<Deleted User> (13762)
Sat 15th Apr 2017 20:16
I can't help but feel you should have signed off with an "Aythangyow". But this was very good and I enjoyed it immensely. Thanks for spicing up my snotty Easter weekend Raymondo. I was contemplating gate-crashing the Woking WoL evening at the New Inn on Monday and meeting you and Greg but I'm just not up to it. Maybe another day if you like. Cheers for posting this. Col
Comment is about PRINCE CHARLES's LAMENT (blog)
Original item by ray pool
Well said, Harry. With you, we're never left "Dancing in
the Dark"!
Comment is about An Easter answer? (blog)
Original item by Harry O`N eill
Thanks Raj for reading and commenting. Happy Easter to you, too. May all your eggs have two yolks ?
Paul
Comment is about Eggocentric (blog)
Original item by Paul Waring
Nicely observed Mark. That does give pause for thought. I feel that a similar tribute in a communist country would be mourned and vilified today, but America gets away with it and still lives on that inglorious past that set the country up.
Thanks for your points.
Thank you elP. Imagine fast forward to a future time - even rock gets weathered eventually . i'm thinking of the San Andreas fault creating a massive island promontory! and lake. A very appropriate poem too full of gothic symmetry.
Ray
Comment is about NORTH BY NORTHWEST (blog)
Original item by ray pool
Thanks David, Ray, elp and Colin. This is as you rightly say is the prelude to something David. It was something I wrote for my wife of whom I rarely read my poetry to these days as it can be overload. But she said to me that I ought to post it, so here it is. So you are also right elp about things left unsaid, it can be difficult to break through.
Glad you like the cheesy grin Ray and Colin. You are right Ray it does lighten it a bit What are the chances of us both writing the same thing again Col spooky!
I realise that sometimes I can get a bit intense with what I write so your comments are much appreciated.
cheers
Martin
Comment is about let us talk (blog)
Original item by Martin Elder
Hi Daz, thanks for your comment and message. Please never under estimate your poetry. I have just read Hey Hipster and it is really good. You are right about conformity as it is nothing more than a form of conditioning which robs people of their very inner being. Keep writing mate. I love it. Keith
Comment is about dazzer (poet profile)
Original item by dazzer
Nice one Paul . HAPPY EASTER!!
"it's all about me, not you
and I'm chocolate enough..." -- quite Willy Wonkarish.
Oeuf à la coque (can you say that in English?)
Raj
Comment is about Eggocentric (blog)
Original item by Paul Waring
<Deleted User> (16837)
Sat 15th Apr 2017 10:04
i loved the journey....it sure feels the same..you wish to enjoy the countryside and scenery, but the jerks and bumps spoil it...and of course leaving the place where u lived for long, is always a sad experience, and the fear of moving to a new place is also a sad experience.....i loved it till the end....hope u enjoy ur new den....lol!!!
Comment is about A Sad Memory (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
<Deleted User> (13762)
Sat 15th Apr 2017 08:52
I can only echo the previous comments Martin and what a coincidence we have both posted poems with cheesy grins! If you wait long enough two show up at the same time. Thanks for posting yours. Col.
Comment is about let us talk (blog)
Original item by Martin Elder
Hi Keith, thanks for
the comments on my poems. I often wonder if anyone actually reads anything I write. I'm interested in your comment about conformity in your profile, one of my relations served in the army until he was about 40 and has only just really found his own voice. Ive enjoyed reading your poems especially a mountain journey. Daz
Comment is about keith jeffries (poet profile)
Original item by keith jeffries
<Deleted User> (13762)
Sat 15th Apr 2017 08:28
I could think of a few cardboard cut-out shapes that would have left better stains than a quilt! Oh the temptation borders on the Adam and Eveable - the despoliation of his Garden of Eden - just because it is so inviting to be done, a metaphorical act or performance.
the imaculate front lawn or garden is surely an extension of the front parlour - there but never used, except maybe for the doctor or priest.
but in their defence they are a dying breed as so many are buried under concrete and gravel, cars and caravans. And the run-off during storms from these grassless patches has only increased the chance of local flooding. "They paved paradise, put up a parking lot hahahaha"
great idea for a poem Keith. Cheers,
Col
Comment is about His Cherished Domain (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
Nice one Keith. I treat lawns for a living, so know only too well how obsessive some people can be over their lawn (It's a man thing). I know of one guy who cuts his twice every day, and trims the edge with a pair of scissors.
I think this poem captures the psyche of such obsessives
Cheers Kevin
Comment is about His Cherished Domain (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
elPintor
Sat 15th Apr 2017 00:55
Just my version of someone deciding to become very small just a little too late...
Thanks all for reading and I hope to keep reading more from each of you.
elP
ps
..can't resist the urge to look up more about Wyeth...
Comment is about discontinuity (blog)
Original item by nunya
elPintor
Sat 15th Apr 2017 00:47
A character study in the light of a brief space in time...
Cinematic...that's my favorite word for your work.
elP
Comment is about what god has joined together let no man put asunder (blog)
Original item by Stuart Buck
elPintor
Sat 15th Apr 2017 00:42
This makes me think of all the things left unsaid...sometimes when we are in the greatest need of explication, we just can't find the proper context...
This is very sweet, Martin. Its speaks, in a strong voice, of being time-tested and surviving.
elP
Comment is about let us talk (blog)
Original item by Martin Elder
elPintor
Sat 15th Apr 2017 00:32
I once had a daydream of Rushmore being swallowed by the earth..MC has a point, though--my dream may one day come true...
Percy Shelley's "Ozymandias"
I met a traveller from an antique land
Who said: Two vast and trunkless legs of stone
Stand in the desert. Near them, on the sand,
Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown,
And wrinkled lip, and sneer of cold command,
Tell that its sculptor well those passions read
Which yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things,
The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed:
And on the pedestal these words appear:
'My name is Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!'
Nothing beside remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level sands stretch far away.
from, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ozymandias
Comment is about NORTH BY NORTHWEST (blog)
Original item by ray pool
elPintor
Sat 15th Apr 2017 00:18
Quite cleverly written, Keith..I will never understand this modern adoration of the front lawn. It seems most like a living room with an outrageously expensive couch on which no one is allowed to sit!
elP
Comment is about His Cherished Domain (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
MC, thank you for your comments on the content on the poem A Frontier of Contrast. It makes for some interesting reading. I agree with your use of the word indolent as this can apply to most Latin countries as I well know having lived in Spain for many years. There can be no doubt that California is an economic giant which will always attract wealth but what it has invested in its pristine beauty it lacks in culture. America is highly multicultural which cannot be said of its southern neighbours who are more monochrome in their complexion. America has no cohesive culture but a dynamism to succeed; to create wealth. Yet when the wealth has been created they are stymied in their search of culture. Thank you again for you comments which I value. Keith
Comment is about M.C. Newberry (poet profile)
Original item by M.C. Newberry
The Mount Rushmore memorial bears some passing
similarity to the reasoning behind the monument told of
by the poet in a famous poem - the ego that demands
"Look on my works (O ye Mighty)...and despair" And who
knows? The great heads of those past presidents may
also be worn down to barely discernible fragments by
the remorseless ravages of time...and be the subject of
some as yet unwritten poem.
Comment is about NORTH BY NORTHWEST (blog)
Original item by ray pool
An intriguing and entertaining tale of two places - or
maybe that should be two attitudes of mind.
I recall reading somewhere that California's economy was
larger than some countries; also that San Diego is
the naval hub of the USA itself. Two factors that surely
help keep the Golden State at the forefront of estimates
of financial worth.
I retain the suspicion that the Latin temperament is
responsible for the quality of life of its people. Indolent
is a word that comes to mind. Further south, South
America has numerous national examples that keep
populations in poverty whilst a select few with professed
socialist sympathies do not seem keen on sharing the
wealth they hold. The indolence occasionally erupts
into violence (Venezuela is currently teetering on the
brink!) by those masses who lose patience with the
way they are being kept in financial chains, with job
prospects and any opportunity of improving their lot
in life dismissively denied in perpetuity.
San Diego may be pristine but the optimistic traffic
headed that way indicates the attraction such a
prospect holds for those not satisfied with their more
"colourful" existences.
Comment is about A Frontier of Contrast (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
Hi Col, thanks for the wonderfully nutty (and wonderfully well-crafted) comments, just what the doctor ordered on such a cold and miserable day. Thanks for the dvd prize, too, loved the eggheads titles.
So pleased you picked out 'albumenandwomen' for praise. And, yeah, the cow and egg gag, very good. I was tempted to use "boeuf, boeuf, boeuf" but, sadly, couldn't get it to work.
Immense thanks for this hilarity. Happy Easter. Hope you feel better v.v. soon.
Paul
Comment is about Eggocentric (blog)
Original item by Paul Waring
<Deleted User> (13762)
Fri 14th Apr 2017 17:38
Yay! Happy Easter! Send chocolate - I hear it soothes a sore throat.
gossamer thin and fetherlite - it's a chocolate egg filled with condoms! What a surprise!
albumenandwomen deserves a prize - on its way a dvd box set of the Eggheads TV Show Series 1-18 with 6 celebrity specials and spin-off shows Are You An Egghead? / Revenge Of The Egghead / Make Me An Egghead. Congratulations!
there's only one thing separating a French cow from a French egg and that's a bee - work it out.
toodle-oo ?
Comment is about Eggocentric (blog)
Original item by Paul Waring
What a great story Col to go with the poem. Everything has a price, even paradise. (is that another verse I wonder?)I love that word skedaddled by the way. There's something deeply ironic about heads in the cloud !
Ah the versatility of words David. A wry comment if ever I saw one. I'm saving the audio for a Prince Charles debut , fingers crossed.
I'm glad you highlighted that line Paul - I know you like a twist lightly adjusted to suit. The film was a real classic, especially the music of Bernard Herrmann. (who wrote the Psycho music too).
Happy Easter all.
Comment is about NORTH BY NORTHWEST (blog)
Original item by ray pool
Laura, love this, love it with a capital L. I didn't get chance to post a comment yesterday but I kept thinking about this wonderful poem. Great subject, very original with so many good lines and clever weaving in of the song lyrics, too.
Big thank you Laura for posting this. A real Easter treat ?
Paul
Comment is about Darlin' Dancers (blog)
Original item by Laura Taylor
Ray, very good this, especially:
"in all their rocksure
cocksure majesties"
I must watch this film again, thanks for the reminder.
Paul
Comment is about NORTH BY NORTHWEST (blog)
Original item by ray pool
Very impressive website Maria!
Comment is about MARIA TOSTI (poet profile)
Original item by MARIA TOSTI
<Deleted User> (13762)
Fri 14th Apr 2017 08:17
Ha, I almost have some first hand experience of this Ray. I drove up to Mount Rushmore last year through the theme park towns of Deadwood and Sturgis only to find my goal shrouded in cloud. Off course you have to pay because it's cleverly concealed - not just by clouds - so I asked if I could turn around and leave having found myself in a queue of cars. Fortunately they said yes so I skedaddled away and went in search of something else, a campsite I believe. There followed a very long drive across South Dakota and Iowa and endless fields of corn, soya and sunflowers. God Bless America!
Col
Comment is about NORTH BY NORTHWEST (blog)
Original item by ray pool
<Deleted User> (13762)
Fri 14th Apr 2017 08:06
this doesn't sound like Tenerife Keith. btw do you get called 'Tenerife Keith'?
I do like this poem, it takes the reader on the journey, squeezed in with the goldfish. In my mind I took a side road at the mention of Nan. Got me thinking how some elderly people might feel leaving their homes and being shunted around council run care homes, perhaps ending up in places they had no connection with.
there is also a 'Jerusalem' feel to this. And did those feet etc. Except the feet are the furniture lorry wheels cresting the hill and the dark satanic mills are your tall satanic chimneys. Good work Keith.
Colin
Comment is about A Sad Memory (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
Hello Keith! Thanks for your comment and for taking the time to read my poem. I read your poem in your profile and I really liked it. I saw you write a lot. It is a good thing!
Comment is about keith jeffries (poet profile)
Original item by keith jeffries
thanks for commenting on ;'this book is bound in leather...' MC - as always you are spot on with your observation of it's meaning and nuance - I appreciate you taking the time to post
Ian
Comment is about M.C. Newberry (poet profile)
Original item by M.C. Newberry
thanx for commenting on 'this book is bound in leather...' Cynthia - you make a very good point about line lengths and I will look to edit this piece into a better 'construct' because I feel you are right
Ian
Comment is about Cynthia Buell Thomas (poet profile)
Original item by Cynthia Buell Thomas
Deliciously and resolutely heartfelt and a proper tribute to treasured leather. Is there anything finer than what we trust on our feet ?
I've got a pair of Chris Brasher boots I climbed Snowdon in = snuggly buggly and I've taken to wearing them eccentrically in unsuitable situations , so a kindred feeling. Though I have a feeling you may have lived more fully in yours....
love to you Laura !
Comment is about Darlin' Dancers (blog)
Original item by Laura Taylor
<Deleted User> (16837)
Thu 13th Apr 2017 16:24
the last two lines sums up the scenario world wide....v see the wrong happening in the society but no one voices it out, and if anyone stands to do so, the government knows how to silence that voice......phew!!!!
realistic poetry indeed!!!!
-ghazala l.
Comment is about Quakers (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
Ah cheers David
I was on about them in bed last night as it happens. They were the best boots ever. I was so gutted that I kept them for a whole year after the soles came completely off. Couldn't bear to part with them, and with it coming up festie season, can't help but miss them all over again.
Thanks very much. Still raging. Just miss me old boots ?
Comment is about Darlin' Dancers (blog)
Original item by Laura Taylor
Hi Cynth
No way! Actual rules?! I am so moving to Canada. I was stuck on a bus between two offenders at the weekend, could barely breathe. It ruined my journey.
Why would anyone even attempt to put nail varnish on whilst on a journey?!
Comment is about Cynthia Buell Thomas (poet profile)
Original item by Cynthia Buell Thomas
Hello Maria, I have so enjoyed reading your Biography and the poem To the Boundaries of the Soul. so much of what you have written speaks to me and to which I can relate. Your words, The Soul is our true abode............so very true and also inspiration which comes from inside with insistence. Thank you for these. Keith
Comment is about MARIA TOSTI (poet profile)
Original item by MARIA TOSTI
Strangely unsettling and pictorial , a vapour of thought made real by poetic skill, elP.
Ray
Comment is about discontinuity (blog)
Original item by nunya
This shines through with loss of hope and faith and is as accurate as life itself is appalling when faced with the unpleasant truths we all live alongside , mainly choosing not to see, unless fate guides us along those personal trails.
Heartfelt and moving.
Ray
Comment is about Spite Britannia (blog)
Original item by Noetic-fret!
Saying it the way it is often and a common experience beautifully described. Very touching and delicately sculpted. I like the cheesy grin line, that lightens the poem in a way.
Ray
Comment is about let us talk (blog)
Original item by Martin Elder
Thanks for liking it, Suki, I kept it to the tanka format - pretty much a true story ?
Comment is about Carolyn (blog)
Original item by Rick Gammon
<Deleted User> (16837)
Thu 13th Apr 2017 11:48
Hello Keith, thank you for showing interest in this poem. not many people like to read about scriptures, spirituality or God. thank u for your lovely comment.
-ghazala l.
Comment is about keith jeffries (poet profile)
Original item by keith jeffries
Martin, thank you for commenting on my poem Shell Shock. Despite ten years in HM Forces the poem was inspired a World War One veteran who I knew as a boy. He survived the Battle of the Somme. Thank you again. Keith
Comment is about Martin Elder (poet profile)
Original item by Martin Elder
Kevin Norrest
Thu 13th Apr 2017 10:16
fabulous... i found myself in a miraculous world of writing.. What will be the http://essaydune.com/ for such a writing? what d'you think?
Comment is about Delusions (blog)
Original item by Green
Thanks Gary
I do like to put some rhythm in my poems if I can, I am quite driven by something of a historical nature or as in this case an almost fairy tale feel to it.
I am on the mend and will probably be back at work soon.
Glad you like the poem
Thanks again
Martin
Comment is about Robbers tongue (blog)
Original item by Martin Elder
I have never experienced what has traditionally been called shell shock and I hope I never do but I have come across a number of guys who have really been through the mill with what is now called PTSD and it is dreadful. I take my hat off to anybody who has. A good and brave poem Keith, well done.
Nice one
Comment is about Shell Shock (blog)
Original item by keith jeffries
Fantastic Stu. the even consistent rhythm in this great and moves the piece along at a good pace. There is a real sense of urgency to it
Fab
Comment is about what god has joined together let no man put asunder (blog)
Original item by Stuart Buck
I love 'a blank sheet full of bullet holes' in particular what a great poem elp
Comment is about discontinuity (blog)
Original item by nunya
Bill Simonson
Sat 15th Apr 2017 21:24
I liked this! Love the line "Oh, lead to the dance once more"
Comment is about In Consequence Of Love (blog)
Original item by Adam Whitworth