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		Let's Pretend it's April - Nov. 28Rules: Write a poem for LPiA on the topic or form described. Each poem should appear as a New Reply to this thread. The goal is to, at the end of the month, have written 30 poems for the month of November. (or one, or six, or fifteen) Prompts may be revisited at any time. All members are welcome.
 
 Topic : Write a poem inspired by a poison or venom.
 Form : Any
 Line requirements: 8 or more
 
 Feel free to reply with comments or kudos as you wish.
 
 Questions?
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		11-28-2023, 11:10 PM 
(This post was last modified: 11-29-2023, 01:25 AM by TranquillityBase.)
	
	 
		Colloquy with My Kidneys
My body brews its own poison,
courtesy of my kidneys,
those favorite bits of Jack the Ripper
and Leopold Bloom,
just to give the names of two respectable admirers.
My kidneys, just as I’d forgotten their existence,
come to call.  I offer them water and placation.
They are inside me where I can’t see them, 
even behind my back.  My lungs I can image,
even my heart and liver, but my kidneys
two surprising jellyfish 
from out of my evolutionary past.
My blood is unclean, creatinine it’s called,
I pretend I can feel it in my veins.
My kidneys seem remarkably unconcerned.
I send them home, it’s like talking to the sky.
It’s a tender betrayal.  
	 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 Joined: May 2014
 
	
	
		Poison-Tipped Arrows
 I'm not so sure
 Cupid will escape
 the forensics
 we have today
 and I for one, hope he fries.
 
 Half his potions
 are pure poison,
 
 and the other half
 Alchemic Hail Marys.
 
 I trusted him once,
 
 but for now,
 the boy is cancelled.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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 Joined: Jun 2015
 
	
	
		Zeroes and Ones
 The zeroes and ones
 aren’t playing nice
 on my machine at home,
 and I’ll be damned
 trying this on my phone.
 
 It’s been fun
 looking in, though.
 
 Consider me a poisonous
 snake in the grass;
 in the meantime
 better watch yer ass.
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		Final Poison
 
 It’s said and it is true:
 “The poison is the dose”
 which is to say all things
 are deadly at some concentration
 and all things likewise harmless
 at a harmless dose– and yet
 there is another attribute
 which makes a poison: secrecy.
 
 Poison, as the layman understands,
 is not taken willingly
 except by suicides.  A poisoner
 depends on fraud - a show
 of harmlessness; war gas
 loses effectiveness, timely perceived.
 Poison, like the unseen bullet,
 is a magic trick, invisible, a con
 which could be evaded
 were the victim made aware.
 
 Perhaps most poisonous
 and unseen thing of all,
 deadly in either overdose or under-dose
 and even in just measure
 is time’s passage with its trick
 of always seeming
 about to continue
 
 Non-practicing atheist 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		A Poison
 
      Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,        Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,       Of virtue to make wise. What hinders, then,       To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?* 
—Oi, look at this, I cut myself.
  
                           My Queen,  
                my universe, 
poke those holes in upside down—it works, my chemist said.
                                             
                                          And then, let’s watch Cocktail, eat boiled mussels, and fuck  
             till we’re not fit for purpose—let's give movies stars!
 
 
 
 
  
Every technique alleviates any relief  
from what’s already always, forever,  
                                                    and eternally,  
                         a brief despair.
 
*from Paradise Lost 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (12-03-2023, 08:04 AM)Pike Wrote:  A PoisonThis poem really interests me, especially for its whimsy.  Even though all the characters seem to come from a strange alternate universe, they are grounded in ours by the quote from Paradise Lost.  So the hunt begins with an "Oi!", who's the Queen & Queen of what?  Then the "chemist" (so many memorable chemists out there, how to choose?) and his odd prescription.  Then the climax, literal and figurative with the comedian Cocktail. "I'd cut "Let's give the movies stars"....it dates the poem, which is otherwise timeless.
The above is not criticism but an atempt at detailing the wonder I felt reading this.  The last bit about "Every technique..." is appropriate but heavy going". Maybe another Milton quote instead?
 
       Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,        Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,       Of virtue to make wise. What hinders, then,       To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?* 
 —Oi, look at this, I cut myself.
 
 My Queen,
 my universe,
 poke those holes in upside down—it works, my chemist said.
 
 And then, let’s watch Cocktail, eat boiled mussels, and fuck
 till we’re not fit for purpose—let's give movies stars!
 
 
 
 
 
 Every technique alleviates any relief
 from what’s already always, forever,
 and eternally,
 a brief despair.
 
 
 
 
 *from Paradise Lost
 
		
	 
	
	
	
		
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		 (12-03-2023, 10:39 PM)TranquillityBase Wrote:   (12-03-2023, 08:04 AM)Pike Wrote:  A Poison
 
       Here grows the cure of all, this fruit divine,        Fair to the eye, inviting to the taste,       Of virtue to make wise. What hinders, then,       To reach, and feed at once both body and mind?* 
 —Oi, look at this, I cut myself.
 
 My Queen,
 my universe,
 poke those holes in upside down—it works, my chemist said.
 
 And then, let’s watch Cocktail, eat boiled mussels, and fuck
 till we’re not fit for purpose—let's give movies stars!
 
 
 
 
 
 Every technique alleviates any relief
 from what’s already always, forever,
 and eternally,
 a brief despair.
 
 
 
 
 *from Paradise Lost
 This poem really interests me, especially for its whimsy.  Even though all the characters seem to come from a strange alternate universe, they are grounded in ours by the quote from Paradise Lost.  So the hunt begins with an "Oi!", who's the Queen & Queen of what?  Then the "chemist" (so many memorable chemists out there, how to choose?) and his odd prescription.  Then the climax, literal and figurative with the comedian Cocktail. "I'd cut "Let's give the movies stars"....it dates the poem, which is otherwise timeless.
 
 The above is not criticism but an atempt at detailing the wonder I felt reading this.  The last bit about "Every technique..." is appropriate but heavy going". Maybe another Milton quote instead?
 
 
 
 
 
Thanks. It was niggling at me that I had missed this "A poison" prompt. I couldn't connect with it. Until yesterday when I was looking at my bookshelf and saw The Poetical Works of John Milton [Everyman's Library edition—1925], and thought "the serpent, the tree, the fruit..." and that was my "in". It took me longer to decide on the quote than to write the rest of the poem. I was perilously close to just sitting there and reading the whole of Paradise Lost, again.  
I agree that the "let's give movies stars" line can be cut. It does date the poem and that hadn't occurred to me before 
I also agree that the last bit "every technique..." could be cut, changed, or something else. And I actually wanted to end on a Milton quote from the Serpent. Something like: "your fear of death itself removes the fear ." But, I didn't want it to be more quote than poem, as the "my Queen, my universe" is obliquely quoting the serpent when referring to Eve as "Queen of this universe". 
 
Anyway, thank you for reading it and taking the time to comment.     
		
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