A summer garden kaleidoscope in her wear
and clothes arched over by rainbow tinted hair,
she shouted silently 'notice me, notice me'
just like a flower to a bee.
Which is poems of modern ideas in traditional poetry forms, rhyming poems and rhythmic poems plus some less proper items, jokes, epigrams, etc.
Sunday, 21 April 2019
Friday, 12 April 2019
So many seemingly good ideas
didn't succeed but no need for tears
for in a way I don't really mind -
they kept me busy at the time.
Reflection
Sometimes I find myself feeling sorry
for some-one who looks like one of life's losers
only to realise after some thought
they were probably feeling the same about me.
Friday, 5 April 2019
Thanks to Paul Valery
'Poetry is to prose as dancing is to walking'
But -
about what sort of dancing are we talking?
The disco do-your-own-thing thing
without a trace of melody to sing?
Clockwork two-step rhythmic monotony?
Something to do with frontal lobotomy?
Or the body sway as if a wind is blowing,
the arms awry like sculling more than rowing,
the nodding head obeisant to the beat,
the glass in hand but no invention in the feet,
the grinning face telling friends this prancing
is something special - "Look at me, I'm dancing".
Much like free form verse ignoring rhyme,
just posing to be admired all the time.
Sometimes the people opt to dance in line
reviving memories of Ibiza holiday time,
whole teams performing synchronised stupidity
as well drilled morons in some military.
Much like the violent, over-rhyming crap
of mechanistic, syncopated rap.
Or, from a different, older generation
some movement of the feet in ambulation,
no drinks in hand when social pensioners jive,
wind-milling arms to prove life still survives,
outlining shapes and patterns as a pair -
concrete poetry typography in air.
And what about the plethora of South American dances?
A cornucopeia of moves the sun enhances -
tango, rumba, cha cha cha, lambada,
forro, samba, salsa and bachata -
all so vitally rhythmic just like terse,
irreverent, witty, comic verse.
And still there's basic ballroom discipline
of foxtrot, quickstep, waltz delivering
the artistry of Shakespeare and of Byron,
Wordsworth, Hardy, Brooke and Housman -
crafting each individual feeling
whether in the rain or on the ceiling.
But -
about what sort of dancing are we talking?
The disco do-your-own-thing thing
without a trace of melody to sing?
Clockwork two-step rhythmic monotony?
Something to do with frontal lobotomy?
Or the body sway as if a wind is blowing,
the arms awry like sculling more than rowing,
the nodding head obeisant to the beat,
the glass in hand but no invention in the feet,
the grinning face telling friends this prancing
is something special - "Look at me, I'm dancing".
Much like free form verse ignoring rhyme,
just posing to be admired all the time.
Sometimes the people opt to dance in line
reviving memories of Ibiza holiday time,
whole teams performing synchronised stupidity
as well drilled morons in some military.
Much like the violent, over-rhyming crap
of mechanistic, syncopated rap.
Or, from a different, older generation
some movement of the feet in ambulation,
no drinks in hand when social pensioners jive,
wind-milling arms to prove life still survives,
outlining shapes and patterns as a pair -
concrete poetry typography in air.
And what about the plethora of South American dances?
A cornucopeia of moves the sun enhances -
tango, rumba, cha cha cha, lambada,
forro, samba, salsa and bachata -
all so vitally rhythmic just like terse,
irreverent, witty, comic verse.
And still there's basic ballroom discipline
of foxtrot, quickstep, waltz delivering
the artistry of Shakespeare and of Byron,
Wordsworth, Hardy, Brooke and Housman -
crafting each individual feeling
whether in the rain or on the ceiling.
Thursday, 4 April 2019
Apologies to Isaac Newton
I do not know what I may appear to the world; but to myself I seem to be only like a boy peering into a sweetshop window, and diverting myself in now and then seeing a tastier delight or a prettier package than ordinary, while the great ocean of life lies all untouchable around me - infatuation, sex, love, children.
I have to confess that I do get depressed
at being unpopular when I venture
beyond my usual neighbourhood.
It's clear that I do have to work to eat
but I'm very far from being obsessed
with only pursuing my livelihood.
Sometimes I just like to get away
and surely don't deserve the censure
I get from the strangers I encounter.
I can quite see the problem of being famous
when every outing involves the hazard
of being mobbed by total strangers
as in my case by gulls and jackdaws -
it's no easy life, being a buzzard.
at being unpopular when I venture
beyond my usual neighbourhood.
It's clear that I do have to work to eat
but I'm very far from being obsessed
with only pursuing my livelihood.
Sometimes I just like to get away
and surely don't deserve the censure
I get from the strangers I encounter.
I can quite see the problem of being famous
when every outing involves the hazard
of being mobbed by total strangers
as in my case by gulls and jackdaws -
it's no easy life, being a buzzard.
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