Tuesday, December 14, 2010

What Is Poetry?


Poetry, good poetry, washes over the soul like an Ocean claims a ship for Its menagerie, along with good men. When the last word is finished and one is grasping for air, the reader, one who has opened the heart and mind, will learn to swim, and become strong in the sojourn to the shore of understanding, insofar knowing a little more about the universe around and within them; some may correctly argue they are one in the same.  It is an exposition of the artist bearing all, beauty and ugliness, for the sake of that which is bigger than judgment, for truth.  He stands naked, in his poems for all to see and judge and become inspired. It creates the most intimate of relationships between reader and artist. This is more intimate than sex, or love, or even the relationship between the Divine and Its subjects. This relationship to the artist is bittersweet, for whether or not the artist’s poem is accepted or disliked weighs heavily on the weak hearted, while those whom care not of what is deemed good or bad and accept that which is will revel in the exposure. And so too, will the reader get drunk in beauty and truth and love and death and sex and above all else, sagacity.
Poetry can, too, be like a bricklayer’s trade. A poet uses words as stones, crosses through life’s mud as a way to understand or want for clarity of what otherwise makes no sense. These stones wield the path behind the footprints of the artist, and for his own soul and others. For ages poets have used words as an account, or path, to find beauty in themselves. To dwell in the words and emotions, made by the calm mind is to extend a glimpse to the light inside. It is with the words of truth and pity, and piety that the poet finds enlightenment. This poet, disciplined in his art, in his realized universe, and abundant with listenings from the heart is the poet whom finds Voice. No longer does this poet dwell in the whinings of angst and immature despair, but rather uses such as instruments to grow and promote growth.
What deep and clear axiom is embodied and can be autopsied in a poem!  That which is taken out of a poem differs among readers, and more importantly among the same reader at different times, as well as the poet himself. These interpretations are beautiful for they are exactly what the audience needs to hear; they are that which stems a tree of reality (or at the very least temporeality). That is to say, poems are the mirrors through which we see ourself and our inequity and strength. There, is found: truth.
            Many achieve the status of Sage in the realm of words, like Dickenson, Whitman, Ferlinghetti, Ginsberg, Hughes, Homer, Virgil, Collins, Bukovski, Morrison, Angelou, Knight…  Many more strive to achieve it and may hedge mediocrity. It is said that there are two types of poets. First, the great poets; they live life through their poetry, and in turn sacrifice themselves to the quill-tip crucifix.  Second is the bad poet. These are the ones that live a life of poetry, and make true happiness a state of mind by living! Then, they slapdashedly jot it down later. I, therefore, pride myself on being a bad poet, and live a life meant for living. I envy those, however, that have make the word their life and exalt them with the fullest esteem I hope to one day hold in my naked hands, palms out for all to see, and judge, and glory.

            

You Make Me Want To Drink Again

A life with out love is like a thirst without drink for cure.  I float atop a putrid ocean of insufferable tonic, a tease for the liking. I dipped a spoon, and again and again, I tasted the salted waters, tainted with lies. Only two spoonfuls sweeted my tongue, while the rest caused me great disdain. I try again and again, for the tides and waters shall forever change, and I hope to be washed in the sweet again.
Touch my tongue with your honeysweet lips, and tip your chalice for a couple sips. Let me drink from you freely and take you all in, cause I am thirsty for your love, and you make me want to want to drink again.  You make me want to drink again.

Chorus: Please don’t go, please don’t go (summer love)
Don’t leave me here all alone

May I Tell You A Secret?


I wont hold you to it--  
You can forget if it suits your taste

I prefer a dry throat, a treat I accidentally provide
The empty swallow that gets stuck half way down
The way I sound, raspy as if years of lessons have eroded sharpness
Like river rocks, static-- stoic
and smooth

Choosing words as fingers pick mulberries,
Stained and fragile
Knowing the best-- slight red and tart to taste

The way they fill my mouth and leave bitter--
Rotten teeth--  
            Dry, and reminding


shh-- 
I am here

Stow Away For A While


He snuck through the steerage, shoulder by shoulder, used two ticketless hands to stow away,
and smile in accomplish.

He peeped, and gawked on grotesques and gargoyle faces, university spectacles on sharp, narrow noses. He sat next to idiots crying Faggot! Queer! Sloshing around their beer. He was drunk too, and pitied himself for silence had stolen his tongue. He was a whim of “several billion cells to be him for a while” for a while.

Charles Mingus! he cried
Hughes, Hughes kissing whiskey and head struck ejaculate,
over and over
Charles Mingus, Charles Mingus

Thursday, December 2, 2010

Lost in Translation


Daughter breadfruit the beauty, ja, ja, aj,
aha, ja, jaita like dog.
they are not my incultados values. very reyna of
Timbaro begs for it but that is not responded to him to the municipal
president after aperitivo.ja, aha, aj, aj we are igualitas.

That nor conoszco, of the beautiful flowers
but of Chuincio pa riba asks to me,
that I sang pirecuas to them in the events,
and were but fine until Polyglot they were so that they dominated that of the language.
 you know that pa that us