Located in the mind and in our moods

A misanthrope is not so hard to find
They live invisibly till they’re  set off.
Then their cold sarcasm  affects our  minds
What we say incurrs their bitter wrath

If we hate all  the humans that we know
Have poor opinions  of the world  without
Then  it’s likely we have suffered bitter blows
And so in childhood we began to doubt

When we  feel afraid and weak we’re pressed
We see the world    through narrow focused lens
Others seem to  have life without tests
So why should they need  us to make amends?

Unnoticed and well hidden attitudes
Are located in the mind and in our moods

 

That immigrant from Argentina

I shall be praying on my piano  all day then preying on you
Prelude to  her fugue
Feeble concerto for viola with extra large stark gestures
The New World’s emmpathy.
60  beckons by Ian Gage
Folk songs wrung nightly
Old Saxon songs set for spinster with  Jew’s harp ,complete with original  blue number tattoo as  worn in Da Cow.Few  remains
Burning our hiking  boots, acconpanied by rockets and kettle drums
Don’t dig for me,Sergeant  Tina, sung by Aldous Huxley
All Mozart’s Twinsets.
Recollections and prayers led by The Immigrant from Argentina

 

Fugue

Definition from google
fjuːɡ/
noun
noun: fugue; plural noun: fugues
  1. 1.
    MUSIC
    a contrapuntal composition in which a short melody or phrase (the subject) is introduced by one part and successively taken up by others and developed by interweaving the parts.
  2. 2.
    PSYCHIATRY
    a loss of awareness of one’s identity, often coupled with flight from one’s usual environment, associated with certain forms of hysteria and epilepsy.
Origin
late 16th century: from French, or from Italian fuga, from Latin fuga ‘flight’, related to fugere ‘flee’.

No more will Raphael sing

 

They are  selling new  commandments  in the rain
But these  are not from God,they are from men
They are selling  angels’ wings,
So no more shall Raphael sing
Down in, down in,down in Jerusalem

They are building concrete houses by the dozen
And proclaiming   the Messiah  has  arisen
They are taking words in vain
It’s driving us insane
The Jordan  overflows and drowns the  living.

They need water,they need food and homes to live in
While military wheels ascend to heaven
Men must fight until they kill
They say it is God’s will
So they’ll  lock down even  children in their prisons

If you throw a pebble at the soldier shouting
You’ll get 20 years in jail  and they’re still counting
Because to  them  you  oftimes seem
Like the Nazis in  bad dreams
Who   wiped them out, and  they are still recruiting

We’re like blind folk in the tavern drinking doubles
But we’re creating, not forgetting, all our troubles
We attack the ones who’re near
It’s not the brandy or the beer
If we carry on the Gold  will  turn to rubble

Re love

While vestiges of life remain
I’ll meet you in that  deep domain
Where love and silence trembling  reach
Some hearts, and so to me they teach
The song that’s sung will never end
My love.

I’ll wait in quiet of  greenwoods sane;
Feelings  will   both teach and strain;
We never  feel as free from angst
As angels in their twilight dance.
Yet there are   finer  axioms here
We may  owe others love not fear
Keep  loving

Everyone has got their heart
And souls, though hidden.  don’t desert.
We might whirl round in hope to see
The other is no fantasy
As angels sighing  float away
My feelings will as ever say
I love you

Do not be a Misanthrope

misanthrope Audio pronunciation
 Merriam Webster
noun | MISS-un-throhp
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Definition
:
a person who hates or distrusts humankind
Scroll down for more about misanthrope
 may
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Algernon Charles Swinbourne (1837-1909)
Balliol College Portraits: 139 Oil on canvas, 18×13, 1860. Poole number 74
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:
Did You Know?
The word misanthrope is human to the core—literally. One of its parents is the Greek noun anthrōpos, meaning “human being.” Its other parent is the Greek verb misein, meaning “to hate.” Misein also gave Englishmisogamy (“a hatred of marriage”), misogyny (“hatred of women”), misology (“a hatred of argument, reasoning, or enlightenment”), and misoneism (“a hatred, fear, or intolerance of innovation or change”). Anthrōpos also joined forces with phil- (a combining form meaning “loving”) to form the Greek ancestor of philanthropy(“active effort to help other people”). We also findanthrōpos when we delve into the foundations of the word anthropology.

Concert

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From the internet

 

Please use the toilets in the interval.They make a  loud noise when hot and  embarrassed,that is to say Flushed

MENU

1.Ode to Annoy
2.Green Peeves.
3.The Lord is my Leopard
4.Harlot’s lemons for her hair.
5.You’re the only one for Tea.
6.I’m a  believer,I can relieve her if I try.
7 The Dance of the Severn Whales
8.Tingle’s Cave.
9.The Swan of To-Inhale-Her
10.The Four Teasings.

After the interval I will give a short talk on Fossils and Paradox
Then the orchestra will play
11 You are my heart’s good night
12 Bark’s  Preludes and Blurgs arranged  for orchestra by Jo Mendellsdohn.
13 Hello Suites played by Paul Toblerone on his arpeggionne.
14.So you want the Moon to play with, sung by My Dad in Virtual Reality
All ruminations gracefully received

Tickets Free,Seats :£45 per person

.The Bar is open.

Cigarettes on sale for 1 hour only.

No joking  in the Foyer by Order

NOW THERE IS NO VERTICAL

When you struck me,I vibrated like a kettle drum,
then as smaller percussions and repercussions
echoing from all the glassy surfaces
creating a balletic geometry of sound tracks
in space and time.

When you knocked me down,
I fell against her and her and her;
we were like a row of skittles
and we all went down with the lifeboat;
The infinite chain of being is.

When you hit me,the Fall spread across the world
Now there is no Vertical
All is undivine and graceless.
By the Rod it’s ruled

When you left me,I left myself,the world,the rocks,dry land
I weighed down sank to the ocean bed
with coral eyes
gazing.

When you struck my mind
I became an instrument of a foreign power
Singing a song I didn’t know.

When the glass was smashed
the splinters flew into all our hearts.
You didn’t know what we couldn’t see.

I lay on barren ground and gave birth
To my own Creator in the desert

That bloody bomb

When I was young and  almost here
I had a problem with  my fear.
My mother’d not known what to do
And I kept running to the loo
At last the doctor’s mind was  clear
They sent me to a nuclear seer.

The man looked up, the man looked down
I’d never seen him in the town
He asked me if I had bad dreams
Or  ruined  my sleep with howls and screams
I never knew quite  how to say:
The nuclear bomb might go astray.

They told us what to take inside
The nuclear shelter, where we’d hide
Tampax weren’t allowed as they
Might break our hymens on the way
So we had our bags  of big  pads
As  seeing our blood ‘d dismay the lads

We must lie  down in the hedgerows
But not  day dream or take a doze.
In  our mill towns we had  no hedge
It was a metaphor I  grudged.
Later, clutching bags of  bloody cloths,
We  would come out and see God’s wrath.

On the nuclear fires we’d burn
The sanitary towels  society spurned.
I hope before the  bomb comes back
The Bishops will permit some slack
For tampax are  so small and neat
Our bin would have  an odour sweet

We might be turned into grey ash
And our hymens all  out-blast
We’d never  know our clitoris
By a  lover’s soft caress
So get together  while you can
Before they drop  that  bloody bomb.

 

Most  women have suffered from monthly menstrual bleeding with sometimes severe pain and also they have suffered in childbirth but many never enjoyed sex at all as they were taught nothing about their bodies.And without being aroused sex would be painful.I think it is easier for men to enjoy it but seeing their partner not keen might spoil their enjoyment

Interpretation in the Oxford Dictionary

Definition of interpretation in English:

Interpretation
Pronunciation: /ɪntəːprɪˈteɪʃ(ə)n/
NOUN
1The action of explaining the meaning of something:
the interpretation of data
More example sentences Synonyms
1.1 [COUNT NOUN] An explanation or way of explaining:
this action is open to a number of interpretations
More example sentences Synonyms
1.2 [COUNT NOUN] A stylistic representation of a creative work or dramatic role:
his unique interpretation of the Liszt études
More example sentences Synonyms
Derivatives

interpretational
Pronunciation: /ɪnˌtəːprɪˈteɪʃ(ə)n(ə)l/
ADJECTIVE
Example sentences
Origin
Late Middle English: from Old French interpretation or Latin interpretatio(n-), from the verb interpretari (see interpret).

For editors and proofreaders
Line breaks: in¦ter¦pret|ation

 

Confession for beginners

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Pray Father ,sieve me your blessing
Where you raised a Catholic?
No,I was born one.
But where you baptised?
Wow,you are very nosy.
Well, in here there are no secrets
Well,I am a chef,you see.
Well I  don’t see but I can imagine.
I have been away for 4 years in the maze.
In Northern Ireland?
No,in Saffron Walden
But that is only 2  dimensional.How could you spend so long in it
I’m a   short straight line
We’re all equal now so don’t congratulate yourself.Are you real?
I believe so.But can I confess?
What have you done?
Poisoned Ivy.
With full consent?
No,she had no idea.
I mean did you consent wilfully?
I suppose so.
Well,go to the police.
She’s not dead.
Well,you’ll have to try harder next time.Only sinners can be saved
I always thought it was unfair
Hermeneutically, they think we all sin at times.
My name is not Eamon Yewtickally.
Never mind.Maybe when you come again it will be.
Will I come again?I thoughtChristians didn’t believe that.
It’s just a manner of speaking.
I expect more from a man of the cloth
I’m just a man of the paper now.
Are you a reporter?
I might be.What else have you done?
How much will you  pay me?
That’s no way to talk to a Rabbi
But this is a Catholic church
I am standing in for Father Brown
Could he not get a Catholic?
Well,you see Jesus was a Jew, so it’s all ok.
Don’t you feel annoyed?
What about?
Jesus ruining your lives.
We all like arguing but he did take it  a bit further than planned
Who planned it?
Zadok the priest.
Was he a Catholic?
No, the Church didn’t exist till after Paul of Tarsus.
Well,while I am here let me say I have never  been anti-Semitic
Well, any other sins?
You can’t give me absolutiont?
I can aim my water pistol at you!
What would Jesus say?
He never mentioned confession.
So who invented it?
Augustine the Hippo wrote abook called Confessions
You’d have to be very self confident to publish your sins.I jusy blog mine.
And how does that make you feel?
Not how,who.
Who was it?
A very nice old woman.
Well better look next time.
Next time! How about my firm purpose of amendment?
It’s gone with the sinned
And my penance?
Go thou and sin no more

 

Hermeneutics

Definition of hermeneutic in English
Pronunciation: /ˌhəːmɪˈnjuːtɪk/
ADJECTIVE
Concerning interpretation, especially of the Bible or literary texts.

NOUN
A method or theory of interpretation
DhermeneuticalADJECTIVE
hermeneutically
13466493_10204805161448742_776586429784805711_n

Origin

Late 17th century: from Greek hermēneutikos, from hermēneuein ‘interpret’.

He was a pan with a lid on

My lover was a little elusive
I never knew where he would be
He never said,come to bed
I  have no thoughts in my  head
He just disappeared,woe is me.

My lover was as elusive as raindrops
He was here but he  evaporated at once
He was  a pan with a lid on,
A seat not to sit on.
Until he decided to pounce.

He was elusive on  the Sabbath, divinely
For he  preferred Greek Orthodox
He suffered the Evangelicals
So  potent as  Oracles
And he liked Jews with those strange  Russian locks.

I wonder why he ever got married
As he preferred to have sex in his head
He fantasized   every day
Told me  when he was feeling gray.
Then  got laid  with me  here on the bed.

 

I guess he liked spreading confusion
And being  unusual in taste.
He went to the lavatory
As it was mandatory
Then admired my  hermeneutics and  waist

What is allusion in poetry?

SPBF2_20160615

 

Allusion

“Allusion Definition

Allusion is a brief and indirect reference to a person, place, thing or idea of historical, cultural, literary or political significance. It does not describe in detail the person or thing to which it refers. It is just a passing comment and the writer expects the reader to possess enough knowledge to spot the allusion and grasp its importance in a text.

For instance, you make a literary allusion the moment you say, “I do not approve of this quixotic idea,” Quixotic means stupid and impractical derived from Cervantes’s “Don Quixote”, a story of a foolish knight and his misadventures.

Allusion Examples in Everyday Speech

The use allusions are not confined to literature alone. Their occurrence is fairly common in our daily speech. Look at some common allusion examples in everyday life:

  • “Don’t act like a Romeo in front of her.” – “Romeo” is a reference to Shakespeare’s Romeo, a passionate lover of Juliet, in “Romeo and Juliet”.
  • The rise in poverty will unlock the Pandora’s box of crimes. – This is an allusion to one of Greek Mythology’s origin myth, “Pandora’s box”.
  • “This place is like a Garden of Eden.” – This is a biblical allusion to the “garden of God” in the Book of Genesis.
  • “Hey! Guess who the new Newton of our school is?” – “Newton”, means a genius student, alludes to a famous scientist Isaac Newton.
  • “Stop acting like my ex-husband please.” – Apart from scholarly allusions we refer to common people and places in our speech.”

Do not leave me

 

Do not leave me for  the desolate  grave.
Do not leave me  here when you are gone
Do not leave me   to whom love  you gave
Do not leave me

My   tender arms, I stroke  and gently bathe
To soothe my mind , when  near me there is none.
Do not leave me for  the desolate  grave
Do not leave me

For   our humorous love ,I ever crave
A founding ground we have built upon
Do not leave me   to whom love  you gave
Do not leave me

A sorrow deep convulses like a wave
Washes me of  hope, of memories  done
Yet do not leave me for  the desolate  grave.
Do not leave me

I love not the charisma  of men suave
I love your voice and all our passion spun
Never leave me   to whom love  you gave
Never leave me.

In my heart, your name shall be engraved
In my mind,  you circle like the sun
Do not leave me for   your desolate  grave
Do not leave me  for death’s dark embrace~
That dark embrace

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Edify

IMG_0080

 

 
Merriam-Webster
WORD OF THE DAY
August 4, 2016
 photo1137 qq
edify Audio pronunciation
verb | ED-uh-fye
Definition
:
to instruct and improve especially in moral and religious knowledge : uplift; also : enlighten, inform
Scroll down for more about edify
“Reading Lawrence, I am amazed and edified by the raw emotional intensity of his characters. I’m looking for ways to internalize this rich, untamed emotion and try to impart something of it to the characters who come to life in my keyboard.”
— A. B. Yehoshua, quoted in The New York Times Book Review, 16 June 2016
 images york

fit

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  PLAY NOW
 DSCN0022
Did You Know?
The Latin noun aedes, meaning “house” or “temple,” is the root of aedificare, a verb meaning “to erect a house.” Generations of speakers built on that meaning, and by the Late Latin period, the verb had gained the figurative sense of “to instruct or improve spiritually.” The word eventually passed through Anglo-French before Middle English speakers adopted it as edifyduring the 14th century. Two of its early meanings, “to build” and “to establish,” are now considered archaic; the only current sense of edify is essentially the same as that figurative meaning in Late Latin, “to instruct and improve in moral and religious knowledge.”
Examples of EDIFY
“Reading Lawrence, I am amazed and edified by the raw emotional intensity of his characters. I’m looking for ways to internalize this rich, untamed emotion and try to impart something of it to the characters who come to life in my keyboard.”
— A. B. Yehoshua, quoted in The New York Times Book Review, 16 June 2016
“He said he hopes the group takes away the community they began to build, so they can unify and edify each other to do the work of recovery.”
— Taylor Stuck, The Herald-Dispatch (Huntington, West Virginia), 15 May 2016

When we begin

When we begin the slow descent  to age
From that peak or maximum of strength
We notice nothing as it has no length
So feel no need to cry or scream in rage
When we begin.

The ” writing on the wall” is on the page.
The well off sink in angst, the workless tense;
We’ve lost our youth, our mind looks for defence
Then we begin the slow descent  of age.
Then we begin.

The music that we hum is  a slow dirge
An elegy falls from every pen to page
I do not  feel it’s good that we should rage
But gently take the  shroud of silk or serge
As in the living earth we all shall merge.
Then life begins again

 

 

Poincare, a human bee

Bee-collecting-pollen-0101.jpg

 

http://www.storyofmathematics.com/19th_poincare.html
Henri Poincaré

Henri Poincaré (1854-1912)

Poincaré deliberately cultivated a work habit that has been compared to a bee flying from flower to flower. He observed a strict work regime of 2 hours of work in the morning and two hours in the early evening, with the intervening time left for his subconscious to carry on working on the problem in the hope of a flash of inspiration. He was a great believer in intuition, and claimed that “it is by logic that we prove, but by intuition that we discover”

Minister for Reign

Theresa May
Went to say
Tougher than man
I’ll drop that bomb.

Boris is Foreign
Minister for rain.
If it pours
Shut the door.

Owen Smith
Who’s he with?
I never heard of him
Should I be scared of him?

Jeremy Corbyn
Needs  a new warning
Socialism’s out?
What is Labour about?

Political animals
Are often criminals
No-one can jail ’em
And no-one can play with ’em

 

As false as Vietnam

  • As false as Vietnam
    As good as they come
  • As happy as  the very
  • As comic as the day  he  was stung,
  • As corny as a ribald tomcat,
  • Massive!What if?
  • As green as  man-made custard.Bird’s try!
  • Lost out?Then  pluck could save you.
  • As many  calls as a  pioneers’ phone book,
  • So old,yet he fused with her
    So cold but was amused by her.
  • As divine as the rose of your grace
  • As fine as the clothes we misplaced
    As misaligned as the books on the page
  • Displeased  by hunch, he drowned her horrors.

The referendum

David Cameron
Got a hammering
The referendum
Sorta bent him.

Boris Johnson
Always wants some
Maybe women
Keep ’em coming
Maybe power
He’s missed the hour.
Two roads diverged
Gove emerged
Stabbed Boris’ back
Went off track.
Gove is  finished
Boris diminished

Too much light

Too much light blinds  eyes that outward gaze
We cannot see, like Paul on Tarsus Road.
The mystery ‘s inherent in the  code.
When we come to parting of the ways
Too much light blinds.

Not a choice of two roads but a maze
With no sat nav or answer to download
Where shall we be at the ending of  the  days?
What mystery,what horror  may unfold
As we stumble through the  rubble, by fear crazed
Too much light blinds

 

 
As  with the whores of Babylon we laze
Don’t we feel a touch of icy cold?
Has the   winsome moon become too bold?
Armageddon beckons , who obeys?
Too much light blinds

 

 

As being Catholic was a sin

Good Queen Bess
Felt a bit of regret
As she beheaded her cousin
And another  few dozen.

Queen Mary burned
Heretics spurned
So was Jesus  pleased
As they   crackled and wheezed.
Burning our foes
Brings further woes.

The Hanoverians were brought in
As being Catholic was a sin
Claimants to the  throne
Have had life postponed.

Queen Victoria had sex
When dear Albert was vexed
So  she provoked him each day
As she sure liked to play.
Their children ruled Europe
Until no one could endure it
The Kaiser made war
And irritated the Tsar.
Empires laid waste
Jews were deemed base.
These studious good  folk
Later sent up in smoke.
God read the  signs
And black was his mind.
Jesus loved sinners
So are the Nazis  the winners?
It’s bloody confusin’
And   negates amusin’
Original sin
Can we  ever try again?

This green country’s the home of many wild

The garden’s now a  Wood ,where dwell three wolves
The  maple red  is now the  president
And all the laws and rules have been devolved
For the sake of all the residents

This green country  gives heart like mine  no grief
For hidden are the houses standing near
And  as the wolves dance, I watch with relief
As ants and beetles stand around   and stare

For wolves are never seen in suburbs tame
And  maples are at home in  foreign lands
It may be that the satyrs play new games
And smuggle in some creatures contraband.

Let explanations die their long due death.
Let’s lose our minds and dance  in happiness.

 

Clerihew?

Henry Moore
Sketcher  of war
Sculptures massed
No gas masks
Underground shelters
Where people felt it

 

Picasso’s blue
Gave life new woo.
I like his drawing
So utterly awing.
My  legs gave way
What can I say?

Clerihew today?
Do it your way.
Sonnets are posher
And also kosher
Say it wrong
Cat bit my tongue