Thursday, January 28, 2016

Compilation Poem for 1/28/16

This week's compilation poem is a new format.  We had two poets write compilation poems completely separate from each other and then we zipped them together into one poem (switching back and forth from one line to the next). Some of the line combinations were really great!!

If you've ever heard Marianne's poetry
did our hearts not sing within us
this can be dangerous
shake my darling heart
your last words will haunt me forever
to keep a hand on the latch
Something up there
when fruit becomes addictive
is brushing dandruff
no source of boundary
from his hair
when the rolling words finding their way home
don't listen carefully
a warmth penetrating from the midnight star
I regret reading that
I did not want to absorb
it's under copyright
the silence is a rotting boat
yet completely forbidden
you must heal yourself
I find that I am sleeping with demons
they were talking about how easy she is
eat that cannoli
you should be praying not preying
the potent juxtapose of bitter and sweet
becomes cross with me and eats garlic
for we loved
the slabs from the roof like standing sleepers
their entwined hands felt more emotion
my sadness was never beautiful
besides not giving a damn
her features were preserved in a death mask
I'm really tall. It's a big problem.
was her sadness beautiful?
I regret reading that.
removing dignity post mortem
fluttering wings warn me off
I am not painted in neoclassical form
with a calm voice she says "Hello, Michael" as if she had never been asleep
a moment's pause among the woad
Marianne builds houses on fields of cloth
Marianne will forever be greater than me in the cloth category
I regret reading that
kneel with your family
as you pray to
a God you might not even believe in
some things I just no longer laugh about
my sadness was never beautiful
a truck emerging out of a rock
my sadness is not your story to tell
consuming is like possession
the thirst that darkness kindles
it's a big problem
reverberating in my brain.

by Marianne Hales Harding and Michael Clements

We read it like that at the open mic, but I kind-of wish the zipping hadn't ended.  So here's the poem with continued zipping:


If you've ever heard Marianne's poetry
did our hearts not sing within us
this can be dangerous
shake my darling heart
your last words will haunt me forever
to keep a hand on the latch
Something up there
when fruit becomes addictive
is brushing dandruff
no source of boundary
from his hair
when the rolling words finding their way home
don't listen carefully
a warmth penetrating from the midnight star
I regret reading that
I did not want to absorb
it's under copyright
the silence is a rotting boat
yet completely forbidden
you must heal yourself
I find that I am sleeping with demons
they were talking about how easy she is
eat that cannoli
you should be praying not preying
the potent juxtapose of bitter and sweet
becomes cross with me and eats garlic
for we loved
the slabs from the roof like standing sleepers
their entwined hands felt more emotion
my sadness was never beautiful
besides not giving a damn
her features were preserved in a death mask
I'm really tall. It's a big problem.
was her sadness beautiful?
I regret reading that.
removing dignity post mortem
fluttering wings warn me off
I am not painted in neoclassical form
with a calm voice she says "Hello, Michael" as if she had never been asleep
did our hearts not sing within us
a moment's pause among the woad
shake my darling heart
Marianne builds houses on fields of cloth
to keep a hand on the latch
Marianne will forever be greater than me in the cloth category
when fruit becomes addictive
I regret reading that
no source of boundary
kneel with your family
when the rolling words finding their way home
as you pray to
a warmth penetrating from the midnight star
a God you might not even believe in
I did not want to absorb
some things I just no longer laugh about
the silence is a rotting boat
my sadness was never beautiful
you must heal yourself
a truck emerging out of a rock
they were talking about how easy she is
my sadness is not your story to tell
you should be praying not preying
consuming is like possession
becomes cross with me and eats garlic
the thirst that darkness kindles
the slabs from the roof like standing sleepers
it's a big problem
my sadness was never beautiful
reverberating in my brain
her features were preserved in a death mask

by Marianne Hales Harding and Michael Clements


Friday, January 22, 2016

Poem for Endurance

Eyes That See, Ears That Hear

I see it before me
Looming over me
Its size dominates me
Blocks nearly all light
The surface is smooth
Leaving me no place to grasp
No footholds to climb
The darkness and ferocity of my foe
Mock my small human form

I am so tiny
My grip is too weak
My legs have carried me
More miles than I remember
They tremble with fatigue
Before this beastly monument

This wall was not on the map
I have adhered to it always
Mountains were scaled by me
I wandered in valleys
Appreciative of their beauty and ease
The straightaways – I sprinted
All were on the charted course

My map is true
My compass has not failed me
Yet there it sits before me –
Wrong
Ending my quest before I can complete it

I am so tiny
And this obstacle so large
My grip is too weak
And there is no place for my hand
My legs tremble and buckle beneath me
I cannot win

Tears bathe my face
And water the earth
With handfuls of mud
I furiously scrub at my palms
Slowly awareness breaks through

I marvel at the callouses that have
Replaced the soft flesh
Without my notice
I rub the mud up my arms
Noticing for the first time
The strength of the muscles and sinews
My crying abates
The wall is large and seemingly indomitable
But my will is steel
And my eyes sharp
My mind is keen

On quivering determined legs
I stand
And stare the obstruction down
It is still enormous and terrible
But no longer frightening

And then, from the top
I see it,
Hidden in the shadows,
Blocked from light,
A hand
Extending a length of rope
I hear a faint voice calling out
"Take it, and I'll help you over."

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Graphic Noir Poetry

I love noir.

I love the detective, whodunit stories.
I love the intrigue,
the long shadows,
the smoke clouds
and Venetian blinds.

I love the jazz bellowing from pool halls
and the reflective static rain.
I can't get enough of it.

When I leave the office
at the end of a long day at work,
I light it up and breathe it in.
I crack open a can of it when I get home.
I pop some in my mouth as I sit down at my desk
to draw out the seeds from their tough shell.

 And when I reach the fin of the day,
I still feel the ache for a little more
in my dark bones.
I stretch for more,
but the .45 of sleep hits me
and I'm out cold until
I awake in the dark.
Noir.