K. Morris's Blog, page 665

July 17, 2016

As in Days of Yore

When the sun sinks
Man Drinks
From the Lillie lined pool
Where many a fool
Has drunk before.

As in days of yore
So it is now.
I think on how
Everything has changed
Yet remains the same.

The fool
Still drinks
As the sun sinks
Over the stagnant pool
Where lillies have long since gone to seed,
Vultures feed
And luxuriant weeds
Supply all needs.


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Published on July 17, 2016 22:56

Ossip Mandelstam: the tragic life of an incredible poet

Jennifer Menninger - Writer. Student. Traveller.

IMG_1661 Some days ago, I went to the exhibition “Ossip Mandelstam – Wort und Schicksal(word and destiny)” inHeidelberg’s oldtown.The Jewish Russian poet and essayist was a studentat Heidelberg University in 1909/10, and it was here that he started writing.His tragic life shows how much our livesare influencedby policy-makers and that beautiful art always finds a way to come to the surface.

In 1913, when Mandelstam was 22, hisfirst collection of poems...

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Published on July 17, 2016 14:26

“My Vibrating Vertebrae and Other Poems” by Agnes Mae Graham

A great guest post on my friend, Victoria (Tori) Zigler’s site, by Chris Graham (AKA the Story Reading Ape), about his mother, Agnes Mae Graham’s collection of poetry. For Chris’s post please follow this link, http://ziglernews.blogspot.co.uk/2016/07/poetry-book-by-author-agnes-mae-graham.html.


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Published on July 17, 2016 10:46

The Poet’s Obsession

Love and death are the poet’s great obsession.
Wile the former session
May be long or brief,
‘Tis certain, the performance, once over, ends in grief.


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Published on July 17, 2016 09:21

Owl

I have lain awake listening for the owl’s cry.
A note that chills
Thrills
Then does die.

One day
This bird of prey
Will carry my soul away,
Or so the supersticious say.

Mice hide
While I, in my pride
Decide
The owl’s erie cry
Signifies that I will die.

The bird has no interest in me
So why can I not be free
From his cry
That to my window nigh
does rise, then, as suddenly, die?


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Published on July 17, 2016 03:20

July 16, 2016

Heels

Heels approaching
Conscience’s reproaching
Din Shrieks, “This is sin”!
But oh, how sweet it is to give in …

Sound ever nearer,
Clearer and clearer.
The man fears her
Yet desires.
unquenchable fires.

The body tires
Yet still he aspires
To take
And her passion awake.


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Published on July 16, 2016 09:28

Figurines

Not all metal is brass.
Figurines
Perform sceenes,
Reflected back in glass,
Then out of the play pass.
Some will return again
To cause the director pain,
But not all metal is brass.


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Published on July 16, 2016 06:44

International Poetry competition – one of the biggest and best

BRIDGET WHELAN writer

poem typewriter162746_640

One of the world’s biggest and most prestigious poetry contests, the National Poetry Competition is now open for previously unpublished poems of up to 40 lines on any subject. (Publication includes being posted on blogs, twitter etc etc) The competition is judged by Moniza Alvi, Gerry Cambrige and Jack Underwood. Every entry will be read by at least two judges – they don’t just get to see a selected short list. All poems are judged anonymously. 1st prize is 5,000
2nd 2...
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Published on July 16, 2016 04:37

Refracting

The poet may redact
The light that through his poem does refract.
But the reader will therein construe
That she believes to be true.


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Published on July 16, 2016 04:24