My soul agent

KODAK Digital Still Camera

Is this man your soul agent?
No,I don’t  have a spiritual agent
But is he your only agent?
No,I employ many detectives in my agency
Well, who is he?
I don’t really know.He  follows me not just on FB but here in the town
Is he spying on you?
Well, if he were, would he not try to hide?
This may be a trick.Unless  he wants to ask you out but is too shy.
What’s it got to do with you, anyway?
I was only asking.
That’s what they all say
Who?
Men, women, you know.They ask me to open their doors when the key gets stuck
And do you?
Only if I know them.
So how come you are so skilled at opening doors?
I’m just a genius manque.
Gosh, you speak French.
S’il vous plait
Ah,mon oncle est mort
Moi aussi
You don’t talk like an Aussie
I’m from Christchurch
You are a believer?
No, my parents  lived there
What, in a church?
No, in a bungalow.
How charming
It was horrible
I  am sorry.
It’s not your fault.You were not born then.
Can souls be guilty?
Only Dover souls.

The agency for souls is love gone strong

The  agency for souls is in  its space
Sending new souls through to be well placed
I see it in the mountains ,shining lakes.

The water shivers with the rivers  underground
The babies enter life with   cry and song
The  agency for souls is  love gone strong

As the matter and the spirit wind
Interlaced with love and work and mind
We see might in the mountains grand designs

Each soul is an agent, human, kind
Brought to earth and  softly  held,defined
The  agency for souls is  love unblind

We  have our  own vocation, we have guides
Our talents  and our weaknesses beside
Sculptured are the mountains  dignified.

We are more in heaven on this earth
When souls are how we measure people’s worth
The agency is how we know his Mind

A soul must be embraced and brought to earth
Where there is love we hope there will be mirth
The  agency, the soul,  can  take its  space.
I see  love  by  the waterfalls, sun chased

As I heard it

Photo0321.jpgWurt’zmicat= where is my cat
Wurzmidinner= where is my dinner
Midadsmokes= my father smokes
Deyelikekippers= are you a maths teacher?

Avityeroanway= have it your own way
Amgointechurch =I am going to church
Yecanseesatanin’t mirror= one can see Satan in the mirror
Izzitrainin= is it raining?
adoantwant t’ gotoskool=I am menstruating
pizeanirrationalnumber=I am going to Confession
Izzgodtranscendental= can we pay the rent?
Amgoint’etbuzzstop=I am leaving home
Alostmibuzzfairmam=I am a thief

Serious art that is funny

radleylake20181https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/serious-art-thats-funny-humor-poetry

Extract

Carolyn Forché, someone who has never been accused of being a funny poet, has said “irony, paradox, surrealism . . . might well be both the answer and a restatement of [Theodor] Adorno’s often quoted and difficult contention that to write poetry after Auschwitz is barbaric.” But what did the philosopher and critic Adorno mean by this fatuous statement? No poetry? Or just a very, very serious and earnest poetry? Because, let’s face it–earnestness is almost always bad art. Good art makes us think; it has more questions than answers. Often, but not always, satire does this too. But earnestness almost never does this–that’s not its job. Earnestness is comforting. It wants to hug us. And we want to be hugged sometimes. But sometimes we want to laugh while poking holes in self-righteousness and oppression, whether it be literal political oppression or oppression of a quieter sort – cultural and aesthetic oppression. Irony and satire are such a good antidote to oppression because oppression needs to be earnest (or at least look earnest) in order to be feared by those it seeks to cow. Oppression cannot work alongside irony because it believes in its own righteousness and a monolithic concept of truth that must be asserted to the oppressed with a straight face. Irony and satire are the tools by which the oppressed get to make fun of the oppressors without the oppressors getting it.

Yer what?

 

Dust Cursed when Father’s Cross hung in outer Banach space
Deeds were heard.He left.
No insight.Graphs discontinuous
Both sides toasted at once please with old  jam  and whipped streams
Bath and laugh.Pay as you gloat.Pray and demote.Exam with no notes

Pensive Frenzy Penis Wednesday
Died or laid beside. Decide.Deride.Derrida deceived her
Deconstructed destructured destabilised, de-lied de truth sat on me
Too wide.She implied.What a bride.All undenied
She was beside herself.Disassociation.Double woe man

Logic’s no magic
Tragic sentences deliberated in the Tower.
Heads off trouble
Inferno detered her.He went up in flames.Boy’s games
Paradise crust over minced groats on brown pies
Dante ilio braganzi.Fancy?
Beowulf organza dress for wild dancer
Prise before Fall.
Salvation deterioration.
Golden letter.Feel better.
Godly  rites .Music
Sleights of Sand
The Tide came in

Seven deadly tins

P10002611.Cadbury’s  chocolate biscuits  made with real butter
2 M and S Choc chip cookies or any other biscuits
3.Tinned marrowfat peas to  eat with fish and chips
4.  Earl Grey Tea
5.Fudge made with real cream
6.Harrogate toffee extracts teeth free of charge
7. Chocolate almonds

Mountain

We saw the view from Langdale to the sea
Windermere, a riddle ten miles long
Coniston a question of degree
Old Man standing like a  children’s song

The risky climb, the tough hand that saved me
The energy of youth and the unknown
The  boldest child, the future poetry
By the shape of hills ,I’m overthrown

The shock of beauty  and the cliffs of rock
The slope as sheer as  silk, the mirrored poem
The sturdy heart that startled with its knock
The  pensive soul that brought these wishes home

On the highest peak’s edge, we   lay down~
Closed our eyes to  hear the   sheep bells sound

Death of death of poetry

12080087_623843411088874_6682646184996107768_ohttps://www.poets.org/poetsorg/text/death-death-poetry

 

“Poetry, then, appears to be:

  1. a vacuous synonym for excellence or unconsciousness. What else is common to the public perception of poetry?
  2. It is universally agreed that no one reads it.
  3. It is universally agreed that the nonreading of poetry is (a) contemporary and (b) progressive. From (a) it follows that sometime back (a wandering date, like “olden times” for a six-year-old) our ancestors read poems, and poets were rich and famous. From (b) it follows that every year fewer people read poems (or buy books or go to poetry readings) than the year before.
    Other pieces of common knowledge:
  4. Only poets read poetry.
  5. Poets themselves are to blame because “poetry has lost its audience.”
  6. Everybody today knows that poetry is “useless and completely out of date”—as Flaubert put it in Bouvard and Pécuchet a century ago.

For expansion on and repetition of these well-known facts, look in volumes of Time magazine, in Edmund Wilson’s “Is Verse a Dying Technique?,” in current newspapers everywhere, in interviews with publishers, in book reviews by poets, and in the August 1988 issue of Commentary, where the essayist Joseph Epstein assembled every cliché about poetry, common for two centuries, under the title “Who Killed Poetry?””

Survivor guilt

https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/survivor-guilt

 

“It’s all your fault, anyway, and it always has been—
the kind word you thought of saying but didn’t,
the appalling decline of human decency, global warming,
thermonuclear nightmares, your own small cowardice,
your stupid idea that you would live forever—
all tua culpa. John Phillip Sousa
invented the sousaphone, which is also your fault.
Its notes resound like monstrous ricochets.

But when you wake up your body”

Follow the link for more,please

You shall take no other God  to sea ever

You shall take no other God  to sea ever
You shall not make for yourself a mind dull nor sit down without  writing
You shall not misuse the Dictionary of the Word.
You shall remember and keep the people’s day wholly free
You must not  murder words nor sentence to death
You must not  be desultory with those you live with
You must not steal goodness from the poor nor torture them with your pride
You must not give false references  to your hard  labours
You must not be envious of your neigbour’s earplugs.
You shall not be  vexatious with his cows nor his wife, nor anyone that emits love  and  does humankind favours
You must not worship the Bible

The pattern

A villanelle is like a cable knit
The lines repeated twist ,make strong ,make warm
My  mind  is held by pattern as I sit

How can we find a subject that is fit
To spend our time to make  this unique form?
A villanelle is like a cable knit

 

My  mind  is held by pattern as I sit
1 and 3 repeat while 2 rhymes with
1 and 3 make strong the cabled arm

For few escape the dark, the glimpsed abyss
The patterned repetitions keep us calm
A villanelle like love is holy writ

Who hurts whom and why did Judas kiss?
King David knew the valleys ,wrote his psalms
My  mind  flows with the  patterns as I sit

From life and death and injured pride we learn
That noone who repents will suffer harm
A villanelle  from chosen words is knit
My  mind   dwells in the pattern and the wit.

 

A scarcity of silence

” To be continually surrounded by language used exclusively for utilitarian purposes is a threat to the disinterested yet sacred attention a poet must have to words. Also, poetry has an intimate, necessary relation with silence. The work of poets is impaired by too much noise and language, a scarcity of silence.”

 

Matthew Zapruder

Poetry in times of crisis

Way-through-the-woods.jpghttps://lithub.com/poetry-and-poets-in-a-time-of-crisis/

 

“We only know that the immediate signs are bad. Deep, potentially irresolvable fissures in our democracy have revealed themselves, along with an epidemic of rage, as well as hopelessness. The results of this election were, for at least half the country and much of the rest of the world, a massive shock. Yet even had the results been different, we would still have been in a time of crisis. All the local and global problems were already there, and remain.

I am the father of a two-year-old son, so even before the election these facts worried me deeply. Since Trump’s victory I have felt even more spiritually sick, adrift. I keep looking around for a father of some sort, but mine has been gone nearly ten years, and there don’t seem to be any others available.

Since election night I have been experiencing an intense lethargy. During the day, as well as in the middle of the night, I am visited by sudden, destabilizing visions of the future. All night, intermittently, I feel them pressing into my mind. These visions bring anxiety and high alertness, though for no immediate perceivable danger, which in turn brings paralysis, and diurnal exhaustion.

I am a poet, which means that my areas of expertise and concern are language and the imagination. In the days after the election, shattered and exhausted and frustrated and angry and intensely anxious about the future, as so many of us are, I felt certain it was essential to begin to ask, what does this crisis mean for poets, and poetry? What, in these times, must we do? Can poetry help save us?

I have always believed that poetry has its own special role, distinct from all other uses of language. I agree with W.S. Merwin when he writes, “poetry like speech itself is made out of paradox, contradictions, irresolvables … It cannot be conscripted even into the service of good intentions.” He then goes on to explain, however, that circumstances can challenge this belief:”

On the shore

The face that was familiar is no more
Yet in my dreams he  is alive again
Without his presence, I feel lost and sore

The truth of loss, no human can ignore
It tears our  heart  to pieces with its pain
The face that was familiar is no more

Yet sentimental offerings I abbhor
When parted from the love with whom I’d lain
Without his presence, I feel lost and sore

No give and take of love, the shore is bare
The tide is out  so far the waves complain
The face that was familiar is no more

On the sea’s edge, we would walk and stare
Now I walk alone is this  my shame?
Without his presence, I feel lost and  bare

By my write the inner rhythm’s regained
The art of losing well  may be attained
The face that was familiar is no more
With him I   found sweet sea shells on  the shore

 


 

There were ten turtle doves and a harvest in a pear tree

 

IMG_20180224_172933

Art by Katherine’s Unconscious Mind

  • You shall have no other Gods for tea ever
  • You shall not make for yourself any  mind doll nor sit down with it nor versify  nor terrify it nor me
  • You shall not misuse the Home of the Word.
  • You shall remember and keep the Sabbath day  wholly free
  • You must not commit murder nor fantasise  it nor pretend war is just harmless fun
  • You must not commit adultery even with uncivil partners
  • You must not steal  benefits from the poor nor deride them
  • You must not give false references  about your Saviour
  • You must not be envious of your neigbour’s goods. You shall not be sensuous with his mouse nor his wife, nor any cat that emits  love with right behaviour

 

In the stillness

“God as an experience” A Stephanie Dowrick talk

Psalm 46

 God is our refuge and strength,
    an ever-present help in trouble.
Therefore we will not fear, though the earth give way
    and the mountains fall into the heart of the sea,
though its waters roar and foam
    and the mountains quake with their surging.[c]

There is a river whose streams make glad the city of God,
    the holy place where the Most High dwells.
God is within her, she will not fall;
    God will help her at break of day.
Nations are in uproar, kingdoms fall;
    he lifts his voice, the earth melts.

The Lord Almighty is with us;
    the God of Jacob is our fortress.

Come and see what the Lord has done,
    the desolations he has brought on the earth.
He makes wars cease
    to the ends of the earth.
He breaks the bow and shatters the spear;
    he burns the shields[d] with fire.
10 He says, “Be still, and know that I am God;
    I will be exalted among the nations,
    I will be exalted in the earth.”

Like leaves you’ve flown

The face that was familiar is no more
Yet with my mind I conjure up his eyes
His last warm smile, his wink,oh my sweet Lord
As I whispered  psalms he made his flight

The face that was familiar  now has gone
I see it inadvertently by  need
I shall  never  seek another one
With eyes and lips and speech that I might heed.

The face that was familiar  comes in dreams
Yet when I waken he is not in place
And so with grief my body hunches, squeezed
To keep the heart from  ravages unsafe

O face familiar,now like leaves you’ve flown
And I am left alone in homeless home

Kitchen fire

A plaster figure
Stands for my identity
Virtuosity

The door swings like rope
I am loosened from myself
Gape like a wide mouth

The kettle looks dead
Where is the kitchen fire
Where  are all of you?

I keep alive by thought
What day is it,I ask him
But he is absent

I put the bags outside
Let’s pretend we are here now
Will someone collect me?

 

Sylvia Plath:romantic?

http://journals.sfu.ca/thirdspace/index.php/journal/article/view/gordon/141

Extractphoto0189

“Raymond Williams observes, in his book Culture and Society: 1780-1950, that between the end of the eighteenth century and the early years of the nineteenth, some significant shifts in the meaning of words occurred. One of the important words that underwent this shift was ‘art’ and with it, the conception of the artist changed dramatically. Williams notes that “Art came to stand for a special kind of truth, ‘imaginative truth’, and artist for a special kind of person” (15). Furthermore, the idea of the genius changed from “meaning ‘a characteristic disposition,’” to “mean ‘exalted ability’, and a distinction was made between it and talent” (Williams 15). So, a Romantic conception involved not only a new perspective on art, but also on the person and the abilities that created the art. The conception of the Romantic Artist developed into one in which the Artist “is by nature indifferent to the crude worldliness and materialism of politics and social affairs; he is devoted, rather, to the more substantial spheres of natural beauty and personal feeling” (Williams 48). While Williams goes on to explain that this view is a simplification of the interests and social engagement of the Romantic poets, elements of this view persist. It is also important to note Williams’s gendering of the Artist as male. The gender bias is not only a reflection of the conventions of the time in which his book was written, but also reveals some of the presuppositions underlying the Romantic tradition.

E. Young, in his 1759 work Conjectures on Original Composition, reveals another underlying concept: “An original may be said to be of a vegetable nature; it rises spontaneously from the vital root of genius; it grows, it is not made; Imitations are often a sort of manufacture, wrought up by those mechanicsart and labour, out of pre-existent materials not their own” (qtd. in Williams 54). The idea of the original privileges the creativity and ‘liberty’ of work that breaks new ground and is spontaneous invention over work which is the result of effort and imitation. Rather than record the mundane, “the Artist’s business is to ‘read the open secret of the universe’” (Williams 56). The Artist has access to something universal and can transcend the ordinary through inspiration.

One potential reason for the use of the Romantic tropes of the Artist in work on Sylvia Plath is the many similarities between the lives the later Romantic poets led – lives of passion, pain, fame, ending in early death – and Plath’s experiences. The poets help to create their personal fame through their poetry, which was so personally revealing. The later Romantic poets – specifically Byron, Shelley and Keats – bear striking similarities to Plath. Byron was “made famous by his despair” and all three “die out of England” (McGann 110) as expatriates, like Plath who died away from America. The “Romantic poets like Keats appear to suffer in and through their work” (McGann 136) and the same could be said of Plath. Al Strangeways states that “Plath’s connection to Romantic tradition is […] usually treated incidentally” and that this is inadequate because many of her “central conflicts […] such as her struggles with individualism […] and her interest in the extremes and intensities of the unconscious, are rooted in Romantic concerns and influenced by [a] Romantic version of conflict” (40). The trope of the suffering, tortured artist is frequent in Plath criticism, though less prevalent in Rose and Stevenson’s works. Byron’s death is also “normally thought of in relation to his marriage separation, but that domestic event merely culminated his desperate Years of Fame” (McGann 111). The observation applies equally well to Plath, a female addition to the tradition typically restricted to males, but this important idea of gender and inclusion in the canon will be returned to later in the paper.

A crucial concept for the discussion of Plath and her work is that of the ‘genius.’ Christine Battersby notes that

[b]y the end of the eighteenth century, ‘genius’ had acquired Romantic grandeur: it had been transformed from a kind of talent into a superior type of being who walked a ‘sublime’ path between ‘sanity’ and ‘madness’, between the ‘monstrous’ and the ‘superhuman’ The creative success that could be ascribed to ‘mere’ talent was opposed to that bound up with the personality of the Romantic ‘genius.’ (103)

Poems for peace

img_20181015_2246203042https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/69592/poems-for-peace

 

“Yet we Americans live in the most powerful country in the world, whose adaptably postmodern empire is marked by what William James calls Pure War, a state in which the real war is the constant preparation for war. Though our poetry has ably represented the traumatic and unmaking operations of war—from the rage of Achilles on to our present day—it has also often unwittingly glorified and perpetuated a culture of war. We have yet to give adequate attention to how our poetry also contains the seeds of other ways of dealing with conflict, oppression, and injustice, and how it may advance our thinking into what a future without war might look like.

How to imagine peace, how to make peace? In our conversations on the Peace Shelf, three general subcategories emerged, though these were full of overlap and contradiction: Sorrows, Resistance, and Alternative Visions. It’s simple enough: we need to witness and chronicle the horrors of war, we need to resist and find models of resistance, and we need to imagine and build another world. Even if modern poetry has been marked by a resistance to the glorification of war, vividly shown by the World War I soldier poets and many others, the important work of poetic dissent has been, too often, via negativa—resistance to the dominant narrative, rather than offering another way.

Even Denise Levertov—one of the self-consciously anti-war poets on any Peace Shelf—found herself at a loss for words at a panel in the 1980s, when Virginia Satir called upon Levertov and other poets to “present to the world images of peace, not only of war; everyone needed to be able to imagine peace if we were going to achieve it.” In her response, “Poetry and Peace: Some Broader Dimensions” (1989), Levertov argues that “peace as a positive condition of society, not merely as an interim between wars, is something so unknown that it casts no images on the mind’s screen.” But she does proceed further: “if a poetry of peace is ever to be written, there must first be this stage we are just entering—the poetry of preparation for peace, a poetry of protest, of lament, of praise for the living earth; a poetry that demands justice, renounces violence, reveres mystery.” That Levertov lays out succinctly what we ourselves, the Peace Shelf collective, took some weeks to arrive at, illuminates the challenge of the peace movement and of the literature that engages it; our conversations, our living history and past, are scattered, marginal, unfunded, and all too easily forgotten.

The following poems, dating from the 20th century onward—which appear in the anthology Come Together: Imagine Peace—provide a foretaste of the larger feast, which could begin with the Sumerian priestess Enheduanna’s laments against war, with Sappho’s erotic lyrics, or with Archilochus’s anti-heroic epigrams. Yet this feast isn’t mere sweetness and light. “Peace” is no mere cloud-bound dream, but a dynamic of living amid conflict, oppression, and hatred without either resigning ourselves to violence or seizing into our own violent response; peace poems vividly and demonstrably articulate and embody such a way. At their best, peace poems, as John Milton did in “Aereopagitica,” argue against “a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary.” If, in Milton’s words, “that which purifies us is trial, and trial is by what is contrary,” then peace poetry must also interrogate the easy pieties of the peace movement and its own ideological blind spots. And indeed, Michael True’s exploration of nonviolent literature confirms that “although writings in [the nonviolent] tradition resemble conventional proclamations recommending peace reform, their tone and attitude tend to be provocative, even disputatious, rather than conciliatory.””

Conned today

8340680
Made by Katherine
I had  a hard day having been conned by some  clever people pretending to be Mcafee Security.It was not just the money but the need to return the computer to its factory settings which meant Windows 10 was removed.I also lost my credit card and some other things but I managed to call the Bank before anyone could use it
Then I got vertigo and almost fell onto the coffee table.No doubt it would have collapsed and fallen to pieces like the rest of my life seems to do now and then
However while the laptop is still not ready,I read some of my poems outloud and  amazingly my tension was reduced immensely.
I will remember that as on days when I make many phone calls I do get quite fraught.
I always try to be pleasant to the people in India who are helping me because I think it’s not just our friends we should be kind to.And my doctor is Indian and so were many of my colleagues so I have an admiration also linked to the fact that they invented the concept of zero as a number…….. a very abstract idea.Look it up.Maths is interesting.It’s not arithmetic

The  wounds can be discerned but seldom seen

The agony of  loss will clot  in time
The anguish sharp destroys the human heart
The  wounds can be discerned but never found

 

As for us human beings, love profound
Predicts that one or other will depart
The agony of  loss will clot in time

As on our beds ,we wounded folk all lounge
Until a message comes  and we must start
The  wounds can be discerned but never seen

As life flows out like lyrics and their rhymes
As lizards from their hiding places dart
The agony of  loss will ease in time

At first the very cells each seem to scream
The eye seeks visions to protect the hearts
The  wounds can be discerned but never seen

 

How Helen may have overturned the cart
How skin of little children often smarts
The agony, the pain will wane  in time
The  wounds can be discerned but are now  tamed

 

Save the rich

At last I have achieved what I most need
Is it money, fame or love or war?
I’ve got writer’s block and painful knees

This block I have proves I once wrote at speed
With words that rose up from my heart’s deep core
At last I have  been given what I need

Are there markets which will buy my pleas?
What I fear the most is that I bore
I’ve got writer’s block and  knobbly knees

I could run a class on minds diseased
If I did I’d speak up from the floor
At last I have  been  offered what I need

A teacher on a podium might freeze
Like google drive , like love which we ignore
I’ve got writer’s block and ancient knees

 

Save the rich from greed and envy pure
From starving , from homelessness, the poor
At last I have achieved what   noone  knew
I’ve got  sex free socks and gendered knees


 

A dark lilac November sky

Old man,bending over,
arched like a fallen moon
in a dark lilac November sky.
Joy and pain wrestle my heart across the emptiness
and toss it up like a damp rocket
to fall in a hidden corner where mice live.
Would that not be a good ending,to be dust
to these little creatures nesting
in my chewed green twine and my tartan basket?
They have eyes and shiver in my hand when I rescue them
from the cat,
as any heart might.
Now night falls on the newspaper basket
where the damp Times and the Guardian mix into glue
and tomorrow the sun will rise
and it will just be the garbage
with no poetic undertones nor deathly hushes..
Heather and a silver light
you stand on a hill top like a god
looking over his domain.
Strong and now weak
it’s the humane condition
Everlasting life is too dangerous for humans.
Silent,motionless,home of beetles
bit by bit we fall away
into the mother soil
with cracked jugs and dropped coins
for a future academic to dig into.
Transparent hand touches me.
Whose might it be but yours?

Haiku Economics

dsc000751https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poetrymagazine/articles/69633/haiku-economics

 

Quote:I was teaching economics at the Georgia Institute of Technology when I made the haiku-economics connection. I needed to connect with 225 economics, science, and engineering majors—college kids who were being trained to believe that poetry and feelings are not important to, say, the World Bank. At the same time I was reading The Essential Etheridge Knight and falling in love with haiku. I thought about the inability of standard economic models to explain bubbles, crashes, and global inequality—and how market fundamentalists refuse to discuss them. I saw the bridge I needed in this poem:

Invisible hand;
Mother of inflated hope,
Mistress of despair!

Adam Smith, indeed. Perhaps it’s the economists who can learn the most from poets about precision and efficiency, about objectivity and maximization—the virtues, in other words, of value-free science.

Ironically, the benefit of the addition is in the cost. The typical haiku budget constraint is limited by three lines of seventeen syllables. Basho himself understood well the joyful paradox of haiku economics: less is more, and more is better! Each poem is the length of about one human breath. This constraint, though severe, is more than offset by a boundless freedom to feel:

Window reflection—
The baby sparrow sitting,
Listening to glass.

I do not yet possess ironic wit

I do not yet possess ironic wit
Yet often I amuse the readers’ ears
Just as my cat once bit me as I sat
Confessing sins, my scruples and my fears.

When one   man left me as I was so bright
Yet others told me  I was  dim and vain
The irony here affects my  once sweet nights
We see in others what we most disdain

Would you tell a lover they were dumb?
Would you tell a lover they smelled queer?
Would you tell a lover you  hate  men?
Would you tell  one they seem insincere?

We see in others sin which dwells in us.
Perpetuating  malice  as  we boss.

What is irony in poetry?

man wearing welding helmet welding metal near gray brick wall
Photo by Movidagrafica Barcelona on Pexels.com

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/learn/glossary-terms/irony

 

“As a literary device, irony implies a distance between what is said and what is meant. Based on the context, the reader is able to see the implied meaning in spite of the contradiction. When William Shakespeare relates in detail how his lover suffers in comparison with the beauty of nature in “My Mistress’ Eyes Are Nothing like the Sun,” it is understood that he is elevating her beyond these comparisons; considering her essence as a whole, and what she means to the speaker, she is more beautiful than nature. “