fifty-dollar bills left behind by a drug dealer perhaps
Who departed in haste and so he is rich for a lifetime
Because of pain and urine


A blond woman with a silver tongue stud and gold rings
Above her left left eye lights a cigarette with a candle
In the VIP lounge of a club in Minneapolis
And the candle drips wax to the red carpet, somehow causing
A lone fisherman on an upstate lake
To slip on some odd substance, falling overboard and drowned
Eventually eaten by his own propeller
While a child from a lake tribe
Kneeling in his canoe
Watches in distance and mist
Unable to do a thing for him
He mutters, "That poor man,"
And paddles through the reeds
Skimming the surface with a plank,
Continuing to harvest wild rice from the surface of Glacier Lake


A popular character actress removes her Emerald brooch,
After a banquet to raise money
For the twin benefit fo Los Angeles runaways
And the Dalai Lama's return to Tibet.


By her simple action, undoing the clasp of the brooch
The Dalai Lama stubs his left foot on a cabinet in his room
At the San Francisco Zen Center's guest house, 800 miles up the coastline
Causing alarm among the Roshi and initiates, and a marlin-blue swelling
On the big toe of the gentle Lama, who meditates the pain to Maya


While in a cluttered shop in the thin streets of Milan, Italy,
Its floors filled with rosewood shavings
The air cramped with oak dust,
The man who built the cabinet
On which the Dalai Lama's foot was stubbed
Slumps over his workbench with a cerebral hemorrhage.
He is dead.
It had been growing a long while in his mind.
It was simply a matter of time.


And a young Norwegian film student thoughtlessly
Decides to title his short film
It Was Simply a Matter of Time.
It has nothing to do
With time, however, nor the dead
Italian cabinet maker.


A mosquito sucks the blood of a post-Soviet Baltic girl
And she falls in love with a balding Armenian
Who assures her that only girls with strong sexual drives are chosen by these insects
The mosquito dies and provides a small meal to a starving bird.


That bird's song awakes me at 5 A.M.
I shiver with a sudden sense of dread because the mosquito
Which it ate was poisoned by the blood of the girl which it bit
Because she was imbibed with lies and designer drugs and so the bird sings off-key
As it jars me from sleep, and the room is folding over
Darker as I rise and know a change is coming & bad & soon writing this poem





----
Your turn.
 
i have resently discovered Sappho.. her poetry is wonderfull. i find that even though it was wrote in 630 bc
i find that a lot can be set to todays tasks, problems .,.
this is my favorate at the moment .
the first one i read of hers did literaly blow the top of my head off , it was he is more a hero..


I have not had one word from her

Frankly I wish I were dead
When she left, she wept

a great deal; she said to me, "This parting must be
endured, Sappho. I go unwillingly."

I said, "Go, and be happy
but remember (you know
well) whom you leave shackled by love

"If you forget me, think
of our gifts to Aphrodite
and all the loveliness that we shared

"all the violet tiaras,
braided rosebuds, dill and
crocus twined around your young neck

"myrrh poured on your head
and on soft mats girls with
all that they most wished for beside them

"while no voices chanted
choruses without ours,
no woodlot bloomed in spring without song..."

--Translated by Mary Barnard
 
Short but explosive

Suicide's Note

by Langston Hughes

The calm,
Cool face of the river
Asked me for a kiss.
 
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