Page 783 of 1355 FirstFirst ... 2836837337737817827837847857938338831283 ... LastLast
Results 7,821 to 7,830 of 13549

Thread: Today's poet

  1. #7821
    Master
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Bethlem
    Posts
    1,478

    Re: Today's poet

    Photo No 1 For Freckles' Fellrunning Calendar.

    Who is that girl in the photo there,
    Running through shot with wind in her hair,
    Red blooded males lift their heads up,
    By gosh it's Freckle the Fellrunners Pin-Up.

    By Herakles.

    P.S. When will the 2011 calendar be ready.

  2. #7822

    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Herakles View Post
    Photo No 1 For Freckles' Fellrunning Calendar.

    Who is that girl in the photo there,
    Running through shot with wind in her hair,
    Red blooded males lift their heads up,
    By gosh it's Freckle the Fellrunners Pin-Up.

    By Herakles.

    P.S. When will the 2011 calendar be ready.
    Yes I am getting quite a bit of ribbing for this photo you lot!......2011 will be ready just as soon as I complete my ten fell races this year (two so far) with two months showing me lounging around drinking snecklifter in various stunning locations!

  3. #7823
    Master
    Join Date
    Sep 2009
    Location
    Bethlem
    Posts
    1,478

    Re: Today's poet

    I vote for one of the locations to be lounging about on a peat bog on top of kinder with just for your pleasure a couple of topless mountain rescue men stopping you sinking. In fact guys lets have a where should Freckle be seen drinking Snecklifter for her calendar comp.

  4. #7824

    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Herakles View Post
    I vote for one of the locations to be lounging about on a peat bog on top of kinder with just for your pleasure a couple of topless mountain rescue men stopping you sinking. In fact guys lets have a where should Freckle be seen drinking Snecklifter for her calendar comp.
    Now your talking!...I could have done with them today!.....

    well I am a little tired now...all that running you know, makes a calender gal/tip top athlete sleepy....i'll sign of with one of my faves from Auden...night all...

    Lullaby

    Lay your sleeping head, my love,
    Human on my faithless arm;
    Time and fevers burn away
    Individual beauty from
    Thoughtful children, and the grave
    Proves the child ephemeral:

    But in my arms till break of day
    Let the living creature lie,
    Mortal, guilty, but to me
    The entirely beautiful.
    Soul and body have no bounds:

    To lovers as they lie upon
    Her tolerant enchanted slope
    In their ordinary swoon,
    Grave the vision Venus sends
    Of supernatural sympathy,
    Universal love and hope;

    While an abstract insight wakes
    Among the glaciers and the rocks
    The hermit's carnal ecstasy.
    Certainty, fidelity
    On the stroke of midnight pass
    Like vibrations of a bell,
    And fashionable madmen raise
    Their pedantic boring cry:

    Every farthing of the cost,
    All the dreaded cards foretell,
    Shall be paid, but from this night
    Not a whisper, not a thought,
    Not a kiss nor look be lost.
    Beauty, midnight, vision dies:

    Let the winds of dawn that blow
    Softly round your dreaming head
    Such a day of welcome show
    Eye and knocking heart may bless,
    Find the mortal world enough;

    Noons of dryness find you fed
    By the involuntary powers,
    Nights of insult let you pass
    Watched by every human love
    Last edited by freckle; 11-04-2010 at 11:04 PM.

  5. #7825
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Teesdale
    Posts
    2,902

    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by freckle View Post
    Distances


    Swifts turn in the heights of the air;
    higher still turn the invisible stars
    When day withdraws to the ends of the earth
    their fires shine on a dark expanse of sand.
    We live in a world of motion and distance.

    The heart flies from tree to bird,
    from bird to distant star,
    from star to love; and love grows
    in the quiet house, turning and working,
    servant of thought, a lamp held in one hand.~


    Philippe Jaccottet ~
    Gosh, this is delicious Frecks....where do you find these? Keep them coming please.
    Am Yisrael Chai

  6. #7826
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Tringshire
    Posts
    312

    Re: Today's poet

    Hello again, it's been a while since I was last here, and there are some names I don't even recognise.

    Anyway, since spring is upon us, and everything is good, a quick attempt at a couple of verses.

    Spring in my step, daylight running!
    Snowdrops, crocus, primrose, daffodils
    Banishing the long long winter at last.
    Soon bluebells. I have been reborn.

    But wait, look in the shade there -
    Nettles waiting to rise and strike.
    Soon bracken will unfurl noxious ferns,
    Cow parsley rising again to crowd the path.

    Tangling bramble and dog mercury in the forest.
    Crops rising in fields to scratch my legs.
    Picnickers spoiling the peace and quiet.
    Oh I can't wait for Autumn...

    I don't really mean it! It's just that sooner or later, in mid summer, probably when it's raining and the nettles are drooping across the paths and stinging hard, I just long for the empty landscape of winter. Terrible really, to wish my life away like that. But spring is great, and it's also good to catch up with what's happening on the poetry forum.

    Steve

  7. #7827
    Senior Member
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Tringshire
    Posts
    312

    Re: Today's poet

    Herakles, your words
    Quote Originally Posted by Herakles View Post
    While i crawl into the cave,
    I've constructed within my soul,

    By Herakles.
    reminded me of a couple of lines in Sylvia Plath's poem The Colossus. Your poem and Sylvia's are about different things, I know, but after I went and read The Colossus again I thought it was worth sharing:

    I shall never get you put together entirely,
    Pieced, glued, and properly jointed.
    Mule-bray, pig-grunt and bawdy cackles
    Proceed from your great lips.
    It's worse than a barnyard.

    Perhaps you consider yourself an oracle,
    Mouthpiece of the dead, or of some god or other.
    Thirty years now I have labored
    To dredge the silt from your throat.
    I am none the wiser.

    Scaling little ladders with glue pots and pails of Lysol
    I crawl like an ant in mourning
    Over the weedy acres of your brow
    To mend the immense skull-plates and clear
    The bald, white tumuli of your eyes.

    A blue sky out of the Oresteia
    Arches above us. O father, all by yourself
    You are pithy and historical as the Roman Forum.
    I open my lunch on a hill of black cypress.
    Your fluted bones and acanthine hair are littered

    In their old anarchy to the horizon-line.
    It would take more than a lightning-stroke
    To create such a ruin.
    Nights, I squat in the cornucopia
    Of your left ear, out of the wind,

    Counting the red stars and those of plum-color.
    The sun rises under the pillar of your tongue.
    My hours are married to shadow.
    No longer do I listen for the scrape of a keel
    On the blank stones of the landing.

    By Sylvia Plath

  8. #7828
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Teesdale
    Posts
    2,902

    Re: Today's poet

    Quote Originally Posted by Stevie View Post
    Hello again, it's been a while since I was last here, and there are some names I don't even recognise.

    Anyway, since spring is upon us, and everything is good, a quick attempt at a couple of verses.

    Spring in my step, daylight running!
    Snowdrops, crocus, primrose, daffodils
    Banishing the long long winter at last.
    Soon bluebells. I have been reborn.

    But wait, look in the shade there -
    Nettles waiting to rise and strike.
    Soon bracken will unfurl noxious ferns,
    Cow parsley rising again to crowd the path.

    Tangling bramble and dog mercury in the forest.
    Crops rising in fields to scratch my legs.
    Picnickers spoiling the peace and quiet.
    Oh I can't wait for Autumn...

    I don't really mean it! It's just that sooner or later, in mid summer, probably when it's raining and the nettles are drooping across the paths and stinging hard, I just long for the empty landscape of winter. Terrible really, to wish my life away like that. But spring is great, and it's also good to catch up with what's happening on the poetry forum.

    Steve
    You've made me smile Stevie thanks. Who was it who said a weed is just a plant whose virtue has yet to be discovered? Could have been talking about me, perhaps .

    I seem to recall reading that the North American Indians (Native Amercians?), before the Spanish brought the horse to the continent, did rather alot of running. When they were tired (bonked), they use to thrash their legs with stinging nettles to squeeze those extra miles out of them . I can see that catching on. Gap in the market for some nettle 'rub' me thinks.
    Am Yisrael Chai

  9. #7829
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Teesdale
    Posts
    2,902

    Re: Today's poet

    The Effortless Point

    Three long-distant-runners
    out for buoyancy
    pad by me, leaving the weed tassles a-waggle
    and are past the sumach clump and
    fleet, into brightness flowing,
    they bear along

    lungs
    all rinsed with morning.

    For Richard Rolle, swift in the strength of stillness,
    flowed light, and the out there flooded
    his pulses
    leaping these six centuries -
    love breathes him alive.


    Moving into sky
    or stilled under it
    we are in the becoming
    moved: let wisdom learn
    unnoticing in this.



    Margaret Avision
    From her anthology 'sunblue'

    Found this in a second hand bookshop this morning while muching around Barney Castle -ain't it just lovely, or what? Sadly the FRA formatting won't allow me to post it in its orginal spacing.
    Am Yisrael Chai

  10. #7830
    Moderator Mossdog's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Teesdale
    Posts
    2,902

    Re: Today's poet

    Richard Rolle (1290–1349) was an English religious writer, Bible translator, and hermit.[1] He is known as Richard Rolle of Hampole or de Hampole, since after years of wandering he settled in Hampole, near the Cistercian nunnery.

    According to Wiki.
    Am Yisrael Chai

Similar Threads

  1. Today's pie
    By Derby Tup in forum General chat!
    Replies: 37
    Last Post: 26-12-2020, 06:42 PM
  2. Today's DIY
    By Harry H Howgill in forum General chat!
    Replies: 23
    Last Post: 04-02-2015, 11:45 AM
  3. Today's Look Ma No Car!
    By Alexandra in forum Training
    Replies: 29
    Last Post: 31-12-2011, 10:20 AM
  4. Today's rain!
    By Stolly in forum General chat!
    Replies: 12
    Last Post: 23-07-2010, 12:25 AM
  5. Today's DVD
    By Deejay in forum General chat!
    Replies: 0
    Last Post: 27-07-2008, 08:23 PM

Tags for this Thread

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •