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favorite poems

May I drop in to this thread to ask a question, please? A poster on another forum asked me whether there are any JREF members who are poets. Obviously, that now includes this IS forum too, but the context had a hint of 'atheists can't be poets'. I did a google search for atheist poets which was quite interesting but said I would ask. He himself is almost 100% a sceptic by the way!
Thank you and sorry for the intrusion.


I've a chapbook I made for my fifth poetry class in college, but I'm pretty sure that would just confirm that poster's suspicions. :p
 
Another of my favorites from lit class.

Robert Graves:

The Naked and the Nude


For me, the naked and the nude
(By lexicographers construed
As synonyms that should express
The same deficiency of dress
Or shelter) stand as wide apart
As love from lies, or truth from art.

Lovers without reproach will gaze
On bodies naked and ablaze;
The Hippocratic eye will see
In nakedness, anatomy;
And naked shines the Goddess when
She mounts her lion among men.

The nude are bold, the nude are sly
To hold each treasonable eye.
While draping by a showman's trick
Their dishabille in rhetoric,
They grin a mock-religious grin
Of scorn at those of naked skin.

The naked, therefore, who compete
Against the nude may know defeat;
Yet when they both together tread
The briary pastures of the dead,
By Gorgons with long whips pursued,
How naked go the sometimes nude!
 
Music For Brass, by Gunter Grass (trans. by Christopher Middleton)

Those days we slept in a trumpet.
It was very quiet in there,
we never dreamed it would sound,
lay, as if to prove it,
open-mouthed in the gorge --
those days, before we were blown out.

Was it a child, on his head
a helmet of studied newspaper,
was it a scatty hussar
who walked at a command out of the picture,
was it even those days death
who breathed that way on his rubber stamp?

Today, I don't know who woke us,
disguised as flowers in vases,
or else in sugar bowls,
threatened by anyone who drinks coffee
and questions his conscience:
one lump or two, or even three.

Now we're on the run and our luggage with us.
All half-empty paper bags, every crater in our beer,
cast-off coats, clocks that have stopped,
graves paid for by other people,
and women very short of time,
for a while we fill them.

In drawers full of linen and love,
in a stove which says no
and warms its own standpoint only,
in a telephone our ears have stayed behind
and listen, already conciliant,
to the new tone for busy.

Those days we slept in a trumpet.
Backward and forward we dreamed,
avenues, symmetrically planted.
On a tranquil unending back
we lay against that arch,
and never dreamed it would sound.
 
One more while I'm at it, and then I promise to keep quiet for a while.

This one is by Charles Simic, called WHAT THE GYPSIES TOLD MY GRANDMOTHER WHILE SHE WAS STILL A YOUNG GIRL

War, illness and famine will make you their favorite grandchild.
You'll be like a blind person watching a silent movie.
You'll chop onions and pieces of your heart into the same hot skillet.
Your children will sleep in a suitcase tied with a rope.
Your husband will kiss your breasts every night as if they were two gravestones.

Already the crows are grooming themselves for you and your people.
Your oldest son will lie with flies on his lips without smiling or lifting his hand.
You'll envy every ant you meet in your life and every roadside weed.
Your body and soul will sit on separate stoops chewing the same piece of gum.

Little cutie, are you for sale? the devil will say.
The undertaker will buy a toy for your grandson.
Your mind will be a hornet's nest even on your deathbed.
You will pray to God but God will hang a sign that He's not to be disturbed.
Question no further, that's all I know.

I love that third line.
 
Dickenson
Hope is a thing of feathers

Invictus
Beyond this place of wrath and tears
Looms but the Horror of the shade,
And yet the menace of the years
Finds and shall find me unafraid.


But my favorite is Ric Masten

'But time is for the ticking clock
and you're between the tick and the tock
bleeding from the passion in your brain
so put another bandage on and sing us all another song
and fill us with the beauty and the pain'
 
Linnets
By Larry Levis

Verse 12
This is a good page.
It is blank,
and getting blanker.
My mother and father
are falling asleep over it.
My brother is finishing a cigarette;
he looks at the blank moon.
My sisters walk gravely in circles.
My wife sees through it, through blankness.
My friends stop laughing, they listen
to the wind in a room in Fresno, to the wind
of this page, which is theirs,
which is blank.

They are tired of reading,
they want to go home,
they won’t be waving goodbye.

When they are gone,
the page will be crumpled,
thrown into the street.
Around it, sparrows will be feeding
on bits of garbage.
The linnet will be singing.
A man will awaken on his deathbed,
not yet cured.

I will not have written these words,
I will be that silence slipping around the bend
in the river, where it curves out of sight among weeds,
the silence in which a car backfires and drives away,
and the father of that silence
 
I liked Jaberwocky and stuff by ee cummings like this http://www.geocities.com/SoHo/8454/eec.htm But I rarely read it anymore.
In my younger years, my tormented years, I used to write poetry, some pretty twisted stuff and some not so twisted. Does anyone else write poetry? Anyone interested in reading the babbling of a tormented youth?

I once wrote pose,
That without doubt would offend thy nose.
The stench of which thy senses would greatly offend,
Such I would not suffer onto a friend.
My words were loaded with such heavy junk,
That up on your ears they would fall as the noise of a heavy clunk.
To the ground they fell
And sank all the way to hell
With such a sound that rang upon that lower level
With a sound that burst the ears of Satan that old horny devil.
He cryied out in pain with a sound so loud,
That it echoed all the way to space dispersing every white cloud.
Allowing the sun to shine,
Showing a blue globe on which for once small second all was fine.
 
Keeping Things Whole
Mark Strand

In a field
I am the absence
of field.
This is
always the case.
Wherever I am
I am what is missing.

Mark Strand, poet, essayist, translator, passed last Saturday; he was 80.

Eating Poetry
Mark Strand

Ink runs from the corners of my mouth.
There is no happiness like mine.
I have been eating poetry.

The librarian does not believe what she sees.
Her eyes are sad
and she walks with her hands in her dress.

The poems are gone.
The light is dim.
The dogs are on the basement stairs and coming up.

Their eyeballs roll,
their blond legs burn like brush.
The poor librarian begins to stamp her feet and weep.

She does not understand.
When I get on my knees and lick her hand,
she screams.

I am a new man,
I snarl at her and bark,
I romp with joy in the bookish dark.
 
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I am very sorry to hear that Mark Strand died. One of my favorite poets since way back when, and, in fact, author of the first poem I posted in this short but very old thread, back in 2005. I clipped this one from The New Yorker when it appeared in about 1970, and in honor of the author I re-post it here:

The Good Life, by Mark Strand

You stand at the window.
There is a glass cloud in the shape of a heart.
The wind's sighs are like caves in your speech.
You are the ghost in the tree outside.

The street is quiet.
The weather, like tomorrow, like your life,
is partially here, partially up in the air.
There is nothing you can do.

The good life gives no warning.
It weathers the climates of despair
and appears, on foot, unrecognized, offering nothing,
and you are there.
 
Thanks for introducing me to his work.
The End

By Mark Strand
Not every man knows what he shall sing at the end,
Watching the pier as the ship sails away, or what it will seem like
When he’s held by the sea’s roar, motionless, there at the end,
Or what he shall hope for once it is clear that he’ll never go back.

When the time has passed to prune the rose or caress the cat,
When the sunset torching the lawn and the full moon icing it down
No longer appear, not every man knows what he’ll discover instead.
When the weight of the past leans against nothing, and the sky

Is no more than remembered light, and the stories of cirrus
And cumulus come to a close, and all the birds are suspended in flight,
Not every man knows what is waiting for him, or what he shall sing
When the ship he is on slips into darkness, there at the end.
 

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