Earth may burn and human hearts may freeze

Earth may burn and human hearts may freeze

Before you send that email,stop and muse
Do not shoot the arrow poison tipped
Why gravely hurt a friend with differing views?

The vulnerable, the lonely,those we choose
To pass the suffering on, in words encrypt
Before you send that email,stop and muse.

When we do evil, we our virtue lose.
See mouths down-turned with narrow tensed up lips.
Why gravely hurt someone with differing views?

You may have a match,don’t light the fuse.
Might you be more gentle, less abrupt?
Before you send that email,stop and muse.

Earth may burn and politicians freeze
Does that mean that we must be corrupt?
We’ll stretch our minds instead to hear all views

For our dear heart,our own sin will corrupt
We will suffer from our own descent
Before you send that email,stop and muse.
Why gravely hurt yourself when you can choose?

Wool in winter

Merino wool caresses lover like

When we are alone and have no mate.

Even wool cannot converse with man

As useless as that bold great copper pan

Conversation, narrative our skills

Stories can be kept to aid the will.

Wrapped in wool of sheep we shall survive

Stories are what keep the soul alive

Carl Jung: You Can’t Solve Life’s Greatest Problems, You Outgrow Them | by Thomas Oppong | Personal Growth | Medium

https://medium.com/personal-growth/carl-jung-you-cant-solve-life-s-greatest-problems-you-outgrow-them-5c0f025bdd14

Ills of the body.

Dandruff, menstruation ,acne , scent
Posted on September 23,
Dandruff, menstruation ,acne , scent
Deodorants,shampoo and strange new thoughts
The anxious adolescent in torment

Tampons,towels. skin care and defence
Confession, absolution, count for naught
Dandruff, menstruation ,acne , scent

Wet and dry the dreams are wryly bent
We wake confused from what we never sought
The anxious adolescent in torment

The virtues and the vices must be learnt
The will and the desire cannot be bought
Dandruff, menstruation ,acne , scent

Parents’ words our own strength can augment
But for the nervous, it is much too late
The anxious adolescent, the torment

“Civilised”. we might just kiss a date
Until we lose our heads and challenge fate
Dandruff, menstruation ,acne , scent
Poor adolescent in this crazed torment

Alone

I slept right the centre of our bed
Instead of in that mouldy sleeping bag
I slept so near the edge it wore away
And I slid to the floor one night last May

In the middle all alone the space seemed large
No-one there to hold me in their arms
I did not read a book,I was worn out
Pondering on the means and on the doubts

I’ve been lonely like a little child
That mother sent to Office in a file
Waiting for the “open now” command
Will I get to heaven or be condemned?

The file is cold,the Word has little shame
Not guilty of my lack of love and name
I got Office 35678
I can ‘t make attachments , it’s too late

The world collapsed upon me like a cliff
I fell down this dirty yellow rift
Nobody could hear my screams and yells
Perhaps being truly dead may be less hell.

I crawled into my bed as into arms
Solid reassuring, warm and calm
I lay there in the middle , tried to pray
I can’t believe you’ve really gone away

I pray for all my family by name
My sister, brothers,cousins and the lame
I pray for readers who send notes to me
And for that random apple on the tree

I pray for friends who don’t believe in God
I pray for others ,mentally down-trod
Then I feel at loss and dream of you
Polishing my old black boots anew

Still I feel the emptiness inside
When I wake I think I feel your smile
Yet it’s not the same as being enrobed
In the arms of one who has great love

I guess we change but slowly and with pain
Like the folk who marched, their hope Remains

Osteoporosis: Exercises for back pain

https://theros.org.uk/information-and-support/osteoporosis/living-with-osteoporosis/exercise-and-physical-activity-for-osteoporosis/caring-for-your-back/exercises-for-back-pain-after-spinal-fractures/

It’s not just that I’m lonely

I didn’t know I’d love you
With both my heart and mind
Every love is different
Each is a special kind

Yet all human lovers
Must part and go their ways.
Some may die and fall to dust
Some may go astray

When we feel this lonely
No-one else will do
It’s not just that I’m lonely.
I’m lonely, just for you.

Political fires

It seemed the fires of Grenfell Tower had spread
A hear oppressive like the fires of hell
London smothered in air dull and dead.

Flames that slobbered with a passion red
Water that the sun burned up too well
It seemed the fire of Grenfell Tower had spread

God permitted Satan with his dread
Britain quarrelled, split , prepared to kill.
London smothered in air dull and dead.

A referendum showed us all ill-bred.
Neighbours spoke in words that I call vile.
It seemed the fire of Grenfell Tower had spread

By what person is our nation led
who fills our stomach with acidic bile?
The PM spoke in words both dull and dead.

Tempers raged like fires all fresh and wild
Evil was to emptiness beguiled
It seemed the fire of Grenfell Tower had spread
People smothered in the fire lie dead

Written on my phone

The Norfolk post

Everything that I have written for the last two years has been written on my phone including another blog which I have on blogger. That is not about poetry or literature

I would not have believed it possible to do this on a phone and it’s just a Motorola cheapy.

I have learned a lot from that but I’m hoping to be able to use a computer again soon. I would have been very surprised it was possible to do it.

And thank you so much to my regular readers whose efforts have kept me going and catch me writing through this time.

So in my house technology has been a wonderful help

The air of London dull and dead

It seemed the fires of Grenfell Tower had spread
A hear oppressive like the fires of hell
London smothered in air dull and dead.

Flames that slobbered with a passion red
Water that the sun burned up too well
It seemed the fire of Grenfell Tower had spread

God permitted Satan with his dread
Britain quarrelled, split , prepared to kill.
London smothered in air dull and dead.

A referendum showed us all ill-bred.
Neighbours spoke in words that I call vile.
It seemed the fire of Grenfell Tower had spread

By what person is our nation led
who fills our stomach with acidic bile?
The PM spoke in words both dull and dead.

Tempers raged like fires all fresh and wild
Evil was to emptiness beguiled
It seemed the fire of Grenfell Tower had spread
People smothered in the fire lie dead

Neon light on snow

The vivid scream of neon lights on snow
Harassed my senses made me feel I’m blind
Vulgar is the street in giant’s glare

Who invented neon and what for
Could this colour not have been disguised;
The orange scream of neon lights on snow?

As for coming winter I prepare
The sunlight slants and gets into my eyes
Vulgar is my street ,oh do not glare

Is this light a key to metaphor
Seeking out the haunts of Putin’s spies?
The orange screams of neon lights hurt more

Reading John le Carre, I defer.
I am naive with both truth and lies
Vulgar is my street ,oh do not glare

The mystery of nature and its blight
When humans add to this with senseless fights
The orange screaming of the lights on snow
Smack my eyes and ears as North winds blow

Raw emotional nightmare.

I wake up naked,

nothing protects me from the nightmare emotions

I’ve been dreaming of a dead man who is awarding prizes for poetry

I might be a winner but I don’t like it.

I thought he was dead I cried

But no they said that isn’t true although it’s now 57 years since he swallowed the aspirins

Where has he been, what has made him a judge a poetry but he never heard any?

Everybody’s looking he doesn’t seem embarrassed by his absence or his presence.

How can you be here like this I asked him but he smiled and did not speak,

He’s been following my blog from purgatory.

I tell him I don’t need you now, and when I did need you you failed me.

I am a different person now every cell in my body is different from what it was when you were alive.

So you’ve been reading poetry have you?

Is there a newspaper or a magazine that people up there could read or is it pure speculation.

I might have got an answer but I woke up.

When I’m dress my clothes seem to make a protective barrier around my heart so that the nightmare is less violence in its effect.

I’ve got my husband’s wool vest to give me aid. I hope he won’t come back as

Professor of mathematics because it was not do anything for me now yes he was envious.

A pitythat you can’t enjoy your own wifes talents.

We shouldn’t need to put others down to make ourselves feel better.

Unfortunately we do

Wings

Diagonal streams now stripe the windowpane
And in them, tiny insects drown and die.
Unexpected ,sudden rain has come.
Those escape who have the wings to fly.

No angels were seen peering at my room
No doubt they have their Sunday wings to press.
No camera ,even with psychotic zoom,
Can catch an angel while she is undressed.

Now the rain has dried and all is sweet
I tend to houseplants standing by the door.
By good luck these houseplants never bleep.
Only in the real world do they flower.

Bleeps and pings are not a natural sound.
But to the artificial we will bound.

Leaves upon a tree

We are little leaves upon the tree
We never did control our tiny worlds
The tree of life; its power, its mystery

With metaphor, it’s easier to see
Life is tender, see each leaf unfurl.
We are tiny leaves upon the tree

Singing in the sun we seem to be
Full of joy until the storm winds swirl
The tree of life; what power, what mystery

Extinguished candles smoke at Tenebrae
We are blown to death however bold
We are hapless leaves upon the tree

Thus we sacrifice to God uncertainly
Yet as the wars continue, we grow cold
The tree of life; what power, what mystery

Who has dropped us from the hands that hold?
Who has stolen certainty untold?
We are little leaves upon the tree
The tree of life; what power, what mystery

Don’t learn joined up handwringing

Disappointed tonight, the sky was dark mauve and grey

Yet on this phone camera it all comes out the same,anyway

Again looking I see it’s gone black

How dare it do that behind my back?

Darling ease up, the universe needs some slack

Poets need words that don’t bring on simultaneous handwringing.

How to write and how not to write poetry

12651322_666000976873117_6377294032820224503_nhttps://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/68657/how-to-and-how-not-to-write-poetry-56d2484397277

Advice for blocked writers and aspiring poets from a Nobel Prize winner’s newspaper column.
BY WISŁAWA SZYMBORSKA
Introduction
In the Polish newspaper Literary Life, Nobel Prize winning poet Wislawa Szymborska answered letters from ordinary people who wanted to write poetry. Clare Cavanagh, translates these selections.

The following are selections from columns originally published in the Polish newspaper Literary Life. In these columns, famed poet Wislawa Szymborska answered letters from ordinary people who wanted to write poetry. Translated by Clare Cavanagh, they appeared in slightly different form in our Journals section earlier this year.

To Heliodor from Przemysl: “You write, ‘I know my poems have many faults, but so what, I’m not going to stop and fix them.’ And why is that, oh Heliodor? Perhaps because you hold poetry so sacred? Or maybe you consider it insignificant? Both ways of treating poetry are mistaken, and what’s worse, they free the novice poet from the necessity of working on his verses. It’s pleasant and rewarding to tell our acquaintances that the bardic spirit seized us on Friday at 2:45 p.m. and began whispering mysterious secrets in our ear with such ardor that we scarcely had time to take them down. But at home, behind closed doors, they assiduously corrected, crossed out, and revised those otherworldly utterances. Spirits are fine and dandy, but even poetry has its prosaic side.”

To H.O. from Poznan, a would-be translator: “The translator is obliged to be faithful not only to the text. He must also reveal the full beauty of the poetry while retaining its form and preserving as completely as possible the epoch’s spirit and style.”

To Grazyna from Starachowice: “Let’s take the wings off and try writing on foot, shall we?”

To Mr. G. Kr. of Warsaw: “You need a new pen. The one you’re using makes a lot of mistakes. It must be foreign.”

To Pegasus [sic] from Niepolomice: “You ask in rhyme if life makes cents [sic]. My dictionary answers in the negative.”

To Mr. K.K. from Bytom: “You treat free verse as a free-for-all. But poetry (whatever we may say) is, was, and will always be a game. And as every child knows, all games have rules. So why do the grown-ups forget?”

To Puszka from Radom: “Even boredom should be described with gusto. How many things are happening on a day when nothing happens?”

To Boleslaw L-k. of Warsaw: “Your existential pains come a trifle too easily. We’ve had enough despair and gloomy depths. ‘Deep thoughts,’ dear Thomas says (Mann, of course, who else), ‘should make us smile.’ Reading your own poem ‘Ocean,’ we found ourselves floundering in a shallow pond. You should think of your life as a remarkable adventure that’s happened to you. That is our only advice at present.”

Richard Zimler

https://alchetron.com/Richard-Zimler#Our-love-for-the-life-we-survive-richard-zimler

Extract

Richard Zimler received the 2009 Alberto Benveniste literary prize in France for his novel Guardian of the Dawn. The prize is given to novels that have to do with Sephardic Jewish culture or history. It was awarded to him at a ceremony at the Sorbonne in January 2009.

Richard Zimler Richard Zimler RichardZimler Twitter

Five of Zimler’s novels – Hunting Midnight (2005), The Search for Sana (2007), The Seventh Gate (2009), The Warsaw Anagrams (2013) and The Night Watchman (2016) – have been nominated for the International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, the richest prize in the English-Speaking world.

Richard Zimler httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons44

Zimler has also edited an anthology of short stories for which all the author’s royalties go to Save the Children, the largest children’s rights organization in the world. The anthology is entitled The Children’s Hours. Participating authors include Margaret Atwood, Nadine Gordimer, André Brink, Markus Zusak, David Almond, Katherine Vaz, Alberto Manguel, Eva Hoffman, Junot Díaz, Uri Orlev and Ali Smith.

The wind blew off your hat

Salthouse St Nicholas church - aerial Norfolk | Salthouse ch… | Flickr

By Salthouse Church the wind blew off your hat
We watched it flying like an unstrung kite
Then snow fell in cold Cromer,see the map!
A cat dosed by the fire in the warm pub
Yet near Salthouse winds blew off your hat
I’d have blown off too, were I less fat
These gales would give the sailing boats a fright
By Salthouse Church the wind blew off your hat
We watched it flying up in cold sunlight




When our love’s died


I wish to live despite my love has died

And I have no-one but a cat to feed and stroke.

In memory my love will long abide

Though as I write I feel my spring has broke.

My grammar and my spelling are perverse

I used to make religion out of these.

But now I feel that life is getting worse.

As if my heart’s been stung by monstrous bees

In such a state my words may get confused

My sentences are senseless as they’re writ

And as for syntax, it is now abused

As round this room the ghosts of lovers flit.

My grammar is not perfect yet it be

Sad I can say just the same of me

B

The pain of tragic pasts feared imminent

You revealed the face within your face
Human,lowly,humbler than an ant
The pathos in your eyes made sad my gaze

The other face, defended, has no grace
With it ,you appear quite confident.
Yet you revealed to me your hidden face

I know now of the suffering of your days
The pain of tragic pasts feared imminent
The pathos in your eyes made sad my gaze

The Lord says you’re his lamb and sends you grace.
Yet you must hide from men intolerant
You revealed the face within your face

Like Jesus, you were scourged and in disgrace
You wandered feebly,lost, itinerant
The pathos in your eyes makes sad my days

If God exists then would he not embrace
The lost, the lonely, even the vagrant?
You revealed the face within your face
The pathos in your eyes makes humans base.

Re-experience your own sorrow and be overwhelmed

The joy of trauma.

Born to die.

Be your suffering self.

Born to sin.

Kill your real self.

Detach your own retina.

Scramble your own Brain

How to go to hell.

How to see Gaza

Born to hate.

Do a degree in suffering and win

Your boundary is also my boundary

Envy is such pain

I so loved your beautiful
coat of many colours
I almost passed out

Other women made such
Spiteful remarks
I knew it would be hidden

You wore a cheap mac from
A large chainstore after that
Depriving my eyes of drowned joy


And then I became afraid
Of women’s tongues
Destroying what they never found

Envy does not want to like
Handmade clothes
Colours of dawn or sunset

Wants others grey and plain
Treads on their bare faces
In disdain

Why we Envy

I envy shy black people because they can blush secretly

And I envy Chinese people because they don’t go yellow when they feel sick

I envy Jewish people because they enjoy arguments.Yes that is too general a statement but don’t let’s argue about it. Unless you are Jesus Christ. Did Jesus

argue? Get the Bibles out.

I envy philosophers because they know what distinguishes an argument from a quarrel

I don’t want to be a Catholic because they believe in hell. Can you still go to hell even if you don’t believe in it

Why does nobody mention limbo anymore?

Why do I have to ask questions when other people know by intuition?

Why were red Indians called red Indians?