Curator: I'd like to fling slime on them Pollocks
but I'm forced instead to tickle his dead bollocks.
I have no choice.
Peggy Guggenheim's hall of Pollocks
flings, slings emotion
ceiling to floor
billy wrote:welcome to the site. make it your own, wear it like a well loved slipper and wear it out. ella pleads:please click forum titles for posting guidelines, important threads. New poet? Try Poetic DevicesandWard's Tips
As Weetabix's broken back
sits soggy on my tongue;
Our firmament's a tasty snack,
On which God's dreams are hung.
He "hangeth the earth upon nothing,"
said Job in scientific writing:
Job wrote something else
about water and clouds,
and continued to write down his sighting.
These fragments I have shored against my ruins
Why then Ile fit you -T.S. Eliot (The Wasteland)
He "hangeth the earth upon nothing,"
said Job in scientific writing:
Job wrote something else
about water and clouds,
and continued to write down his sighting.
Our little temples here cannot pretend,
"Until the day and night come to an end"*;
And God in all His wisdom does attend,
To finishing the foolish works we've penned.
*Job 26:10
a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions
Our little temples here cannot pretend,
"Until the day and night come to an end"*;
And God in all His wisdom does attend,
To finishing the foolish works we've penned.
Pretend to work the fields
and search for fruit.
Pretend to work your
ass off in a suit.
But all means little
in the end
when all we do
is just pretend.
Yeah, I should have put "Job 26" somewhere on my last post. When i saw your line about "on which God's dreams are hung", it reminded me of that verse I quoted (which I had to quickly look up again to finish the rest of my poem). I couldn't resist trying to frame Job's writings as scientific observation. I must admit, I may not know where I stand on the whole religion thing, but I do enjoy flexing a little biblical knowledge around.
(01-04-2016, 05:19 PM)rayheinrich Wrote: He "hangeth the earth upon nothing,"
said Job in scientific writing:
Job wrote something else
about water and clouds,
and continued to write down his sighting.
Our little temples here cannot pretend,
"Until the day and night come to an end"*;
And God in all His wisdom does attend,
To finishing the foolish works we've penned.
*Job 26:10
These fragments I have shored against my ruins
Why then Ile fit you -T.S. Eliot (The Wasteland)
(01-04-2016, 05:37 PM)Emz Wrote: Yeah, I should have put "Job 26" somewhere on my last post. When i saw your line about "on which God's dreams are hung", it reminded me of that verse I quoted (which I had to quickly look up again to finish the rest of my poem). I couldn't resist trying to frame Job's writings as scientific observation. I must admit, I may not know where I stand on the whole religion thing, but I do enjoy flexing a little biblical knowledge around.
The Bible, like Shakespeare, Greek Mythology, etc. plays such a major roll
in all western literature that, believer or not, knowledge of it is essential.
(Not to mention beautiful.)
Ray
a brightly colored fungus that grows in bark inclusions
Pretend to work the fields
and search for fruit.
Pretend to work your
ass off in a suit.
But all means little
in the end
when all we do
is just pretend.
like work your ass
for a lease.
Cop a fat cat
cuz you whippin' a Caprice.
Search for fruit
up in a rotten bar stand
pan-handle a one night
wit quite the handle
we tha only mammal to
stammer, stammer..
Quote:The Officious Fauxku Choo Choo (the play's the thing)
Rules with Explications Thereof*
contemporaneously known as The One True Rules*
Your TINY poem should:
1. Use 2 or more significant words from the previous poem.
2. Echo some aspect of the previous poem (optional).
3. Contain 1 to 4 lines, or be a limerick.
4. Be a fauxku, pseudoku, otherku** (seebelow), a real haiku (not that
anyone really knows what one is), limerick, or a whatever-you-please
(e.g. metaphorically dense rhyming Nyāya Sūtra). Just make it TINY.
(And since this is fake art, TINY is not defined.) 5. If miscalculation, confusion, lapse in judgment, good intentions, ill temper,
addled thinking, or self-deception lead to snarl; don't try to communicate,
don't try to resolve: Just write something (e.g. lists of various vegetables
or something about dog diapers) and keep moving.
See the OP for more babble.
like work your ass
for a lease.
Cop a fat cat
cuz you whippin' a Caprice.
Search for fruit
up in a rotten bar stand
pan-handle a one night
wit quite the handle
we tha only mammal to
stammer, stammer..
Leave it to us piggie asses
to muck of this simplest of threads
get a grip, a handle, or whatever.
billy wrote:welcome to the site. make it your own, wear it like a well loved slipper and wear it out. ella pleads:please click forum titles for posting guidelines, important threads. New poet? Try Poetic DevicesandWard's Tips