Author Topic: Share your favourite poems  (Read 20669 times)

Róisín

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #90 on: August 14, 2023, 09:11:58 AM »
I know that poem. Heartbreaking.
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Yastreb

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #91 on: August 21, 2023, 07:32:45 AM »
Randall Jarrell is another poet whose verses on war have resonated with me.

Eighth Air Force

If, in an odd angle of the hutment,
A puppy laps the water from a can
Of flowers, and the drunk sergeant shaving
Whistles O Paradiso!--shall I say that man
Is not as men have said: a wolf to man?

The other murderers troop in yawning;
Three of them play Pitch, one sleeps, and one
Lies counting missions, lies there sweating
Till even his heart beats: One; One; One.
O murderers! . . . Still, this is how it's done:

This is a war . . . But since these play, before they die,
Like puppies with their puppy; since, a man,
I did as these have done, but did not die--
I will content the people as I can
And give up these to them: Behold the man!

I have suffered, in a dream, because of him,
Many things; for this last saviour, man,
I have lied as I lie now. But what is lying?
Men wash their hands, in blood, as best they can:
I find no fault in this just man.

The Death Of The Ball Turret Gunner

From my mother's sleep I fell into the State,
And I hunched in its belly till my wet fur froze.
Six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life,
I woke to black flak and the nightmare fighters.
When I died they washed me out of the turret with a hose.


Mail Call

The letters always just evade the hand
One skates like a stone into a beam, falls like a bird.
Surely the past from which the letters rise
Is waiting in the future, past the graves?
The soldiers are all haunted by their lives.
Their claims upon their kind are paid in paper
That established a presence, like a smell.
In letters and in dreams they see the world.
They are waiting: and the years contract
To an empty hand, to one unuttered sound --
The soldier simply wishes for his name.

"Life is all we are. Life is what defines us. In the end, Life is the answer."

Ruler of Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport.

thegreyarea

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #92 on: August 24, 2023, 07:28:46 PM »
So many wonderful poems in this thread! :) I love it!

There are some poems that I love in Portuguese. It's not easy to translate, but I had the luck to stumble upon a particularly well-done version of one, called "Pedra Filosofal" - "Philosopher's stone", by Antonio Gedeão.
Of course it sounds better in the original, but the translator, a brazilian named Jonice, managed to keep most of its magic.

Philosopher's stone

They do not know that dreaming
is a constant in life
as concrete and outlined
as any other thing,
like this grayish stone
where I sit to rest,
like this calm creek
in its easy startles,
like these high pine trees
that in green and gold sway,
like these birds that crow
in drunkenness of blue.
They do not know that dreaming
is wine, is foam, is yeast,
a joyous thirsty little animal
whose sharp snout
pokes through everywhere
in endless restlessness.
They do not know that dreaming
is canvas, is colour, is paintbrush,
base, pole, shaft,
ogive arc, stained glass window,
a cathedral vault,
counterpoint, symphony,
Greek mask, magic,
that it is the alchemist's retort,
distant lands chart,
wind rose, infant,
sixteenth century vessel,
that it is Cape of Good Hope,
gold, cinnamon, ivory,
a swordsman’s foil,
it is backstage, is dance step,
Colombina and Arlequim,
huge flappy flying bird,
lightning-rod, locomotive,
a glorious prow boat,
furnace, energy generator,
split of the atom, radar,
ultrasound, television,
a rocket landing
on the surface of the moon.
They do not know, nor dream of,
that dreaming commands life.
That whenever a man dreams
the world leaps forth
like a colourful ball
into a child’s little hands.
Chapter break survivor: :chap20: :chap21: :A2chap01: :A2chap02: :A2chap03: :A2chap04: :A2chap05:
Languages: :pt: :br: Capable: :gb: Can read and survive: :es: Knows a bit: :fr: :it:

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Yastreb

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #93 on: October 12, 2023, 07:16:25 AM »
Australia has a reputation for the lethality of its wildlife. The creatures of Aboriginal folklore can be deadly also, especially if angered or disrespected. Here's a striking poem about one of the best known.

The Bunyip And The Whistling Kettle

I knew a most superior camper
Whose methods were absurdly wrong,
He did not live on tea and damper
But took a little stove along.

And every place he came to settle
He spread with gadgets saving toil,
He even had a whistling kettle
To warn him it was on the boil.

Beneath the waratahs and wattles,
Boronia and coolibah,
He scattered paper, cans and bottles,
And parked his nasty little car.

He camped, this sacrilegious stranger
(The moon was at the full that week),
Once in a spot that teemed with danger
Beside a bunyip-haunted creek.

He spread his junk but did not plunder,
Hoping to stay the weekend long;
He watched the bloodshot sun go under
Across the silent billabong.

He ate canned food without demurring,
He put the kettle on for tea.
He did not see the water stirring
Far out beside a sunken tree.

Then, for the day had made him swelter
And night was hot and tense to spring,
He donned a bathing-suit in shelter,
And left the firelight’s friendly ring.

He felt the water kiss and tingle.
He heard the silence—none too soon!
A ripple broke against the shingle,
And dark with blood it met the moon.

Abandoned in the hush, the kettle
Screamed as it guessed its master’s plight,
And loud it screamed, the lifeless metal,
Far into the malicious night.
"Life is all we are. Life is what defines us. In the end, Life is the answer."

Ruler of Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport.

Keep Looking

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #94 on: October 12, 2023, 08:20:35 AM »
As he deserved, for littering in the bush! A very funny poem
I write poetry sometimes.

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Róisín

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #95 on: October 12, 2023, 08:25:01 AM »
I really like both of these poems. Yastreb, who wrote the one you referenced? By the way, anent poems and stories about weirds in billabongs, did I ever send you a copy of that short story I wrote years ago about the young man who discovers that his grandmother was a rivergirl? I was looking for it the other day to show to somebody from the library writers group who wanted to reread it, and discovered that I can’t find my copy. Dammit!

And still further on the subject of Australian water weirds, have you ever read Douglas Stewart’s poem ‘The Dosser in Springtime’? Or ‘The Man From Adaminaby’ by the same author? Well worth the time to read.

Grey, that ‘Philosophers Stone’ poem is truly lovely! Thank you both!
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Yastreb

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #96 on: October 12, 2023, 09:03:35 AM »
The Bunyip And The Whistling Kettle was written by John Streeter Manifold. I found a tribute to him that was written in clerihew form.

John Manifold was an Australian poet worthy of praise
He helped keep alive the Australian songs of convict days
His original poem 'The Bunyip and the whistling Kettle' remains as an Aussie great
Poem of the twentieth century like all good rhyme poems one that does not have a use by date
He helped to keep the old ballads of Australia alive
And thanks to people like John Manifold such songs still survive
A Communist and a socialist at heart
From most others he was surely one apart
A renowned poet and preserver of old ballads in Australian literature he remains as one of note
He helped to keep alive Australia's literary forgotten names such as the convict bard the renowned Frank The Poet
Yet he is not seen as an Australian great
And his is not a name we wish to celebrate
But his contribution to Australian literature and culture was far from small
And for that his is a name well worthy of recall.
Francis Duggan
"Life is all we are. Life is what defines us. In the end, Life is the answer."

Ruler of Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport.

dmeck7755

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #97 on: October 12, 2023, 09:09:33 AM »
Here is one
by John Ciardi

A widgeon in a wicopy
In which no widgeon ought to be
A widowed widgeon was.

While in a willow wickiup
A Wichitaw sat down to sup
With other Wichitaws.

And what they whittled as they ate
Included what had been of late
A widgeon's wing. 'Twas thus

The widgeon in the wicopy
In which no widgeon ought to be
A widowed widgeon was.
Fate gives all of us three teachers, three friends, three enemies, and three great loves in our lives. But these twelve are always disguised, and we never know which one is which until we've loved them, left them, or fought them.

~ Gregory David Roberts

Róisín

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #98 on: October 12, 2023, 12:13:35 PM »
dmeck, that is an interesting verseform!
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dmeck7755

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #99 on: October 12, 2023, 12:22:38 PM »
dmeck, that is an interesting verseform!

I still can recite this poem from memory.  It was in a third or fourth grade reader.  I remember looking up all of those W's.
Fate gives all of us three teachers, three friends, three enemies, and three great loves in our lives. But these twelve are always disguised, and we never know which one is which until we've loved them, left them, or fought them.

~ Gregory David Roberts

Yastreb

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #100 on: November 01, 2023, 07:10:17 AM »
I first read this poem at school, and it stuck with me. I've often thought of writing a story based on it.

Reported Missing

With broken wing they limped across the sky
caught in late sunlight, with their gunner dead,
one engine gone - the type was out-of-date, -
blood on the fuselage turning brown from red:

knew it was finished, looking at the sea
which shone back patterns in kaleidoscope
knew that their shadow would meet them by the way,
close and catch at them, drown their single hope:

sat in this tattered scarecrow of the sky
hearing it cough, the great plane catching
now the first dark clouds upon her wing-base, -
patching the great tear in evening mockery.

So two men waited, saw the third dead face,
and wondered when the wind would let them die.

John Bayliss
"Life is all we are. Life is what defines us. In the end, Life is the answer."

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Róisín

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #101 on: November 01, 2023, 09:10:22 AM »
Yastreb, that is chilling and beautiful.
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Yastreb

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #102 on: November 04, 2023, 06:08:38 AM »
This is a poem with a strange and haunting origin. I'll put the details in spoilers.

Was That Me?

Waves hypnotising me
With green beckoning fingers

A dream of spaceflight, weightlessness

Air rushes past to fill a vacuum

Progressive holes that must be filled

Lee Campbell


Spoiler: show
Lee Campbell was a young New Zealander who was among nine people killed when United Airlines Flight 811, a Boeing 747, suffered a structural failure and decompressed at 22,000 feet after departing from Honolulu, hurling them to their deaths. This poem was found by his parents.
The story of this disaster may be of interest both for the skill and courage of the flight crew who brought the damaged aircraft back to a safe landing, and for the dogged investigation by Lee's parents as they sought the true cause of the accident, and were finally vindicated. An excellent account can here found here.
https://admiralcloudberg.medium.com/violent-night-the-near-crash-of-united-airlines-flight-811-ba72b3349ff0



 
« Last Edit: November 04, 2023, 09:28:48 AM by Yastreb »
"Life is all we are. Life is what defines us. In the end, Life is the answer."

Ruler of Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport.

Róisín

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #103 on: November 04, 2023, 08:30:00 AM »
That is horrific. The worst I have personally experienced was a window next to me blowing out as a plane took off. This would have been far worse!
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Yastreb

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Re: Share your favourite poems
« Reply #104 on: November 27, 2023, 05:09:28 AM »
Ben Hall was a bushranger, one of the most celebrated in Australia folklore, and the subject of many poems and ballads. This is perhaps the finest of them.

THE DEATH OF BEN HELL by Williams Henry Ogilvie

Ben Hall was out on the Lachlan side
With a thousand pounds on his head,
A score of troopers were scattered wide,
And a hundred more were ready to ride
Wherever a rumour led.

They had followed his track from the Weddin’ heights,
And north by the Weelong yards;
Through dazzling days and moonlit nights
They had sought him over their rifle sights,
With their hands on the trigger-guards.

The outlaw stole like a hunted fox,
Through the scrub and stunted heath
And peered like a hawk from his eyrie rocks
Through the waving boughs of the sapling box
On the troopers riding beneath.

His clothes were rent by the clutching thorn,
And his blistered feet were bare;
Ragged and torn, with his beard unshorn,
He hid in the woods like a beast forlorn,
With a padded path to his lair.

But every night when the white stars rose
He crossed by the Gunning Plain
To a stockman’s hut where the Gunning flows,
And struck on the door three swift light blows,
And a hand unhooked the chain.

And the outlaw followed the lone path back
With food for another day;
And the kindly darkness covered his track,
And the shadows swallowed him deep and black,
Where the starlight melted away.

But his friend had read of the Big Reward,
And his soul was stirred with greed,
He fastened his door and window-board,
He saddled his horse and crossed the ford,
And spurred to the town at speed.

You may ride at a man’s or a maid’s behest
When honour or true love call.
And steel your heart to the worst or best,
But the ride that is taken on a traitor’s quest,
Is the bitterest ride of all.

A hot wind blew from the Lachlan bank
And a curse on its shoulder came;
The pine trees frowned at him, rank on rank;
The sun on a gathering storm-cloud sank
And flushed his cheek with shame.

He reined at the Court, and the tale began
That the rifles alone should end;
Sergeant and trooper laid their plan
To draw the net on a hunted man
At the treacherous word of a friend.

False was the hand that raised the chain
And false was the whispered word:
“The troopers have turned to the south again,
You may dare to camp on the Gunning Plain,”
And the weary outlaw heard.

He walked from the hut but a quarter mile,
Where a clump of saplings stood,
In a sea of grass like a lonely isle;
And the moon came up in a little while
Like silver steeped in blood.

Ben Hall lay down on the dew-wet ground
By the side of his tiny fire;
And a night-breeze woke, and he heard no sound
As the troopers drew their cordon round —
And the traitor earned his hire.

And nothing they saw in the dim grey light,
But the little glow in the trees;
And they crouched in the tall cold grass all night,
Each one ready to shoot at sight,
With his rifle cocked on his knees.

When the shadows broke and the Dawn’s white sword
Swung over the mountain wall,
And a little wind blew over the ford
A Sergeant sprang to his feet and roared:
“In the name of the Queen, Ben Hall.”

Haggard, the outlaw leapt from his bed
With his lean arms held on high,
“Fire” and the word was scarcely said
When the mountains rang to a rain of lead
And the dawn went drifting by.

They kept their word and they paid his pay
Where a clean man’s hand would shrink;
And that was the traitor’s master-day,
As he stood by the bar on his homeward way,
And called on the crowd to drink.

He banned no creed and barred no class,
And he called to his friends by name
But the worst would shake his head and pass,
And none would drink from the blood-stained glass
And the goblet red with shame.

And I know when I hear the last grim call,
And my mortal hour is spent,
When the light is hid and the curtains fall
I would rather sleep with the dead Ben Hall
Than go where that traitor went.

"Life is all we are. Life is what defines us. In the end, Life is the answer."

Ruler of Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport.