A bare art

 

Bank your chin and upper lip         IMG_0056
you ain’t seen’t coffin yet
you can lead a hearse with  the porter
you can ever  go home and moan
you can say  crap  and strain my nerves
you can take the cat to the bank manager today
you can’t fit a square leg onto  a  round sole
you can’t make a welsh curse out of a cow’s rear
you can’t put the tooth back into the hole
you can’t shop him. you can only hope to maintain him.
you can’t swing a dead bat at NZ
you can’t take  picnicers off a rare  horse
you decomposed on my tart;  where’s the art?

Tantrum ergo,rhodedendrons…..

We used to have Latin at Mass.

And later we learned it in class

Tantrum ergo

We must forego

As the Church built a new and bright past.

 

We used to sing, Credo in unum.

But some of us sang,Cried in your mum.

Our soles were all healed

Partitions were sealed.

And sometimes  in nostalgia advertum

 

 

Mathematics is the science of patterns

Mathematics  is the science of patterns;

So is not for the idle or slatterns.

But now I love art,

The patterns of the heart.

No one conducts that with a baton.

 

Yet mathematics has got  its attractions

I refer not to those vulgar fractions.

But  several types of infinity,

Have their divinity.

Then we have  perspective, and more, golden sections.

 

Add to that, we can say with great ease,

Circles and squares, nonchalant, tease.

Pi is a number

Transcendental with wonder.

As for e, then we’ll  reach that by degrees.

 

Now logs have caused mental fits

Divorced brains and predeceased wits.

So I shan’t mention them today,

But let your minds play.

Algebra  keeps  some hearts frit

 

 

 

 

 

 

Eternity is now

Deferential, I
Eternity await
Submit to your  grace
In my patient state.

 

None but God can judge;
None have his pure gaze.
Write me not your wish.
Tempt me not with praise.

 

Timeless as the  heavens
Eternity is now
Mindful of this lesson
Grace will show me how

His eyes rolled all over

I loved a Ukrainian from France

As he had  his own eloquence.

His eyes rolled all over

The white cliffs of Dover.

His legs did an elegant prance.

 

Now part of that cliff face fell off

St Margaret’s Bay had it quite  rough.

So I took him to Devon

Where the cliffs are sheer heaven.

His hat makes him look like a toff.

 

 

We communicate non verbally,

As we gaze out across the teal sea.

He wiggles his ears

Till I am in tears.

I laugh and  then, oh,dear,I wee.

 

 

Incontinence is a big  trade,

As women’s parts often need aid.

And we pay VAT

Which enrages me.

From puberty to  age we  have paid.

 

The meaning of perspective

perspective
pəˈspɛktɪv/
noun12688098_665658233574058_5196333777777983294_n
noun: perspective
  1. 1.
    the art of representing three-dimensional objects on a two-dimensional surface so as to give the right impression of their height, width, depth, and position in relation to each other.
    “the theory and practice of perspective”
    • the appearance of viewed objects with regard to their relative position, distance from the viewer, etc.
      “a trick of perspective”
    • a view or prospect.
      plural noun: perspectives
      synonyms: view, vista, panorama, prospect, bird’s-eye view, sweep, outlook,aspect;

      archaiclookout
      “a perspective of the whole valley”
    • GEOMETRY
      the relation of two figures in the same plane, such that pairs of corresponding points lie on concurrent lines, and corresponding lines meet in collinear points.
  2. 2.
    a particular attitude towards or way of regarding something; a point of view.
    “most guidebook history is written from the editor’s perspective”
    synonyms: outlook, view, viewpoint, point of view, standpoint, position, stand,stance, angle, slant, attitude, frame of mind, frame of reference,approach, way of looking/thinking, vantage point, interpretation

    “her perspective on everything had been changing”
    • true understanding of the relative importance of things; a sense of proportion.
      “we must keep a sense of perspective about what he’s done”
  3. 3.
    an apparent spatial distribution in perceived sound.
Origin
late Middle English (in the sense ‘optics’): from medieval Latin perspectiva (ars)‘(science of) optics’, from perspect- ‘looked at closely’, from the verb perspicere, fromper- ‘through’ + specere ‘to look’.

Being sad is no disgrace

The bell rang on the ancient church at noon.

A sparrow flitted to  the Tudor wall.

Was this the knell  which brings us  damned gloom?

 

Perhaps there is no meaning here at all.

I read my unknown thoughts projected out,

And  in my rage, desire the walls to fall.

 

Like you, I am too  often stuck in doubt.

Betrayed by old ideal and vanished wish.

So what is in confuses that without.

 

Oh,pain, oh ,mind, oh agony, oh flesh.

I shall not cling to life and wait for grace.

I am, myself, a fish in net of mesh.

 

Was this my  destiny, my rightful place;

Alone besieged by sorrows on all sides?

I  err for  being sad is no disgrace.

 

So ,to my hopes, I’ll cling like drowning beast.

Until my invitation to the feast.

 

 

 

 

Love shall be my song.

Photo0674
Underneath the sweet sky, lover,
You shall be the one.
You were with me in the dark
When all the rest were gone.When the trees throw out green leaves
I’ll love you all night long.
When the flowers fill the cornfields
Love shall be my song.

Poppies red.and linseed blue
Shall decorate my dress.
Hold me in your arms tonight
While I my love confess.

Meadows filled with buttercups
Fill my inner eye.
I love the scent of minty leaves
When my mind is all awry.

I see the sun through closed eye lids
And rose scent’s in the air.
Wherever summer joy comes from….
We have had our share.

Definition: What Is Terza Rima?

In many cases, we can tell that a piece of writing is a poem just by hearing it read out loud. This is especially easy if a poem rhymes. Of course, not all poems rhyme in quite the same way. In formal verse, there are many different arrangements of rhymes, or rhyme schemes, to choose from. One such rhyme scheme is terza rima.

aba, bcb, cdc, ded, efe,

 

Terza rima is a rhyme scheme that uses tercets (three-line stanzas) and a pattern of interlocking end rhymes(rhymes that occur at the ends of lines). This interlocking pattern is often describing using the following letters:aba bcb cdc ded . . . and so on. As you can see, each tercet contains a rhyme from the one that comes before it. To be more specific, the second rhyme in one tercet becomes the first and third rhymes in the next tercet. This pattern can go on as long as the author wants, traditionally ending with a couplet or a single line that rhymes with the second line of the second-to-last stanza (for example, ded ee or ded e).

Terza Rima in Dante’s Divine Comedy

To get a better understanding of how this unique rhyme scheme works, let’s look at an example from terza rima’s early history. The earliest appearance of terza rima was in Italian poet Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy in the fourteenth century. The following example is an excerpt from contemporary American poet Robert Pinsky’s translation of Dante’s Divine Comedy:

As I drew nearer to the end of all desire, (a)
I brought my longing’s ardor to a final height, (b)
Just as I ought. My vision, becoming pure, (a)

Entered more and more the beam of that high light (b)
That shines on its own truth. From then, my seeing (c)
Became too large for speech, which fails at a sight (b)

Beyond all boundaries, at memory’s undoing– (c)
As when the dreamer sees and after the dream (d)
The passion endures, imprinted on his being (c)

Though he can’t recall the rest. I am the same: (d)
Inside my heart, although my vision is almost (e)
Entirely faded, droplets of its sweetness come (d)

The way the sun dissolves the snow’s crust– (e)
The way, in the wind that stirred the light leaves, (f)
The oracle that the Sibyl wrote was lost. (e)

If you listen carefully, you’ll hear that few of the rhymes in this example seem a bit off, but the sounds of the words are still fairly similar. This is called slant rhyme. You may also have noticed that the example doesn’t end with a couplet or a single line. This is because this example is taken from the middle of a canto (or section) in a larger work.