Friday, August 31, 2012

As the River Flows and The Goats of War (Poetry and Notes on War)

1) The Goats of War

We are all of us, dirty
None innocent
All alikewar has
Rolled over us like a train
In High gear:
Blood, boots, bombs
And sharp metal:
A crude lifestyle
We never seem to get
Tired of
The emphatically brave
Come home to the
Bitterly saved
Trying to figure out
What the purpose was
With pitiful eyes;
And then they bite
Their lips, ready
To fight again
Who can ever understand?
The gut of a man!

#861 9/20/05

Note by the Author: I fought in Vietnam, and like many soldiers believed in what I was fighting for, or was supposed to be fighting for. I went because of the adventure also. There are options besides going to war, for the soldier for the one sending them. It was sad in the sense, us young boy back then believed more in what we were doing than the ones that sent us there. I do hope we send our boys back home from Iraq. I don't know if it is all worth it or not, I'm just an old worn out sergeant now. But it seems to me, the guts are still in our men, like they were in me (we have the bravest of all the soldiers in the world); but the folks doing the sending have lost insight for hindsight (perception after the fact), and that is a damn shame.

2) As the River Flows

Life is like a river
It flows and it flows,
Never to return
The same drop of water T
o the same spot;


And so


like the drop of water
I must move onand
off! Off this platform;
Let life flow, flowoo
Like the river


to
Whoever knows where.
According to the plan!
For we are simply
Part of the flow
And that will have to do!

#456 [1/19/05/reviesed 11/2005

Inspired after meeting the poet, Donald Hall for his wife had died, and he grieved dearly; and in memory of the author's mother, Elsie T. Siluk, for he had grieved dearly at the time also, and so there seemed to b e a connection when he wrote this poem; for Dennis' mothers way of thinking was as the poem reads: let life flow. Rosa

See Dennis' web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com. You can also order the books directly by/on: http://www.amazon.com or http://www.bn.com


Author:: Dennis Siluk
Keywords:: Poetry
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Publishing Poetry in Newspapers: Where to Submit

According to Dana Gioia, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, Daily Newspapers no longer review Poetry. There is, in fact, little coverage of Poetry or poets in the general press. (Can Poetry Matter, Dana Gioia, 1991).

John Timpane, Philadelphia Inquirer Commentary page editor, adds: Today, in my opinion, most newspaper people are afraid of Poetry. They're afraid readers won't understand it, especially Poetry they (these newspaper people) find hard or experimental. It amounts to a fear of the verbal. (Kelly Writers House, 1999).

One could argue Gioia and Timpane's claims today, as print media seemingly loses ground, with technological advancements in communications, and as the art of Poetry and its society becomes increasingly associated with academia, thereby making it less user-friendly to the general public.

However, there is, even today, life in the press. This article addresses the Newspapers that currently accept Poetry from the people; listed below are the following Newspapers in the United States, (compiled by Melanie Simms) that presently accept Poetry Submissions.

(If anyone has information on additional listings, please e-mail them to Melanie Simms at moonspinner@pa.net or contact her at her website at www.poetmelaniesimms.net).

Current List of Newspapers that Publish Poetry:

Philadelphia Inquirer: Contact: John Timpane at jt@phillynews.com

The York Daily Record: Contact: Bill Diskin: bill@billdiskin.com

The Oregonian: Ask for the Poetry Editor or call: 503-221-8100

The Santa Cruz Sentinel: Contact: 831-423-4242 and ask for the Poetry Editor

The Pittsburgh Post Gazette: Contact: 412-263-1100 and ask for the Poetry Editor

The Christian Science Monitor: Contact: 617-450-2000 and ask for the Poetry Editor

Clearly this current list is small (albeit still in development) which only forwards the concerns of the American public that Poetry in the Newspaper s is a dying breed, but thanks to the die-hard efforts of these remaining voices in today's Newspapers, America still has hope to see the art rekindled.

Every poet and citizen who appreciates the art has an opportunity and obligation as well to assist. The Newspapers depend upon its readers. Share your voices of concern so that the press realizes that Dana Gioia, John Timpane and your humble author are not alone in their desire to see Poetry in the news again. You can do so by contacting your local Poetry editor and requesting a Poetry article be developed, or, if you're creatively (and financially inclined) start a Poetry column of your own from your own small newspaper press.

Let the voice of the people be heard in the art of Poetry and thrive once again in the Newspapers!

Poet Melanie Simms has been published in over 100 Newspapers, ezines and literary journals including The Pittsburgh Post Gazette, The Santa Cruz Sentinel and The York Times. Learn more about Melanie Simms or contact her for information on Newspapers that publish Poetry at http://www.poetmelaniesimms.net or moonspinner@pa.net


Author:: Melanie Simms
Keywords:: Poetry, Newspapers, Submission, Publication, poet laureate, melanie simms, perry county
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"She Walks In Beauty" A Discussion of the Poem by Lord Byron

She walks in beauty, like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies;
And all that's best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes:
Thus mellow'd to that tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies.

One shade the more, one ray the less,
Had half impair'd the nameless grace
Which waves in every raven tress,
Or softly lightens o'er her face;
Where thoughts serenely sweet express
How pure, how dear their dwelling place.

And on that cheek, and o'er that brow,
So soft, so calm, yet eloquent,
The smiles that win, the tints that glow,
But tell of days in goodness spent,
A mind at peace with all below,
A heart whose love is innocent!

Lord Byrons opening couplet to She Walks In Beauty is among the most memorable and most quoted lines in romantic poetry. The opening lines are effortless, graceful, and beautiful, a fitting match for his Poem about a woman who possesses effortless grace and beauty.

About the Poem, She Walks In Beauty

In June, 1814, several months before he met and married his first wife, Anna Milbanke, Lord Byron attended a party at Lady Sitwells. While at the party, Lord Byron was inspired by the sight of his cousin, the beautiful Mrs. Wilmot, who was wearing a black spangled mourning dress. Lord Byron was struck by his cousins dark hair and fair face, the mingling of various lights and shades. This became the essence of his Poem about her.

According to his friend, James W. Webster, I did take him to Lady Sitwells party in Seymour Road. He there for the first time saw his cousin, the beautiful Mrs. Wilmot. When we returned to his rooms in Albany, he said little, but desired Fletcher to give him a tumbler of brandy, which he drank at one to Mrs. Wilmots health, then retired to rest, and was, I heard afterwards, in a sad state all night. The next day he wrote those charming lines upon herShe walks in Beauty like the Night

The Poem was published in 1815. Also in that year Lord Byron wrote a number of songs to be set to traditional Jewish tunes by Isaac Nathan. Lord Byron included She Walks in Beauty with those Poems.

Discussion of the Poem

The first couple of lines can be confusing if not read properly. Too often readers stop at the end of the first line where there is no punctuation. This is an enjambed line, meaning that it continues without pause onto the second line. That she walks in beauty like the night may not make sense as night represents darkness. However, as the line continues, the night is a cloudless one with bright stars to create a beautiful mellow glow. The first two lines bring together the opposing qualities of darkness and light that are at play throughout the three verses.

The remaining lines of the first verse employ another set of enjambed lines that tell us that her face and eyes combine all thats best of dark and bright. No mention is made here or el sewhere in the Poem of any other physical features of the lady. The focus of the vision is upon the details of the ladys face and eyes which reflect the mellowed and tender light. She has a remarkable quality of being able to contain the opposites of dark and bright.

The third and fourth lines are not only enjambed, but the fourth line begins with an irregularity in the meter called a metrical substitution. The fourth line starts with an accented syllable followed by an unaccented one, rather than the iambic meter of the other lines, an unaccented syllable followed by an accented one. The result is that the word Meet receives attention, an emphasis. The ladys unique feature is that opposites meet in her in a wonderful way.

The second verse tells us that the glow of the ladys face is nearly perfect. The shades and rays are in just the right proportion, and because they are, the lady possesses a nameless grace. This conveys the romantic idea that her inner beauty i s mirrored by her outer beauty. Her thoughts are serene and sweet. She is pure and dear.

The last verse is split between three lines of physical description and three lines that describe the ladys moral character. Here soft, calm glow reflects a life of peace and goodness. This is a repetition, an emphasis, of the theme that the ladys physical beauty is a reflection of her inner beauty.

Lord Byron greatly admired his cousins serene qualities on that particular night and he has left us with an inspired Poem.

The Poem was written shortly before Lord Byrons marriage to Anna Milbanke and published shortly after the marriage.

********************
Garry Gamber is a public school teacher and entrepreneur. He writes articles about politics, real estate, health and nutrition, and internet dating services. He is the owner of http://www.Anchorage-Homes.com and http://www.TheDatingAdvisor.com.


Author:: Garry Gamber
Keywords:: She Walks In Beauty, Lord Byron, Byron, Poem, Byrons, Byron's
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Emily Dickinson is Done But a New Era of Poets Has Begun

Emily

Such your parents

Appropriately named thee

Aemilius meaning rival

It's origin being Roman and medieval

Describing one industrious and eager

Certainly not a people pleaser

Considering your reclusive nature

And social restrictions

To uphold your secluded space

Nevertheless such was needful

That historically you might earn

Your poetic place

Not always does one aspire

To social grace

Yet your inner life was rich

Increasingly sweet

Apart from people

You felt complete

Miss Dickinson darling

You are far from a nobody

Your passion for uplifting somebody

Brought your writings to humanity

Whereby you've achieved immortality

You healed broken hearts

By no means was your life

Spent in vain

Certainly your manner of life

In lieu of your accomplishments

None can disdain

At home you cheered mother

Ba ked for father

And worked in the garden

All the while cultivating

Within your own heart Eden

A reservoir of experience and emotion

To which later in life

You would give your devotion

Sadly your heart ached with pain

When Austin and Vinnie left for school

And Reverend Wadsworth enamored you

The Rev a married man

Was the wrong one for you

Nevertheless morally you kept the rule

Like a girl raised in seminary

You chose friendship not adultery

A choice that led to your legacy

As you began writing incessantly

Loneliness did not get the best of thee

On the contrary Emily

You mastered it wonderfully

Higginson was deluded by your difference

Which ultimately was your brilliance

Thankfully you showed no hesitance

But stayed true to your essence

Your poems self-soothing

Identifying with humanity

And deeply moving

Never stopping

Hope in your soul always perching

The life that you thought

Would never come again

Through your writings

Has repeatedly shined

On the hearts of men

In writing you lived

In living you did rejoice

By dwelling in possibilities

You uplifted your voice

A voice of liberation

Understanding human sorrow

By choosing the path of humility

You escaped societal monotony

Being daily made dreary

By excessive recognition

Preferring alternatively

Thy own inspiration

You gave birth

To literary innovation

Out of obscurity

Your poems came

When Lavinia and Martha

Gave your writings fame

Publishing your work

Brought glory to your name

Indeed Emily

The fog is truly rising

After which there shall come

A great awakening!

Paul Davis is a masterful poet, worldwide professional speaker, minister and author of several b ooks including Breakthrough for a Broken Heart; and Stop Lusting & Start Living.

Paul is a life coach (relational & professional), popular keynote speaker, creative consultant, humor being, adventurer, explorer, mediator, liberator and dream-maker.

Paul's compassion for people & passion to travel has taken him to over 50 countries of the world where he has had a tremendous impact. Paul has also brought revival to many in war-torn, impoverished and tsunami stricken regions of the earth. His organization Dream-Maker Ministries is building dreams, breaking limitations and reviving nations!

Paul's Breakthrough Seminars inspire, awaken, impregnate with purpose, impart the fire of desire, catapult people into a new level of self-awareness, facilitate destiny discovery and dream fulfillment.

Contact Paul to minister, speak at your event or for life coaching: RevivingNations@yahoo.com, 407-967-7553

For additional info: http://www.DreamMakerMinistries.co m, http://www.CreativeCommunications.TV


Author:: Paul Davis
Keywords:: Emily Dickinson,American poet,Writer,Literature,modern poetry,conventional style,Education,wrong man
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Commuting Hell!

Its dark, its cold, its just six thirty,

thoughts of sleep still dull my brain,

As I huddle down, inside my coat,

a Commuter clone, just waiting for a Train.

Insidious rain, just drizzling down,

through weak light of creeping dawn,

Paper sandwich bags and old coffee cups,

blowing past, look so forlorn.

We huddle together, like a colony of penguins,

sheltering from the rain,

As we struggle through, another stressful day,

wait for the downtown Train.

Alien voices, from hidden speakers,

say there is a change, go to platform four,

Some move fast, must be beginners,

veterans stay still, heard it all before.

Styrofoam flavoured coffee,

Giant cup for 10 cents saving!.

Smells like an accident, in a science lab,

But quells my caffeine craving.

Lurid posters, on the wall,

Sell things, we just dont need.

Early morning papers rustle,

As some attempt to read.

Alien voices, another problem,

With the downtown Train,

Can all Commuters, on platform four,

go back to platform one again !

Those that stayed, have a knowing smirk,

written wide upon their face.

While all the new boys, like compliant sheep,

Back across the station race.

In the distance, the lights of a Train,

Raise Commuters hopes so high.

But its just a local freight Train,

That mockingly thunders by.

But then at last, a Train pulls up,

And we fight to claim a seat.

Lay back relax, in steaming clothes,

Commuter hell, finally complete.

John Roberts is a Freelance Training Consultant in the UK and director of JayrConsulting Ltd.

http://www.jayrconsulting.co.uk


Author:: John Roberts
Keywords:: Train,Commute,Work,Subway,Commuter Train
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Thursday, August 30, 2012

Farewell to Lester Graybill

I never met a man, who could shake my hand, and make my heart feel like a hearth afire.

I never met a man, who could smile so easy, real honest.

I never met a man, who could make my dark soul, fill with light, by merely standing with him, in conversation.

I never met a man, who could come by honesty, so cleanly, so believably solid.

I never met a man, who could capture my soul, with the stories of simplicity, and sincerety of his youth.

I never met a man, who could live so modestly, so humbly, so simply, and be so very happy to live.

I never met a man, who could toil in the garden with his wife and find riches in the earth, riches which I could never see.

I never met a man, with a beard, so natural, so manly, that I just wanted to give it a little tug.

I never met a man, who was lacking in height, but, huge in stature.

I never met a man, who could wear clothing, tattered, worn, freyed, and look so regal, though, he woul d not understand that, at all.

I never met a man, who could tell you a story with his eyes, eyes with depth so bottomless, that, words were sometime inappropriate.

I never met a man, who could bring children into this world, who could be just as kind, and loving, and warm, as he. I call it drinking out of the same cup if you will?

I wandered around this big world, looking deep into the souls of individuals, here and there, seeing much of me, in them, nothing special there.

I never met a man who could make me feel the sadness, which I felt today, upon learning of the passing of Lester Graybill. The world will truely be a lesser place without him.

Goodbye my Dear Friend


Author:: Luksi Humma
Keywords:: Old order German Baptist, Old men, Dying, Kindness, Love, Warmth, G rey Beard, Big Heart
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The Lotus Demon of Mercury A Poetic Mytho

The Lotus Demon: Born from the Horns

Born from the horns
Of a wingless archangel
With the pulse
Of perpetual night
Immortalities jagged creatures
Was the Lotus Demons of Mercury?

[Or so I was told by an old seer
From Quito, Ecuador, who lived in
A volcano just outside the city.

The Lotus Demon: Mercurys Demise

Mercury! Such an awful sight
Planet of darkness with no eyes
Where a great Asteroid had hit:
The sun no longer gave you light.

A hellish moment: was your demise,
Candles blown out, like blinking eyes
Dust resides in your volcanic skies
Who is left? Mercurys Demise.

The Lotus Demon of Mercury [A Misbegotten Species

(This is the tale of the Minds of Saturn, Demonic beings, known as Ancient Legendaries; and the Lotus Demon of Mercury.)

[Note: the Mindsa mere remnant of a low degraded horde of demonic-angelic beingsaborigines, one might saywhom comb the utter darkness of outer space for brute-hood, and thus, found Mercurys inhabitants by chance, residing within an ancient giant crater, another race of demons, lotus demons. Thus, here is the story of a vanishing race that takes place: of which Zoov al the leader, led seven and twenty ((Saturnites)) of his followers into the escalade.

The Poetic Tale

[Mercurynites

Faded, dried and burnt bear-rat meat,
Light-white, flowery solar wine
Volcanic walls all around them,
Hollow lava caves: occupied .

*

[Saturnites

Rodent-pelts over their shoulders
(Deemed by most, most dangerous of all
These:
Demonic invaders from Saturn
Well armed and accoutered with:

Ropes and chains, knifes and swords,
Hooks and nails, crossbows and boards;
All warriors wore human fleece;
All warriors had studded-saber teeth.

*

All the warriors stood stone-still, silent
On the great volcanic rim of Mercury
Black lava, eons of col d and dark
The zenith: cloudless and frozen.

*

And then the sun rose high overhead
The ancient legendaries swore
Countless blasphemies to the Godhead:
AbovebelowGod is no more!

Unnecessary: they hurled blocks
Blocks of disdain inside their chest

(Arousing a battle cryat best; for where there is no God, there is only evil; where there is no light, only darkness; where there is no cold, there is only heat. And so it was like this on this day.)

Like the flaming furnace in the sky
The demons waitedwaited, with raging eyes.

*

This day, within the craters deep
No hungry voices heard from below
Hencethe invaders crept with tapered feet
Upon the sleepingwine filledsouls
Of Mercury.

Lo!caves that once were home became
Gravesalas!by these demonic-beings
Killing the Lotus Demon, as up they crept,
Crept up, over, onto, unto the sleeping prey
Of Mercurythis, this was their very day.

*

The Feast of Saturns Henchman

The vile eating habits of the demon,
Thus commenced:
Compulsively draining marrow;
Drinking liquefied bones: with
Pale-dry teeth, flushed-lungs;
Ripping flesh and eyes, ribs and thighs.

(Atrocious creatures, were these demonic beings from Saturn, of a primal time.)

*

[Then

Black altars were placed upon the sand:
Came, demonic prayers with clasped hands
Unto the Henchmanof hellAgaliarept,
And to the Ten-Winged Serpentthey bowed.

*

[Zoov als epitaph

Zoov bellowed with grasping lizard hands
(Heartily) after throwing rocks on skulls
Clattering loudly his feet, he screamed:
I am the god of Mercury now, the god of all,
I destroyed the Lotus Demon!

The rim of the volcano trembled
(Mysteriously, unrepentant)
From its stomach came smoke and stone,
Lava gases and bouldersbuilding their tomb.

Then, then a queer-colored bl aze multiplied
Dropped into the veins, the muddy veins
Into volcanic pits of the dead planet; thus,
Sealing all that livedlived within, within
Within the solid face of the volcano
Sealing their fate, with a lid.

Note: There were four parts to this poem originally, now combined; completed in March and April of 2004, and the last part finished 1/10/05. And all combined on 1/18/05.

See Dennis' web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com


Author:: Dennis Siluk
Keywords:: Poetic Mytho
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Conquering Confusion

God is not the author of confusion
Where therefore does it begin?
How then can we alleviate it?
The word itself - confusion
Can be separated into two words
Con meaning to deceive
Or the Spanish translation
Meaning with
Such is a paradox of sorts
Perhaps it is chronologically backwards
And the Spanish translation should come first
Which is to say
First we are with our desires
Settled in our hearts
As to that which is true
But somehow thereafter
We question ourselves
Become double minded
And thereby deceive ourselves
Allowing our doubts
To overshadow our desires
Or intermingle and coexist
With our desires
From this comes the fusion
The combining and merging
Of that which is true
And that which is false
Of that which we desire
And that which we do not

How then is a human
To differentiate between
Both desires and doubts
When they both arise from within?
Moreover which of the two
Should bear the most weight
Determine his or her fate
And course of action?
Which of the two
Produces the most satisfaction?

It seems desire
Is under girded by faith
Believing that the inner yearnings within
Can be fully satisfied time and time again
Doubt on the other hand
Is embedded in fear
Throwing caution to the wind
Throughout the year
Such a hesitation
Leads to vacillation
Tending toward a deviation
Resulting in a limitation
Leaving ones self-esteem
Diminished by inner reservations

Such inner withdrawal and reservation
Continuously causes one to miss
Their divine visitation
Though within there is always meditation
In which the true self
The heart within
Ponders and fathoms personal exaltation
The uplifting of the inner self
The fulfilling of the inner desires
The igniting of ones passion with fire

Sad ly however
Most tend to be double minded
Seeking outside opinions
Rather than listening
To the still small voice within
That gives birth to dominion
Dominion over thoughts
Dominion over flesh
Dominion over external opinions
Enabling divine rest
Giving one zeal and zest
To be his or her best.
Such a rest of the soul
A peace within
Shuts out the world
And creates your world
As you know it
And would have it to be
Most however know nothing of the sort
They meander in the mud mentally
Stuck in second opinions
Questioning themselves
Overriding their inner impressions
Intuition
And spontaneous expression
Is it any wonder
People go into depression
When they recoil
From authentic expression
Expression of oneself
Not living for another
Breaking forth into joy
Despite the resistance
Regardless of pain
Projecting themselves
Without disdain
Yet m ost are diminished
Deep within
Always looking
For someone to affirm them
Sadly however
Most cannot even
Affirm themselves
Is it any wonder therefore
That you are left out
Left feeling odd
Left feeling blue
Repeatedly not knowing
What you should do

As for me
I know it not
This dreadful evil
A soulish rot
For I fear not mistakes
Or human upheaval
Ive learned to live
And let live too
Ive learned to stand
And not to bow
No, never bow before
The altar of man
For you were created uniquely
By Gods own hand
Skeptics will come
Critics will go
Nevertheless all
Soon shall know
That this man was born
An original from conception
Passing through the womb
Without rejection
For I shall not fear
No matter what
I feel or hear
Because deep within
I can hear Him
The eternal Father
Who loves me dearly
And affirms me daily
To magnificently
Be me!
In me I rejoice
Made in Gods image
In me I celebrate
No need to deviate
For in Gods likeness
I was made
I am His will
On earth today
Therefore I am
And need not to be.
Therefore what I do
I do so happily
Not driven by ambition
Seeking some position
Yeah rather content
Complete in Christ
And He with me
From a position of victory
I stand amazed
As I work out my salvation
Each and every day
Making new discoveries
Seeing new manifestations
Of all for which I was designed
His creation
With the power to create
Create I do
Not concerned with the future
Each day is new
Even what seems to be a mis-step
With it does God surely make
Something profound
And always great

My Lord and Maker
The Great I AM
Was there through my past
And today holds my hand
Journeying with me
Into the future
Showing me t hat
Which is to come
Removing hesitation
So I can run
Though most do not
Understand
It bothers me not
Im in His hands
Should I fall
Hell hold me up
With such security
I erupt
Like a mighty volcano
As a calve from the stall
I shall go forth
Standing tall
My eyes in front of me
My but behind
Not bound to a memory
The futures fortune I find
Surely I will achieve greatness
For the greater One is in me
Now this is the secret
Listen to me
Before you can become
You first must be
In that youll find
Security
At that moment of time
Upon this rock of revelation
You will know for sure
And be without hesitation
The limits will be broken
The chains fall off your mind
Self awareness and authenticity
You will find
Then confusion will go
And youll live in the know
The knowings of God
The intuitive ability
The magic of heaven
For which He created thee
To flow
To marvel
To move in miracles
To rest
To realize
To not despise
Who you are
From whom you came
Never again
Your desires to tame
Awaken the lion
The conqueror within
Lay to rest confusion
It is a sin
A sin deeply rooted
In fear of man
A fear that cripples
Paralyzes and hinders
A soulish disease
Your life to tease
To rob you
From the ability to realize
Reality is near
Just beneath your eyes
Its not without
Nor is it complex
Reality is in you
Now just relax.

Paul Davis is author of Breakthrough for a Broken Heart a book telling us How to overcome disappointments and blossom into your dreams! He is a Minister, life coach (relational & professional), dating expert, popular worldwide keynote speaker, creative consultant, humor being, adventurer, explorer, mediator, liberator and dream-maker.

Paul's compassion for people & pass ion to travel has taken him to over 50 countries of the world where he has had a tremendous impact. Paul has also brought revival to many in war-torn, impoverished and tsunami stricken regions of the earth. His nonprofit organization Dream-Maker Ministries is building dreams and breaking limitations.

Paul's Breakthrough Seminars inspire, revive, awaken, impregnate with purpose, impart the fire of desire, catapult people into a new level of self-awareness, facilitate destiny discovery and dream fulfillment.

Paul can be contacted at: RevivingNations@yahoo.com - 407-967-7553 or 407-282-1745.

For additional info:
http://www.CreativeCommunications.TV
http://www.BreakthroughSeminars.org
http://www.DreamMakerMinistries.com


Author:: Paul Davis
Keywords:: Paul Davis,prolific author, keynote public speaker, breakthrough seminars, life coach, Minister,Poet
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The Fox Run Tavern

A tavern on Main Street, a lone neon sign
A lady in waiting, a star in the night
A heyday for mating in blue neon lights
A table by the Bar and the moments just right

Place your bets on the table squeeze them up tight
Pause for a cigarette lend me your light
A moment of silence, a wiggle in her walk
Then back to the game with its chalk and small talk

How can I say it without being crude?
How can I make you believe it's the truth?
How can I fight it without being a prude?
The awkward exciting pleasures of Booze

You know of the motto. Its been said before
Tease her and please her and make her for sure
Drinks on the house, Ill buy you a round
The rumble and tumble of the sounds from around

The closeness of bodies, the drizzle and ooze
The words of a song that dabbles to choose
A moment in heaven, a night so cool
How can I save it and remember the mood?

The hour is now waning. No wor ds need be said
A dumbness of numbness lays caution to bed
No thoughts of tomorrow as each moment is tossed
To the winds of sin as each rainbow is lost

How can I say it without being crude?
How can I make you believe it's the truth?
How can I fight it without being a prude?
The awkward exciting pleasures of Booze

Benjamin Cox, writing under the pen name, Ben James, disliked writing until he was forced to take a writing class to enter college in 1973. Since that time he has written many poems and short stories and the novel, Insider Dreams. Currently he is the president of Mayes County Writers Club, the treasurer of Pryor Creek Investment Club, the master at arms of the Will Rogers Toastmaster Club and lives with his wife, Betty in Pryor, Oklahoma


Author:: Benjamin Cox
Keywords:: Bar,Nightclub,Pool,Beer,Booze,Women,
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A Happiness Poem

If a Happiness poem could bring forth a smile,
Then my face would always dress in style.

If my ears could hear my computer screen,
From one to another, they, too, would grin.

My keyboard types for my eyes not my tongue
This Happiness poem will never be sung.

But what of my eyes? Don't they shine?
Yes, but not from this poem of mine.

The pen is mightier than the sword,
But a pen can write only words.

The feelings I sense and the senses I feel
For keyboard and screen remain far too real.

My ears and my nose remain at rest.
My cheeks and hairline are doing their best.

But if this Happiness poem could make my mouth smile,
My face would forever dress up in style.

About The Author

David Leonhardt first published this Happiness poem in A Daily Dose of Happiness at http://TheHappyGuy.com/daily-Happiness-free-ezine.html. Read his friendship poem at http://TheHappyGuy.com/friendship-poem.htm l

info@theHappyguy.com


Author:: David Leonhardt
Keywords:: Happy,Happiness,Poetry,Poems,Happy poem,Entertainment,Writing
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Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Banana Republic

Like a cat I slumber, blissfully unencumbered,
Through eighty per cent of my allotted span,
Occasionally awoken, when dissent is spoken,
And I invent another cunning five year plan,
Lately it was pensions, that were being mentioned,
So I borrowed from the French and Robespierre,
Scrap all that went before, saved by tooth and claw,
And let my all equal Citizens appear,
Currently it is time, for me to be in my prime,
For there is another election looming,
I have to appear sincere, for part of this coming year,
And assure everyone that everything is booming,
Never mind strict quotas, Ive imported multitudes of voters,
And told them which party let them stay,
Though Ive rigged the postal vote, and defamed everyone of note,
You never know what might happen on the day.

So to be on the safe side, I swallow all my pride,
And allow my people to hear my hallowed voice,
And roll out the charade, put on the faca de,
And even make believe they have a choice,
Next time around the crown, will be trampled underground,
House of Lords and Lord Chancellor history,
With the other Chancellor gone, I alone will soldier on,
Yes, then there will only ever be me,
Ill hold elections for you, as all dictators do,
And fill positions with those that grease my palm,
As for civil unrest, there is always house arrest,
Or secret imprisonment for those that mean me harm.

So from national nursery, via educational history,
You can in time join the New Labour Youth,
Be taught gay is fun, and the state is number one,
And any other opinion is untruth.

Ask the media if unsure, or philosophically impure,
Brainwashing British Citizens is their forte,
They will surely put you right, or visit you at night,
Either way they will stop you being naughty.

Meekly follow all the rules, laid down in our schools,
Where state is all and learni ng is suppressed,
And you can safely be ignored, not seen as being flawed,
Just be another number like the rest.

Better far to be, a part of mediocrity,
Within your state and the seeds they have sown,
Than to disappear, or to live in constant fear,
For having a mind and will all of your own.

How is it that we, lost the option to be free,
How did we give away our right to choice,
How did we believe, whilst being deceived,
When did we decide to lose our voice.

How did we select the politically correct,
Why are we victims of unpunished crime,
Were we such fools as not to see the tools,
Or did we think they would go away in time.

The tap is darkly dripping, droplets that are gripping,
Our throats today our minds in time to come,
We must turn the tide, and reaffirm our pride,
We must prove we are not deaf and dumb.

It is no good wailing, chained up to your railing,
That you want the vote bac k like before,
For no one hears your plea, they are deaf to you and me,
No on cares about us any more.

This is about manipulation, of us and of our nation,
This is about illusions triumph over actual reason,
This is about lies, and the power to mesermerise,
This is about a slowly creeping treason,
This is about the eviscery, of the neutral BBC,
This is about what poison will soon take its place,
This is about five year plans, and Citizens of Euroland,
This is about civil service, with a very red face,
This is about soaps and plays, which in very subtle ways,
Try to put into our minds new sets of plausible truths,
This is about newspaper demise, in the guise of purveying lies,
Whilst the state preaches Pravda through schools to our youth,
This is about vision and sound, and any means that is allowed,
Trying to persuade you against your own common sense,
This is about duplicity, making seem true what cannot be,
And hoping you will at very least sit on the fence.

This is about unelected expertise, being paid huge taxpayer fees,
Alaister Campbells school of used car salesmen integrity,
This about usage of such curs, and their lies, and their slurs,
To pull the wool over the eyes of you and me.

Maybe feeble opposition is fuelling this submission,
But this is not about parties or their competence,
This is simply a war, not about who to vote for, But who to definitely vote against.

Malcolm Pugh was a civil engineer then a systems programmer - slightly deranged retired now.


Author:: Malcolm Pugh
Keywords:: poem Poetry malcolm james pugh election voting votes political politics blair blairdom banana republ
Post by History o f the Computer | Computer safety tips

Let Your Feelings Be Your Guide

The light of all eternity shines with me now / My Feelings light up my life / How I find my way is determined by them / They illumine my path and show me who I am

When I was young, I felt so many things / Then came the day when I could not stand the pain / My world was chaos then, filled with sorrow and grief / So I closed up to protect that fragile Self within

Years would go by before I could open again / I was forced to by circumstances beyond my control / Life dealt me blows which I later recognized as my own / To awaken me to that sorrow deep within my Soul

I worked hard to find my way back to the Light / To that place within where I could feel once again / There my Heart shone forth with a brave face / And shed light on all that I had concealed

Now I see how I closed that tender-hearted Self / How I froze in the face of my destiny / Troubles swirled around as a constant source of grief / And I fell to sleep out of fear

I am awakening now to the deep void within / Where Ive stored all those troubles and pain / I fight my way back to that center once again / So I can come forth completely and be true

My life moves forward as of this day / When I committed to finding my true Self / Ive engaged all manner of demons on this journey / To return to that Source deep inside

I wish for life to fill me now and bring all it can / I am thirsty for experience and for Growth / I want lavish riches from my Soul to fill me / So that I can truly enjoy all that I behold

This work is sometimes difficult as I have learned / But no more than any task requiring Love / This journey enriches me with its purpose / And fills me with Life and Soul

This is my gift to mySelf, my own holy Soul / To have, to hold and to behold / This Heart that bled is now healing its wounds / And can prosper again from what Life brings

Let there never be a return to where hurts cramp me up / And fill me with bitterness and pain / I am awake now, yes, and can move ahead / To appreciate all that Life has assigned

Oh glory to you, my Sweet Soul, for coming this day / I thank you from the bottom of my Heart / We two can sing together the praises of Love / That take us forward on this journey through time

Never let it be said that one so deserving / Could not find his or her way Home / All whom will follow shall see this Light in turn / And know that their journey can be won

I take you with me now, my Sweet Soul / For you are here in my hands / Where I can behold you / And together, we can be so bold

Move on, you say to me. Move on, my love / The Light wishes for us to do so / And my Heart sings with the possibilities / So that Yes is the answer I can render with ease

My Heart is filled with Love and joy in this moment / Knowing that I am with you, my Soul / My Feelings tell me you are there and always were / Till that sleep came over me earlier on

By awakening to your touch do I know You / And find my own truth there in your eyes / You show me through Love what my purpose can be / I am inspired by this attentive design

I am pleased we are here together, in this life / I am pleased that our love is so strong / For now I can reach you, my Sweet Soul Sublime / When you call to me from deep within my Heart

I have your answer Dear, and know this to be true / That you and I are forever to be born / In this life or another, we join with each other / And We Soar . . . And We Soar . . . And We Soar . . .

Maurice Turmel has a PHD in Counseling Psychology and was a practicing therapist for nearly 25 years. Spiritual and Personal Growth issues are dealt with regularly in his monthly Ezine The Hungry Times Journal. The above piece was excerpted from his Personal Growth book Parables for a Modern Age. He has authored 3 such books and is also a performing songwriter. He can be reached through his Website at: http://www.mauriceturmel.com


Author:: Maurice Turmel
Keywords:: Self, Soul, Feelings, Emotions, Guidance, opening up, inner voice, Inspiration, Motivation, Growth
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Mother's Day

Once again its Mothers day
A day thats just for you
For me to show my gratitude
For everything that you do
You always have time for me
Even in your busy day
A friendly word, a joke or two
Your Loving smile goes a long way
I hardly ever say, I Love you
But I feel with all my heart
A Love that will never end
Its been growing from the start
Youll always be my Special friend
Yes Mum thats what you are
There could never be another Mum
Who compares to you, by far
Thank you for being wonderful
I Love you, yes I do
You are the greatest ever Mum
Thank you for being you.

I have been writing poetry for many years and regularly have it published in print. My poetry is published by Forward Press and in many other publications. So I'm now putting my poetry online. I publish my poetry on my Blog jo-hale-poetry at http://jo-hale-poetry.blogspot.com/ and on 8hop.com My poetry on 8hop.com. I also have information about my poetry at http://www.squidoo.com/jo-hale-poetry. I'm married to my husband Peter. I was born in May 1970 and am a Taurean star sign.


Author:: Joanne Hale
Keywords:: Mothers's day, Mother, Mum, Love, Care, Tribute, Mom, Family, Caring, Daughter, Son, Loving, Special
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

The Macabre Poems Part Five: poems 81 to 110

81) Silence Falls on Uruks walls: An ode to Uruk

If it had not been for the temple harlot, goddess of Uruk, Shamhat, there would not have been an Epic of Gilgamesh, for she it was that brought back to the Great City of Uruk, the Sumerian Capital, the prize Gilgamesh had been longing for; for she had seduced Enkidu, Gilgameshs equal, whom she instructed thereafter on the fineries of civilization, for he was a man-beast in the woods; she brought him a lover, as in time, after the death of Enkidu, Gilgamesh would marry and have a son, and Shamhat would bear a child. The year is 2700 BC. In the poem you are about to read, Huwawa is a giant, who guards the Cedar Forest, Enkidu lives in the forest like a beast.

Silence falls on Uruks walls
While a demigod rules the lands;
A raging wind from the Cedar Forest
Comes with the rattling of Huwawa.
And with the harlot Shamhat,
So follows Enkidu, the beast-man.

* * *

Eldritch stars fall on U ruks walls
As the red moons light fades in;
The granite walls are hinged in gray,
And Gilgameshs mind is bent
He weaves a web to hold his city,
Sumer, king of all Sumerians.

* * *

Shamhat laced her web
By baring her pulsing loins;
Her beauty glimmered in the woods
To the one by the shadowy pond.
The beast-man Enkidu, now doomed,
As she woos.

* * *

The city is joyous with star-dust,
For Gilgamesh has found his equal;
No more boys, virgins or wives,
No more rages like flying equals,
No more building tower-steeples,
Peace and harmony is now at hand.

* * *

Silence falls on Uruks walls
For Enkidu killed Huwawa:
Gilgamesh killed the Bull from Heaven,
And the netherworld cursed the land;
Shamhat died when the temples fell,
And Gilgamesh died in bed.

82) The Minds Eye

Life: it is fact, it is written,
It is part dream and part reality?
I never woke u p
And I never went to sleep.

I wasnt scarred by bullets;
And I didnt write my dreams.
I never looked for reality within them,
I can take or leave them.

In them I roamed aimlessly,
In all seasons of the year
I can dream all this or live it;
Beyond my minds sight.

Inspired by Yuli Daniel, June 27 2004 [#320

Atlantean Poems
[Poems 83 to 98

The Archnights Scrolls: Codex Atlanteanus

Standing upon Terceiras soil
Rising above the Atlantic,
I muse on Atlantean glory:
A time past, no longer to be.
For, in those distant days of old
Sunken now, in the depthless seas,
Reside the Grand Archnights scrolls
Now remnants, of slime and sodden ashes
At the bottom of a tireless sea.

Within these gardens of Poseidon
The poet Anases spirit roams,
Looking for la Tour dyvoire.

And, should he find the crown scrolls,
What shall happen to legends told?

Note: An Atlanteon p oem, 6/27/04; #319

The Princess Ais and the Poet-Hippokamp

As the great ship sailed the eastern expanse,
Princess Ais, looking westward to Atlantis,
Sangfarewell, farewell, thrice farewell,
To Yllipha, in northern Iffrikonn.
Then, listening to the moon-foamed stories of Aon,
Of the river Amphus, and its delta,
She dreamt of its grand and famous Archkingdom,
Of its strange, spellbound, and renowned obelisks,
Of Atlantis metropolitan streets.

Aonpoetic eyes of green, shoaling seas,
A mane of mystic, sea-bright hair;
Ais, eyes of blue and night-black hair:

With Atlantean lyre and harp, strings of silver,
The Hippokamp seduced the princess Ais.

Iffrikonn an island country; Aon, the Hippokamp: seahorse

Aon, the Hippokamp

The sound of the lyre came, sweet and clear,
Ferrying poetic notes of the Hippokamp,
In the far, dark waters of Atlantis
Archkingdom of every land and sea.

With dying breath, and horse-like chest,
To death, and oblivion that sneer
His last breath he took, with nothing of tears,
And died in splendor, amongst his peers.

#323

The Purple Robes of Atlantis

Now resting on the ocean floor,
Atlantis kings in ocean graves
Could neither keep nor save her.
Thus will be no glittering sun,
No hands to open ancient vaults
Or treasures stars once guarded,
Treasures stars will guard no more.

O gentlest bard, sing sweet, sing sweet,
For the poets lost in ancient times

II

The king, the king, I saw you crowned
With jewels and gems, hemmed within,
Within your murex-dyed and gilded robes
While the world paced and stored your glory,
And the god-king sat, deep his eyes
Looking at gold and cyclopean stone,
With a lions face, upon his throne,

Deep within the starless sea,
Patiently he waits, he waits.

Note: in a vision in l983, I saw on e of the kings of Atlantis, in his purple robs.

The Lovely and Dreadful Fountain of Ddath

16,501 BC: on the island of Atlantis, the hymn of the maiden from Noom of At-Tho-Then (brother and sister) is played out in the following poem.

Lailis, O Lailismy love, my love,
(sings and plays the minstrel Ampara)
I love you so much, even in dust,
Of Poaphus, in fair Atlantis.
(And loves were lost for many years.)
Both were sundered by duty and lyre
(and loves were lost for many years).
But it came to pass Atlas Naorthris
Had Ampara sing within his court;

Whereupon both Lailis and Ampara
Rediscovered their long-lost love

At which the wandering minstrel
And goddess ran off, ran off,
To the far shores of the sea,

To the seaport of Allodium
To the fountain of Ddath:
And drank death away.

[#327; 6/30/04

Xilvaa, The Shepherdess

(13,500 BC)

Within the heartland of Atlantis,
Resides the Eiphlox Mountains,
And a mountain vale called Quloyx,
Where shepherds with warm hearts
Gaze with blue eyes into the skies:
Thus, lovers met in the midst of delight.

Who was this stranger who took her heart?
The one his father made to part;
Whose love was proven beyond all doubt?

Thus the two lovers grieved, apart,
And turned to salt the mountain lakes,
Until the Archking fixed all things,
Naming his son Lailliquis
Worthy of Xilvaa, for man and wife.

[#330-6/30/04

How it was in Atlantis [Parts 1 thru IX

I: Queen Lillttis (15001 BC)

By the Great Citadel of Poseidon
Rests Queen Consort Lillttis,
Who battled two personalities

Inside her royal chest,
Until she was dead

[#326--6/29/04

II: Mount Atlantis

Close to the ocean
Resides her great harbor
The Acropolis of Atlantis.

[#328-6/29/04

III: The Acropolis

O great stones of marble, Soaring fifteen-hundred feet high
Your life, art, culture touched the skies.

[#3296/29/04

IV: Astrologers of Atlantis

High upon Mount Atlantis
Resides an observatory,
And once a year upon the dark
During the autumnal equinox,
The astrologer Pharanos
Allows the stars to study him.

#331-6/30/04

V: Atlantis in Winter

And to her north, endless twilight,
Countless fantasies in winters snow;
Where lad and lass and unicorn
Play, in ice and snow,
With autumn leaves of old:
Orange, red and gold.

#335-7/01/04

VI: Southern Atlantis

Marble steps along her shores,
With a tropical glow from the sun,
Antarctic breezes to cool the skin,
And help those off shore, sailing.

Gigantic flowers are everywhere,
Deep in the Southern Archkingdom.

#332-7/1/04

VII: The Atlantic Squid

Ebbing in the semi-tropic seas,
The giant squids reside within,
Within th e volcanoes sub-marine,
Together with the flowers and bees,
So many arch-mysteries to see.

#3347/01/04

VIII: The Obelisks of Atlantis

Her nine-sided ivory tower obelisks,
Atlantis thrones for kings and gods,
Are topped with trident crowns.

#325, 6/29-30/04

IX: The Lost Archkingdom Atlantis

Your towers, temples, and turrets,
Your tapestries and treasures of fur,
Fountains, pools and waterfalls,
Your gardens, lilies and poppies,
Your sculptures, palaces, observatories,
Your giant pearls of Yndessoss,
Corals red and white from Mu,
Lemurias vast urns and vases
Give glory to you, Archkingdom Atlantis.

[#324, 6/29-30/04

Atlantis

98) April in Atlantis
[Written by the King of Atlantis, while in Hell

It is April in Atlantisthe bridges are chilled, the vessels and wines are distilled. And down the canal in The Gardens of Poseidon, the pigeons harvest corn; the bronze horses stare; still distant (above waters of peril) rest temple grounds, and uncouth, uncrowned, the lyrist sounds. Yes! Atlantis in April is toxic, with time, with its islands of stone and grandeurs signs.

Bye, my esteemed friend, Atlantis, this April morning day, with narrow, crowed streets to guided my way, and arches with imprinted golden-carved tales. Good-bye, my spoiled Atlantis, I am bound in Hell.

#342, 7/04

End of the Atlanteon Poems

Part of Legends:

99) The Haunting of Mesa Verde

The Spirit of Mesa Verde: They know I am coming, I said, I will tell the story as you wish. So you say, the voice said, tell it as you may; come into my grave (I am waiting). What shall I call you, I asked; Youve written it already, ancestor! he remarked, You come from a long way to see me, feel me, sense melet it be said I guard the dead. [30 AD.

I am the haunting Anasazi
Of the Cliff Dwellings of Mesa Verd
And the legends told
With thei r winds and dearth bones.

I am the enemys ancestor
Of this Lost World
Haunted by shadows and cliffs
By me and eagles.

I guard the last kivas
Of Colorado
Whose people through me find rest
The others moved before reckoning.

I am the warrior
Of Mesa Verde
That tried to find reprief
Who found only darkness and stillness.

July 30 2004 #343/Reviesed August

End of the Atlanteon poems
And Legends

Political Macabre

Political Prose Poem

100) The Great Sow

I

It is a funny thing, the huge sow each year, at the State Fair, they put a prize ribbon on the biggest, ugliest, and fattest sow humanity can breed

As the public stares, no-one questions what it ate, how much it ate, how it became so fat and ugly; its just glorified as is: pig-flesh, layers of pig-flesh.

Need I say more about this unforgettable sight, which is like the United Nations and its ongoing role with Israel? W here only the United States, the fifteenth member, stood up for Israel?

Yes, says someone in the back, one of the fifteen members of the International Court, who condemned the building of the Great Wall of Israel.

Yes, yes indeed, he repeats to himself.

II

It is a funny thing to see, at the State Fair, this vast bulk of animal flesh lounge its bellyas does the United Nations International Court lounge its belly, review its International Issuesits eyes grooved in fat, set on a vision of a Blue Ribbon (as is the Court set on the destruction of Israel).

This ancient sow has been around a very long time, it just changes its name when it becomes too obvious.

The farmer whistled, but the barrel of fat is taking a nap; yet it grunts, grunts like Whoopi Goldberg on stage for John Kerry, with her dirty jokes. I ask myself: What does the grunt mean? Some one says: Constraint: it wants to eat more, but is being held back.

III

The sow has a brain, small as it is, maybeyes, I know for a fact it is thinking, and I know what it is thinking, and I am willing to share it with you: it is like old grease caked on a frying pan, a skillet or whatever, melting away; its tongue tastes displeasure its a Jew, the tongue says. Vanity and empty pride, but this is disregarded, triumph and pride prevail. The Jew is still the nigger of years past, the one they hung, the many they hung down in the south.

Now the sow looks at the empty dishes on the table and says: Bless my soul, nothing left for the Jew, and gives a glowing smile to the PLO, and gets a big thank you from the sow feeder, Yassir Arafat

The sow now goes back to sleep, snoring. Anyone willing to look down at the sow down through the wooden gates will see a face innocent, peaceful and assured. But try to get into the pen, the beast will sit up abruptly, and the pen cracking beneath him will terrify you.

*Published on the site: useless-knowledge, J une, 2004

War Poems

101) Sunday: Vietnam

[l971

The bugle doesnt blow over here,
no bands or disheveled hymns,
we stand side by side, in groups, pairs,
each to his ownto worship Him.

With dirty faces, hair long, a disgrace,
half-naked with the scorching heat
we stand by our hutches and pray;
life crawls in a war zone, a snails pace.

And across the bay rockets are released
you can hear the whistling sound they make:
coming closer, closer, closerbang!
I move down, over, up around them.

I yearn for my busy Sundays home,
Grandpa makingpork-rib stew;
the newspaper: comics, headlines;
a long, calm sleep: with pleasant dreams.

I yearn for lazy-clear afternoons,
with an intelligent book to read;
voices of my mother, brother, grandpa;
the simple things like the birds singing.

[1971

102) A Gloomful Dusk: South Vietnam

Many nights I see the shadows of the moon,
I never sleep with two eyes shut
In my hutch, on my bed, in the gloom
The gloomful dusk, with death sounds
Morbid sounds of rockets in my sleep;
I hear a cry, rise, rise, to your feet
And I grab my helmet and M16
Prepared to meet the enemy,
In the mountains and across the bay.

I look, and look, wait and breathe;
Breathe these nights away, like night and day.
Deadly insects swarm in my way
Tomorrow white clouds I pray.
Shrapnel flying like burning glass
Across my faceI breathe and wait.

Note: both poems taken from Journal, l971, revised 8/04 into Poetry Sunday: Vietnam [#344 and A Gloomful Dusk: South Vietnam [#345.

Miscellaneous

104) No Remorse

When askedin future time
What should I say on Judgment day?
For then it will be too late,
Too late to pray [so I hear.

What will we all sayon this day
With cold remorseless brains?
Like shifting sands
Upon the plains.

What shall we all say this day?
With sour tears in ecstasy;
When he says:
Ive been listening!

8/23/04 #347

105) Legend of the Little Ute
[Ancient Mesa Verde

She came from the 3rd world into the 4th
Through a tunnel its been said,
And died in the drought;
The drought that lasted twenty-four years,
In the 11th Century AD, she was a Ute.

Bundled, mummified, in the cliff dwellings
The dwellings of Long House, by a window,
Bundled with a turkey;
A turkey to keep her calm, and company,
On her long, long, very long journey.

Written while at Mesa Verde, #346/8/6/04

106) Grandpas Tales

Old Grandpa was a jolly-man,
With tales he told of younger days,
To all the kids around our house
Through heated summer days.

Old grandpa was a liar of course,
So all the grown-up would say;
But what the heck, go and listen:
And tell us lateranyway!

He was a hero of the Great War,
A prize fighter in Japan;
He traveled the seven seas he said
And could out swear any man.

It may be that his tales were true,
Or possible he could have lied;
However, I wrote them down for you,
The day before he died.

6/23/04 #348

107) The Vanishing Giant Tortoise

Sunset ebbing, upon the Isla of Santa Cruz
With the immortal breathing skies of blue,
Of the Galapagos
Sets on the resting tortoises; upon
Their towering glazed shells: some born
During the time of the Civil War

April 23 2004 #350

108) Theft in Trujillo, Peru

So long, so long, so long;
What tears you children bring
For an unsung victim who
Put your father in jailfor stealing.
Yes, stealing, stealingmy money
Cry a tear, a simple tear, another tear:
Simply, I see what you see
You are sorry for being caught.

April 25 2004, Trujillo, Peru

109) Parqueitos

The sun is blooming, bright and high
As I rest outdoors in this Caf
(El Parquetie, in Lima, Per):
The park is green and flowery;
Streets are full of cars, horns, smog;
People, people, people, all about,
On lazing boulevards (hereabouts).
Here, in slumberous Mirafloras,
On lazing boulevards (all about).

April 7 2004, Lima Peru

110) The Mists of Sorrow

Flee the mists of sorrow,
Find your wings and fly away.
Born is just today, not tomorrow
Sunken sunsets only fade.

April 11 2004, Lima, Peru #349

See Dennis' web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com


Author:: Dennis Siluk
Keywords:: Po etry
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Ain't No Cure This Ill

Man has walked on the Moon,
Yet we cant Cure the Sickness of the Spoon.
We live in a Society that thinks fixing our Ills-
Is hidden in the Magic of all sorts of little pIlls.
If you are tired, Cold, Hungry or Depressed
Grab some liquid courage, & get those feelings repressed!
I see broken Souls walking our streets, with hollow Eyes.
And I wonder how they're surviving? Thieving, dealing or lies?
The Cold rolls in off of the shore, heavy with dew-
And wonder how those living in the river-bottom will do?
I see 'em line up for hot showers and free hot meals,
Some come for legal aid, brought in a van on wheels.
My heart goes out to them. Hell, it damn near breaks.
That would be me if I could not see my mistakes.
Trusting men, instead of my higher power;
Thinking a dishonest life could get me ivory tower;
Stuffing my feelings down deep inside,
I would have just been better off if I had just cried.
Thinking numbing pain, was better than dealing with it.
Thinking I had reasons to be like that, cuz I used to get hit.
Yeah, could have been me instead of my friend who died out in the Cold.
Too many Xanex bars and a bottle of that old tequila gold;
He curled up to sleep and then breathed his last breath,
And freed himself from the pain, by finally embracing his death.
Theres been others; just as miserable and lonely in death,
There will be more who figure it's a way to clear their debts.
Could have been me, if I kept going down hill.
Could be me checking out tonight, cuz of just one-too-many-a-pill.

Deborah Coss, has been writting since she was 8 years old, getting published off and on since 15, and finally realized her child hood dream, of carrying press credentials, when sh e worked for http://www.womanmotorist.com She now publishes her own site, http://www.1kindthing.com She also creates some fine arts, and loves photographer, commenting that she is a social portraiture photographer. She has a very constructionist attitude in art and loves making masks and other 3 dimensional objects. In photographer, she loves the medium of black and white. She is a diverse writer, and has published several types of sites for several types of businesses. On a personal side, she is a survivor of an extremly violent childhood and some personal trauma, including being crushed by a car at age 3 and half. Thus, her site 1kindthing.com, tells of overcoming hardships, in addition to her many other styles of writing.


Author:: Deborah Coss
Keywords:: Moon, Cure, Sickness, Spoon, Ills, Society, Coss, Magic, pIlls, Cold, Hungry, Depressed, Souls, Eyes
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Tuesday, August 28, 2012

How Daily Haiku Can Make Your Life Easier

So you're off to work. A million things to think about. Deadlines and your boss are at your throat and you wonder why you even got out of bed. At least you have daily Haiku!

Daily Haiku is a new service presented by Wisteria Press, a small Haiku press located in San Diego. For those of you who don't know, Haiku is an age-old Japanese Poetry form that uses just a few words to capture the beauty of nature. While the 5-7-5 syllable rules may or may not be followed by modern Haiku poets, the poem's form itself really hasn't changed.

It still speaks of quiet moments we may have missed due to our busy lives. In fact, it is exactly these overlooked moments that Haiku specialize in! For example, take a look at this daily Haiku poem (from Wisteria Press)

Sunrise --
Mist hides
The sea clif fs

In just 6 words we have a complete picture before us! We know what time of day it is (morning) because the author has indicated it by using the word sunrise. We know that it is misty out and that the viewer must be on a beach somewhere because mist is obscuring the sea cliffs. All of this is accomplished in just 6 short words. Amazing!

Imagine receiving this kind of Poetry on a daily basis. Why, you might actually be able to slow down a little, if only for a few seconds and appreciate nature's beauty. There is so much we don't see. Fortunately, we have poets and other artists who help us take a breath and notice things of beauty we may have otherwise passed by. A daily Haiku service will help you see these missing gems and give you a moment of peace.

Edward Weiss is a poet, author, and publisher of Wisteria Press. He has been helping students learn how to write Haiku for many years and has just released his first book Seashore Haiku! Sign up for free daily Haiku and get beautiful Haiku Poems in your inbox each morning! Visit http://www.wisteriapress.com for Haiku books, lessons, articles, and more!


Author:: Edward A. Weiss
Keywords:: Haiku,daily Haiku,Stress,Stress reduction,Stress relief,Poems,Poetry
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Poetry is Written for a Universal Audience

I’ve been writing, reading, and singing poetry for 46-years, and I’ve never heard anything so silly as poetry cannot be enjoyed universally, or it is strictly made for the poet. It is, if given a good translator: translatable, I’d say perhaps 50% of poetry. And most poets do not write for themselves, they wrote for the world, the last of the truth givers. One half the Old Testament is written in a form of poetic prose, if not, epic, ode, elegy, or dramatic. Most of your songs today are poetry in motion, a form of personification, a figure of speech that gives human qualities to inanimate objects or ideas, or can. Homer’s Trojan War is poetic; without it we’d have never known there was a war in 1250 BC in Asia Minor.

I do agree with the fact, perhaps a large hunk of poetry is not translatable from one language to another, but most epic poems are, like the Epic of Gilgamish; it frees the spirit, it is like music. In most of Faulkner&# 8217;s early writings you will see a pattern, a form of poetry, he had a hell of a time trying to avoid mixing genres of poetic prose fiction into his historical novels and short stories.

In poetry virtually every line of any poem contains all levels of meaning, condensed: poems are short stories, if stretched out. Thus, you do not have to run around town and buy 20-novels to get to the end of the story.

I’ve read poetry from many ages, from the Old English, representing works in oral tradition, the old bard who had to memorize to make sure it got to its right place, with its accented syllables per line. To Anglo-Norman or Middle English poetry, where we get the French lyric forms.

And I can go on to the Renaissance which their poetry gave rebirth to humanistic culture, focused on mankind rather than on God; to the 17th century of Neoclassicism, all the way to what we have now Postmodernism.

In poetry we have what we call verse, meter, both wor ds for poetry itself, meter is the pattern created in a line though. So if anything, you have in poetry the best of that language in a poem.

Like anything else you write, the poet and reader needs to know the audience, who is the audience he is writing for or to. Some folks say they can’t understand Faulkner, to me he is an easy read, I’ve read all his stuff; and Hemingway, is like he is writing to me. But there are some authors I get lost with after a few sentences. The poet doesn’t necessarily write to the whole world at large, no one does, but some can. And like any story, you got to know what the main subject of the poem is (or in a story: the theme, plot and insight), and if the poet can’t give it, he perhaps is not as good as he’d like to be, or you’re not as good as you think you are in reading a condensed story, in poetic form.

You also have to figure out: does the poem belong to a genre, again like reading fiction o r nonfiction; these are normal questions we ask ourselves, usually when we read anything. And like many writers, such as William Burroughs, and his friends of the 50s, you have to take into consideration what figure of speech is being used in the poem, just like the story. Nowadays people do not want to take any work in reading, but it requires this to have a good read. And you may want to know what the poet’s life and times were. If I read Fitzgerald now, he is like plain music, but in his day he was a flash of lightening.

See Dennis' web site: http://dennissiluk.tripod.com


Author:: Dennis Siluk
Keywords:: Article
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

It Is Here

And what will they find when they excavate into our experiences, our memories, the result of our inspiration, manifesting itself in our art and literature, our culture and the tone in which we approach everything. Beneath the bedrock of our personalities, as anarchists and Revolutionaries -- writers and painters -- creatures and beings -- when they dig beneath the philosophy imbedded in our books and published in our independent presses, and they want to know. When they do this, they will find every reason that we are who we are, that we oppose the things we do, that we stand in defense of those we do. Reason is a powerful thing, and every Authority will oppose it -- they will offer as many obstacles to it as much as they love their power. While their ability to imprison, torture, and kill is constantly used as a means to their end, they will forever be envious that the pen can incite a thousand swords, that humane philosophy can conquer the vicious beast of cruelty.

The reasons, as many as there, as simple as they foundation they are implanted upon, are there. For centuries they have struggled under the shadow of Authority. Secretly, a few have found them, and desired to bring them to the light. Anarchy is a wheat-pasted poster on an abandoned building, calling to arms every worker with the slogan, What time is it? Time to organize! It's in the sweat of every protestor who suffered the malignities of police brutality; it's in the blood of every worker who was dismissed from his job because of work with independent unions; it's in the tears of every individual, feeling more and more helpless and this world seemingly grows more arrogant and more inhumane. Anarchy is in the dreams of those who have wished to escape the slavery of the clock. It is imbedded in every just cause, the sole principle of every liberation movement. It is the belief that those who live in a society ought to be the ones who guide it, that those who work in the factories ought to be the ones who own and run them.

What will they call it, when the seething emotions of despair and hopelessness rise to the top, and individuals start doing what they want, refusing and resisting at every cost? What will it be called, when workers start to share a fair share of income, when whatever laws that are passed are passed by the public? What will this be called? When every tyrant has been deprived of every resource, when the angel of mercy is left holding a broken chain, when the exploiters of society must move on because their ventures have become too troublesome, where no children must suffer from debilitating disease because they are afflicted with malnutrition... When community means something more than a shopping center, and education means something more than a high school, and government means something no more... When the star we have all wished upon finally flickers back, when the sighs whispering for a fair life final ly go in unison, when we finally see something more than a reflection when looking into the pond of the future, when life is not just a travelling through the forest at night alone, when the oppressive regimes have been dismantled with the tool of the people... When true Democracy reigns, on principle and not on outcome, what will they call it? Anarchy.

I am an Anarchist, because I believe that no man has any intrinsic right over any other man. I am an Anarchist, because I believe that every man should be given the right to govern themselves, and that if a man is incapable of governing themselves, that they must be equally incapable of choosing another person to govern them, as they would be without ability to know what would be required or needed. I am an Anarchist, because giving Authority to one person has always been at the sacrifice of everyone else. I am an Anarchist, and I can count as many reasons as I can count those who are capable of suffering. For eve ry conscious being, there is another black mark against the regime of tyrants. For every individual struggling for air under the net of consumer society, there is another reason why my heart secretly cries -- another inspiration for every word I have given to literature on Revolution. The reasons why I am an Anarchist are spread throughout the world, in every oppressed society, in every nation where Authority lies within a small amount of people and not with all people.

One day, there will be more of us than them. One day, the workers who have been treated with less regard than the machinery they operate, will revolt. One day, the children of the children of the children of the children, who have been born to do the same as their ancestors: work in gruelling conditions under inhuman supervision and cruelty; one day, these men will read the books leaders have burned, and their soul will drink from the spring of vitality. One day, we will all try to understand befor e we try to act. Marked on the calendar as today for every Anarchist, this day is a Revolution, where the minds of men finally are consistent with their heart's yearnings -- when the lash and whip are no longer enough sustenance for the individual, when toil and monotony are no longer enough to keep the blood flowing, when obtaining material possessions can no longer deliver happiness...

This day is coming, and for some of us, it is already here. The historians of the bourgeoise elite will struggle to understand why we do what we do. The reasons are purely human, purely mammalian, purely animal. Beliefs are the guiding cause behind every action. Liberty. Community. Peace. Justice. Love. These are the causes of why we do what we do. The sincerity of the Revolution of our heart must be confirmed by our actions.

The pen that writes the history of our liberation shall be guided by our reasons. If your life in contemporary Capitalism doesn't satisfy you, t hen you already have a reason.

Express yourself.

Act. Organize. Protest. Shoplift. Unionize.

www.punkerslut.com

For Life,

Punkerslut (or Andy Carloff) has been writing essays and poetry on social issues which have caught his attention for several years. His website http://www.punkerslut.com provides a complete list of all of these writings. His life experience includes homelessness, squating in New Orleans and LA, dropping out of high school, getting expelled from college for subversive activities, and a myriad of other Revolutionary actions.


Author:: Andy Carloff
Keywords:: Insurrection, Revolution, the people, Resistance, Insurgence, Rebellion, Anarchy, Authority, State
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety ti ps

Poetry Good Poems Require Tremendous Honesty

I'm an amateur poet. Have written probably a total of 100 good Poems in my life that still would not make it to any of the major national Poetry magazines. (Not that I haven't tried, trust me...)

However, I was very honored about six months to get accepted to a Poetry writing Master Class conducted by a bona fide and famous poet who heads the creative writing program in a major university in my area.

This is a man whose Poems I've admired greatly and have just finished a collection of his recently published works.

My first reaction to the news was to call back my writer's center and make sure that it wasn't a joke or anything.

No, it was true. I was indeed accepted to the Master Class of only 12 budding poets and the selection was made on the basis of our sample Poems by none other than The Master himself.

Wow! I was floored. What an honor. What a delight.

But the next emotion was one of absolute dread and fear!

It was one thing re ading my Poems to my wife and loved ones.

But it would be a whole another kind of experience to expose them to the eagle-like scrutiny of a nationally renown poet and actually a hero of mine.

Jeeez, what the heck was I getting myself into?!

Once the workshop got underway I was really amazed at the quality of writing in that small group of ours.

We were all unknown poets, some of us, like me, never even published. But those lines, absolutely haunting, winding, exquisite lines, reminded me once again why I loved Poetry so much in the first place.

However, although we were all evidently qualified in linguistic pyrotechnics, that meant nothing for our Master. It didn't mean anything for him at all.

He was after something else, something more than just a flash in the pan. Hmmm, I was getting curious about that...

At that point I started to talk less and listen more, my ears wide open like radio-astronomy dishes scanning the heavens.

< p>I've soon realized the crucial ingredient that was lacking in my Poems and what made HIS Poems that hard-hitting, that breath taking.

It was a simple word that I had not thought about within the context of Poetry until that time HONESTY.

Let me explain.

We were all both stepping on the gas and the brakes at the same time.

We were all trying to say something very dear and important to us by choosing Poetry as a platform.

Yet when we reached the end of the road, we were all refusing to let it go, flap our wings and fly off the precipice of our daily over-structured mental landscape.

There was a lot of resistance in each of us to tell the truth and nothing else but the whole truth. Instead, we were falling back on the easy defense mechanisms of linguistic acrobatics and clever phrases and metaphors. Obviously to be clever and tricky was not what Poetry was all about.

HONESTY is one word that I've left that workshop with and I'll be f orever grateful to him for showing me the source problem with every bad poem.

Whether I'll have the courage or not to write Poems in the future that will honor that crucial principle is something else.

But at least now I know what to do to write Poems that reveal not only my own small personal facts (who cares?) but great universal truths as well (what a service to humanity!).

I survived the quake of the Master Class and now I don't have any excuses to write bad Poems any more.

Is that why I haven't written any Poems at all since that date?

---------------------------------------------------------

Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. is a Creative Copywriter, Editor, an experienced and award-winning Technical Communicator specializing in fundraising packages, direct sales copy, web content, press releases, movie reviews and hi-tech documentation.

He has worked as a Technical Writer for Fortune 100 companies for the last 7 years.

In addition to b eing an Ezine Articles Expert Author, he is also a Senior Member of the Society for Technical Communication (STC), and a Member of American Writers and Artists Institute (AWAI).

You can reach him at writer111@gmail.com for a FREE consultation on all your copywriting needs.

You are most welcomed to visit his official web site http://www.writer111.com for more information on his multidisciplinary background, writing career, and client testimonials.

While at it, you might also want to check the latest book he has edited:http://www.lulu.com/content/263630


Author:: Ugur Akinci
Keywords:: ugur akinci,Copywriter,technical writer,Editor,Poetry,Poems,Literature
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Rocks

Take some time to stop and look at nature. Pick up a rock or two and think about where it might have started out and what it might have gone through to end up where you found it.

Rocks

The smoothest rock is the one
that was in the roughest part
of the stream,
where it was tossed to and fro,
bouncing from rock to rock
or tree branch,
losing a little of its roughness
with each bang,
until gradually it comes to rest
in the calm, quiet sand
at the edge of the stream.
When you pick it up
and feel its smoothness
you can feel the vibrations
of its tumultuous journey
and know that
despite the troubles you now face,
you too will come to a calm
and quiet place,
your rough edges smoothed,
and you will grant peace
to those who hold you close.
The energy you contain
will speak to their hearts and minds
and calm them,
and they will realize
that they too can have this p eace,
if only they will trust
that God has their best interests at heart.

We seek out the smooth stones
because we know that they
can easily skip across the surface
of the water for a great distance.
Those with rough edges
quickly sink to the bottom -
they have no longevity.
A good skipping stone is a great find indeed.
For it is in the heart of the stone
that the strength is found.
The outside edges are weak
and break off easily,
but the centre becomes purer
and more durable
as the roughness is ground away.
So too our inner core
becomes more durable
as our rough edges
are smoothed.

Copyright Fran Watson February 2005

Fran Watson
http://www.franwatson.ca
http://www.diet-basics.org
http://www.moremoney4u.org


Author:: Fran Watson
Keywords:: Poem, Motivational, Rocks, Inspiring, Poetry
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Monday, August 27, 2012

Miracles Happen Everyday!

Miracles occur everyday

For those who walk in God's ways

By what they do and say

Desiring truth within

To be liberated

From self and sin

The greatest miracle of all

Is one a man named Paul

Experienced at the age of twenty

While attending the University

It happened when my heart opened

To the drawing of the Holy Spirit

My ears embraced the message

And my mind did hearken to it

After which I prayed a simple prayer

Not to get God out of my hair

Or a religious nut off my back

Nor because I had a heart attack

Not for fire insurance

But for life assurance

I did it because I wanted to

I invited Jesus into my heart

Now how about you?

The greatest miracle I say

Is when a soul yields

To the Creator to pray

And repent of sin

Acknowledging the crucifixion

Celebrating the resurrection

Removing himself from all self -deception

To invite Jesus and the Spirit in

Bringing about a Divine exchange

For his life, God to rearrange

Remove all mental derangement

Depravity

And embrace spirituality

Divine spontaneity

Inner tranquility

A new creation reality

Every disciple's duty

To serve humanity

This is the greatest miracle

When a hardened sinner yields

To God's salvation call

To receive Jesus as Savior

Letting go of all

Lest he horribly fall

From a fall however

God above does lift you

Reposition you

To live victoriously

Commit your life wholeheartedly

Receive from above abundantly

It is then

Jesus by His Spirit

Walks into your life mightily

Empowering, equipping and perfecting you

For it is most Miraculous

God becoming a man

To do for humanity

All He can

Taking your hand

Desiring to be with you everyda y

God multiplies your efforts

As you endeavor to do things His way

Wisdom, power and love

Blessings from above

These are the things God thinks of

For this reason

He has drawn near to you

Through Jesus during this season

Though it was a supreme sacrifice

Christ did not make a fuss

Because the way of God

Is continually Miraculous!

Paul Davis is a worldwide professional speaker, minister and author of several books including Breakthrough for a Broken Heart; Stop Lusting & Start Living; and Holy Ghost Fire.

Paul is a life coach (relational & professional), creative consultant, humor being, adventurer, explorer, mediator, and liberator.

Paul's compassion for people & passion to travel has taken him to over 50 countries of the world where he has had a tremendous impact. Paul has served many in war-torn, impoverished and tsunami stricken regions of the earth. His organization Dream-Maker Minis tries is building dreams, breaking limitations and reviving nations!

Paul's Breakthrough Seminars inspire, awaken, impregnate with purpose, impart the fire of desire, catapult people into a new level of self-awareness, facilitate destiny discovery and dream fulfillment.

Contact Paul to minister, speak at your event or for life coaching: RevivingNations@yahoo.com, 407-967-7553

Watch his Miraculous ministry videos below to see Supernatural power flow. http://www.DreamMakerMinistries.com, http://www.CreativeCommunications.TV


Author:: Paul Davis
Keywords:: miracles happen everyday,Miraculous,Supernatural,Divine,God,Jesus,Holy Spirit,Anointed,Signs,Wonders
Post by History of the Computer | Computer safety tips

Manco Capac: and the Sickle of Death NOW! in Spanish and English

Manco Cpac:
And the Sickle of Death

(1)

Manco Capac lived a long, long life,
If measured, longer than any man alive
But even to him came the cup of death

The Master of the Sun, the Sun God
Called to The son of no race, bright
As the sun and most, most handsome:

Commander, go down and tell
Manco Capac about his death to be,
So he may arrange for deposition

A declaration of his possessions
For I have made him a rich man
The wealth of servants and plenty

Thus, the commander left his abode
Earth bound, and went down to
Manco Capac at the foot of the Andes

There he found this righteous man
In the nearby fields with his servants:
Hail, hail, hail, Father of the Incas!

I come from the Golden City of the
Sun, sent by the Great King of Heaven,
To provide for your successor (departure)

Manco Capac and the Commander
Walked by a huge rock, it talked, said,
In a hu man soft spoken voice:

Holy, holy, is the God of the Sun,
For He summons you, and loves you
Loves and wants you to come home!

Manco Capac pretended not to hear
To hear, as he and the Commander
Walked, and talked, in the courtyard

(2)

Manco Capacs servant said (with awe),
To Mama Ocllo (his devoted wife):
The Commander who is with your husband

is not of our race, nor lives on this earth.
Manco Capac then washed the feet of
The Commander; after that, saw a wonder:

The tears of the Commander turned
Into drops of silver and goldmixed.
Pure silver and pure goldmixed.

(3)

Then the Commander rose in a clap of an
eye, and stood in front of God and said:
Master, Lord, I cannot bring death

upon the house of Manco Capac;
For he is the mot gracious, truthful
And merciful man alive on earth

The Lord said to the Commander:
Go down and keep him company;
Eat with him , and do as he asks

I will give you an all devouring spirit
and I will send the Holy Spirit of God
And a dream unto his servant (to interpret)

(4)

And so it was, the Commander sat
With Manco Capac, at his table and
Prayed and ate with him according

to custom; and they rested the same.
And so it was, the servant wished to
Remain with Manco Capac, but could not

he was told to go rest, it was his wish.
In the middle of the night the servant
Woke up on the fourth hour, in fright

he had had a vision, heard Death talking;
Thus, he run to Manco Capac, and cried:
Death has come! and Manco cried

and so did the Commander cry.
Mama Ocllo then left her room,
Found everyone in tears, and she cried,

but asked: Why is everyone crying?
When Mama Ocllo heard the Commander
Speak she knew he was set apart, holy.

(5)

Said Mama, to her much-loved husband:
Do you not know who t his man is?
Then Manco Capac thought and spoke:

I have lied; I know he is very sacred
A Holy Messenger, from the Sun
I see his brightness, of all things.

And Mama Ocllo knelt down and cried:

Glory be to God, who is bright
With wonders; and husband, she asked,

Let us now look at the revelation
Before us; be it for good or evil? and
Glory be to God, who is like the sun

(6)

Then Manco Capac left his wife to talk
to his servant about his vision;
Said the servant with fear and wonder:

I saw all the stars turn into the sun;
I saw the sun turn into a man;
And he was, descending to earth.

And Manco Capac, knew all the stars being one
Was his God, and the sun was the light
The Commander was bringing to him

from the Almighty. And the Commander
Said, It is time for you to leave earth
Journey to God in the form of your soul;

Said Manco Capac: Is it you then
Who de sires to take my soul from me?
Said the Commander with estrangement:

I am Gods messenger, announcing
Gods intentions. Then the Commander
Disappeared; went back into the heavens!...

(7)

The Commander told the Almighty Master
All that took place, and all that was said.
God then told the Commander, Ask him

Why he is resisting Me; and not one of my
Prophets have escaped the mystery of death.
All have been gathered by the Sickle of Death (?)

(8)

And with the Commander God sent Death
And it came to pass, soon after Manco Capac
Seen Death dressed up in Great Beauty:

And Death greeted him, as if to seduce
Him with beautiful words; but Manco Capac
Call Death, Liar, Death is not beautiful.

But Death said, To the righteous
I am beautiful, to the sinnerdecay,
Do not be deceived, to the sinner

I bring much fear, destruction, dismay;
And to you, blessed man, a crown of honor!...< br> And Death showed him two heads; one called

decay, it had a dragons face. The other
Like a golden Tumi, bright as the sun.
And Death said, Go with the Commander.

(9)

And Manco Capac, said to Death, Show
Me now your hands, and Death did. In
One hand he had a Golden Tumi, and

in the other was the keys to the gates
Of the Sun; then the Inca prophet knelt
Prayed to the Almighty, closing his eyes;

And Death called to God, clutching the
Moment: as God looked down, He snatched
His soul, and drew him up to his kingdom.

Notes by the Author [note #1: In l993, I had two heart attacksone bad one, and bad stroke, the stroke I had during surgery that doctors said, You were a fruitcake, meaning, I was destroyed by the stroke on the operating table, at that time, and afterwards, my left side paralyzed and much more. Each day for three days, I saw a huge man standing at the end of my bed, thinking it wa s the doctor, only to find out, it was not; he was there early in the mornings, about 5:00 AM., by himself; I was able on the third day to read again, prior to this, words and letters were distorted, nor could I figure out the numbers on a telephone. It took me three months to learn how to play the guitar again, and at the time, I had played the guitar for 35-years; the point being here, is that Death perhaps was waiting in a white gown? There are 72-deaths, so it has been written. And as we all know, it has been appointed to man to die, be he a believer in God or not; somebody has made this decision, or something. And so in writing this poetic story, I knew how death would knock on Manco Capacs door; and perhaps this was how it happened.

Note #2: It should be noted also that, Manco Capac ordered the construction of a structure, consisting of three windows, at his birth site, so legend would have it; such as one might see at the archeological site of Machu Picchu; th us, it had been pointed out, he most likely came from there.

#784 8/6/2005
Partly Written in Bayfield, Wisconsin 8/2005
While resting, otherwise in St. Paul, MN
By Dennis L. Siluk

Versin en Espaol

Manco Cpac:
Y la hoz de la muerte

(1)

Manco Cpac vivi una vida larga, larga,
De ser medida, ms larga que cualquier hombre
vivo. Pero an para l lleg la copa de la muerte.

El Amo del sol, el dios Sol,
Llam a El hijo de ninguna raza brillante
Como el sol y ms, ms hermoso:

Comendador, baja y dile a
Manco Cpac acerca de su muerte que ser,
As l puede organizar su relevo.

Una declaracin de sus bienes
Ya que lo he hecho un hombre rico
El ms rico en sirvientes y abundancia.

As el Comendador dej su morada
Y se dirigi a la tierra, y fue hacia
Manco Cpac a los pies de Los Andes.

All, el encontr a este hombre honrado
En los campos cercanos con sus criados:
te salu do, te saludo, te saludo, Padre de los Incas!

Vengo, desde la Ciudad Dorada del Sol,
Enviado por el Gran Rey del Cielo
Para proveerte de tu sucesor (por tu partida)

Manco Cpac y el Comendador
Caminaron por una enorme roca, sta habl, dijo
En una voz suavemente humana:

Santo, santo, es el Dios del sol, por
Emplazarte, y amarte- Amarte
Y querer que t vengas a casa!

Manco Cpac, pretendi no or
or, mientras l y el Comendador
Caminaban, y hablaban, en el patio

(2)

Los sirvientes de Manco Cpac dijeron (con temor)
A Mama Ocllo (su esposa fiel)
el Comendador quien est con tu esposo

no es de nuestra raza, ni vive en esta tierra.
Manco Cpac luego lav los pies
Del Comendador; despus de esto, vio un milagro:

Las lgrimas del comendador se volvieron
En gotas de plata y oromezclados.
Pura plata y puro oromezclados.

(3)

Luego el Comendador se elev en un guio de ojo
Y est uvo enfrente de Dios y dijo:
Amo y Seor, no puedo traer la muerte

..sobre la casa de Manco Cpac;
Por que l es el ms amable, honesto
Y misericordioso hombre vivo sobre la tierra

El Seor le dijo al Comendador:
Ve abajo y mantn compaa con l,
Come con l, y haz lo que l te pida

Yo te dar todo un espritu devorador
y enviar al Espritu Santo de Dios
Y sobre sus servidores un sueo (para interpretar)

(4)

Y as, esto fue, el Comendador se sent
Con Manco Cpac, en su mesa
y rez y comi con l segn

sus costumbres, y ellos descansaron igual.
Y fue as, que el sirviente dese
Permanecer con Manco Cpac, pero no pudo

l fue dicho ir a descansar, ste era su deseo
En el medio de la noche, el criado
Se despert, en la cuarta hora, en temor

l haba tenido una visin, oy a la muerte hablando;
As, el corri hacia Manco Cpac, y grit:
La muerte ha venido y Manco Cpac, llor
y as tambin el C omendador llor.
Mama Ocllo luego dej su cuarto,
Encontrando a todos en lgrimas, y ella llor,

pero pregunt: Por qu todos estn llorando?
Cuando Mama Ocllo oy al comendador
Hablar, ella supo que l era santificado, santo.

(5)

Dijo, Mama, a su esposo muy amado:
T no sabes quin es este hombre?
Luego Manco Cpac pens, y habl:

he mentido; yo s que el es muy sagrado
Un mensajero santo, del Sol
Veo resplandor, de todas las cosas.

Y Mama Ocllo se arrodill y llor:
Gloria sea a Dios, que es radiante
Con maravillas; y esposo, ella pregunto,

Djanos, ahora mirar la revelacin
Ante nosotros; sea eso para bien o mal! y
Gloria sea a Dios, Quien es como el sol

(6)

Luego Manco Cpac, dejo a su esposa hablar
con su sirviente acerca de su visin;
Dijo el sirviente con temor y maravillado:

Vi todas las estrellas convertirse en sol;
Vi al sol convertirse en hombre;
Y l estaba, desc endiendo a la tierra.

Y Manco Cpac, supo que todas las estrellas siendo uno
Era su Dios, y el sol era la luz que el
Comendador estaba trayendo para l

del todopoderoso. Y el Comendador
Dijo, Este es tiempo para ti, de dejar la tierra
Viajar hacia Dios en forma de tu alma;

Dijo Manco Cpac, Entonces eres t quien desea
tomar mi alma
Dijo el comendador con extraeza;

Yo soy el mensajero de Dios, anunciando
..las intenciones de Dios. Luego el Comendador
Desapareci. Regreso al cielo!...

(7)

El Comendador dijo al Dios todopoderoso
Todo lo que ocurri, y todo lo que fue dicho.
Dios entonces dijo al Comendador, pregntale a l

Porqu esta resistindose a Mi; y ninguno de mis
Profetas ha escapado del misterio de la muerte.
Todos han sido atrapados por la Hoz de la Muerte (?)

(8)

Y con el Comendador, Dios envi la muerte
Y sta vino a pasar, pronto despus que Manco Cpac
Vio la m uerte vestida en Gran Belleza;

Y la muerte lo salud, como si lo sedujera
Con palabras bellas; pero Manco Cpac
Llam a la muerte Mentirosa, la muerte no es bella.

Pero la muerte dijo; para el honrado
soy bella, para el pecadorpodredumbre..,
No seas engaado, por el pecador

Yo traigo mucho miedo, destruccin, consternacin;
Y para ti, hombre bendito, una corona de honor!...
Y la muerte le mostr dos cabezas, una llamada

.. putrefaccin, sta tenia la cara de dragn. El otro
Como un Tumi de oro, brillante como el sol.

Y la muerte dijo, Ve con el Comendador

(9)

Y Manco Cpac, dijo a la muerte Mustrame
Ahora tus manos, y la muerte lo hizo. En
Una mano l tenia un Tumi de oro, en la

.Otra mano estaban las llaves de las puertas del sol;
entonces el inca profeta se arrodill
Rez al Todopoderoso, cerrando sus ojos;

Y la muerte llam a Dios, agarrando el
Momento: mientras Dios miraba abajo , El
arrebat su alma y lo elev hacia su Reino.

Dennis Siluk, Poet http://dennissiluk.tripod.com [you are welcom to visit my website, I made it for you


Author:: Dennis Siluk
Keywords:: Poetry
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