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Posts Tagged ‘Blue Sky’
[10-20-2006]
Poems:
Blue Poetry
I–Blue (#1505)) 10-13-2006)
II–Rainbow Jars (#678/10-2004)
III–Winter Remembered (#1506) 10-13-2006)
IV–Shadow in the Wood (#679/10-2004)
V–Exile the Poets (#1504)
1–Blue
Blue was the Master, blue, blue!
Blue his eyes, were, blue his hair.
Through the blue air he came
(the whole world turned blue for him).
The flashy designs of his dress
Were neither green nor black, but blue.
Over the blue sky he went
(and even the sea turned blue then).
My life will always leave open
A narrow door, to let him in.
#1505 10/134/2006
II–Rainbow Jars
If you do not ride a falling star
You will never write about who you are,
Revive your dormant soul!
“Now let’s go!”
Harmony is in heaven, not here on earth…!
And ghosts do not tarry in rainbow jars…
If you will not ride a falling star
You leave no impressions
Nor revive your dead heart!
Harmony is in heaven, not here on earth…!
#678 (10/2004)) Revised 10/2006)
III–Winter Remembered
Oh, the whiteness so divine
Of the first snow fall of winter–;
Its solitude so pure,
Its silence so permanent.
It is so far away
(a Minnesota winter)
So far, it is hard to remember–
Yet the idea alone is a fountain.
Unending snowflakes–
A snow that will never cease
On hard wooden roofs, and streets
All this indelible white–.
A fancy indeed, a peace; hence,
Leave alone to remember.
#1506 10/13/2006
IV–Shadow in the Wood
I got lost in the dark part of the wood’s shadow.
The moon is up, dark with shadows in the wood!
“Look dark,” I say, “you are by yourself! What
will you do?”
“…come to this crevasse–this shadow in the wood,”
it said to me; and now I’m a leaf, on a big tree.
#679 10/2004; revised 10/2006
V–Exile the Poets
Exile Baudelaire’s swan, along with Yeats and Keats and Jimeuez, they are all dead poetic geese and so is Martinez. Ride the swan’s neck, then do away with the rest: Dario, Najera, Silva, Casal, and Echeverria. Who needs poets anyway? Do away with Romanticism, literary madness, freedom, lets be clones; it is all that will be left, once the poets are gone.
#1504 10/13/2006

