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Thread: silence

  1. #1

    silence

    8) Silence deeper than winter snows o'er the moorland
    The meadow is white bound and crisp underfoot
    Ravens soar and swerve through the season-shorn trees sounding mortality sugar maple aspen
    liquid amber and Yew
    Starlight a quivering brilliance up o'er the log house below nie high high above the forest tis starlight and there below a small tendril of white smoke

    Sudden some one is there no one the tree shadow dancing strange trance

    I am so old seeming out here on the frozen meadow I remember her
    I do not forget
    Embraces Holding hands is enough
    Meanwhile moonrise hies me to silence and immovablity stunned by beauty deeper than all the universes combined
    Pure light

    There is a silence more vast than we can imagine
    There is a comfort more deep than can be dreamed
    There is a tenderness
    wider than the sky

    Down and down now o'er the crusty snow crackling footsteps and my willow stick plunging hard through the thick icy surface with a thump
    I make my way heavy bound sounded soul clown to the door

    And she is there so fair she has been so many years after my crazed night wanderings
    She offers tea and cookies and a hug What more can an old man want

    The memory of stars the freshness of snow and a kindred spirit waiting there longer than I can remember gentle and pure always
    She used to go out with me We'd get lost and laugh and laugh astounding it is
    How pure and filled with grace and wonder in her crystalline blue eyes
    Gratitude and something for which there is no name from deep deep down in the spirit

    Placid is the gentle night holding hands
    Namaste' (Sanskrit - "Honor to the light that is within you."
    Sanskrit - the planet's oldest spoken language)

  2. #2
    Grim Reaper
    Join Date
    Jun 2003
    Location
    Rapid City,Sd USA
    Posts
    221
    I honestly cannot criticise your work ryokan. I get this black when i try to. Just to let you know i will not be giving you much more than an applaud.
    "My body won't succumb to my heart and it's tearing me apart"

    "There is no point to democracy when ignorance is celebrated"

  3. #3
    i have to agree with phoenix tears, this is one damn good poem, lol...
    shut up and listen!*!

  4. #4
    Hero Admin's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jul 2001
    Location
    East Lansing, MI USA
    Posts
    3,991
    You're writing is very easy to read, it has excellent flow.

    Seems a shame to keep it as mere text though. I think that your writing could be best appreciated in the spoken form.

  5. #5

    more gratitude

    8) Thanks and gratitude,
    all who have been touched
    by these words.
    Came I through the same wood
    young Jimmy walked past
    Howth Castle on his night
    wanderings, when young.
    He always said, "The only way
    it can be understood is if it
    is sung."

    And thus, here, a little something from Jim. May you be touched the way I was, yea, so long ago:
    from "Chamber Music"
    II
    "The twilight turns from amethyst
    To deep and deeper blue.
    The lamp fills with a pale green
    glow
    The trees of the avenue.

    The old piano plays an air,
    Sedate and slow and gay;
    She bends upon the yellow keys,
    Her head inclines this way.

    Shy thoughts and grave wide eyes
    and hands
    That wander as they list-
    The twilight turns to darker blue
    With lights of amethyst."

    From, "Pomes Pennyeach"

    "A Flower Given to My Daughter"

    "Frail white the rose and frail
    are
    Her hands that gave
    Whose soul is sere and paler
    Than time's wan wave.

    Rosefrail and fair-- yet frailest
    A wonder wild
    In gentle eyes thou veilest,
    My blueveined child."

    James Joyce, Francis Thompson, Gerard Manley Hopkins..., all composed print that sang. After a lifetime of reading them aloud to myself with absolute stunned-still awe, I am grateful that some words I have left have did sing to some few.

    And this, for those who love
    pomes aloud:

    "In the U.S. 40,000 people will gather to watch football. In Russia, 40,000 people will gather to hear poetry spoken aloud. That is the essential difference in our two lands."

    from an interview with
    John le Carre', whose
    prose also _sings_.

    Peace and owl song
    Spun with star gleams
    Upon the long long night.
    Waiting, silent neath the Yew,
    I count the graces given by
    a saintly honest few.

    Dream sweetly, on the gentle night.
    Namaste' (Sanskrit - "Honor to the light that is within you."
    Sanskrit - the planet's oldest spoken language)

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