These days are coming to a slow and painful end But all I need in life is that one true friend Who can understand and respect me for who I am who can care and love me for who I am I'm always on the run and living from place to place I don't have a bedroom, I live out of my suitcase Another day, Another day I live to see the next I mark the days on the calender with a check A check to show that I live on to survive And hopefully become someone in this world all before I die. .
(Life is not easy)
Jacob Guinn
Why are you posting this drivel? Is there some reason that you like to hear an 18-year-old whine about how hard life is for him? This poet is first person obsessed in this putrid excuse for a poem— 13 first person references in 10 lines, and the only second or third person reference is to an ambiguous "true friend"— and the reference shows no empathy for the friend— it just demonstrates the putrid poet's demands for this "true friend"... according to this putrid poet, a true friend is somebody who only thinks about what this putrid poet desires...
this is abstract dull emotively-dead drivel where the poet whines about what he wants out of the world... this is a textbook example of bad poetry... a good poem under this title would demonstrate why life is hard with vivid, concrete details, rather than crybaby exposition of desires... life is so hard he marks his calendar with a check... yawn...
Location: Half inch above the K/T boundary Gender:
Posted:
Jul 9, 2012 - 2:45pm
Rough Life
These days are coming to a slow and painful end But all I need in life is that one true friend Who can understand and respect me for who I am who can care and love me for who I am I'm always on the run and living from place to place I don't have a bedroom, I live out of my suitcase Another day, Another day I live to see the next I mark the days on the calender with a check A check to show that I live on to survive And hopefully become someone in this world all before I die. .
Mya and me, we sold love cards at the flea market, hand drawn Tennessee dawns and a poem, hand lettered under the fold, sacred words everyone recognized, five dollars with a pastel envelope, her best grin. guys who knew their wives soft spots bought two or three, the radio played all summer 'love the one you're with' as she drew mornings swiftly through nights as wide as sin. -beau blue
I had a vision of snails racing over the pavement as the sun traced their shadows from crack to crack as the truck wheels raced by but it was just a vision I had as I scraped the shell from the tire of my truck while filling her up with more gas.
Belief is a murmur in the heart of truth Projecting our faith in so knowing our proof At one with the innocence and calamity of youth But a pilgrim in search of full sails...
Across eternity, across its snow, I see my unwritten poems: I see the spoor of their paws dappling the august whiteness of the snow: bristles raging, bloody-tongued, lean greyhounds and wolves, leaping over the dykes, running under the shade of the trees of the wilderness, taking the narrow defile of glens, making for the steepness of windy mountains; their baying yell shrieking across the hard barenesses of the terrible times, their everlasting barking in my ears, their hot onrush seizing my mind; career of wolves and eerie dogs swift in pursuit of the quarry, through the forests without veering, over the mountain tops with sheering; the mild mad dogs of my poetry, wolves in chase of loneliness, loveliness of soul and face, a white deer over hills and plains, the deer of your gentle beloved beauty, a hunt without halt, without respite.
Sonnet XCIV: They That Have Power to Hurt and Will Do None
They that have power to hurt and will do none, That do not do the thing they most do show, Who, moving others, are themselves as stone, Unmoved, cold, and to temptation slow: They rightly do inherit heaven's graces And husband nature's riches from expense; They are the lords and owners of their faces, Others but stewards of their excellence. The summer's flower is to the summer sweet Though to itself it only live and die, But if that flower with base infection meet, The basest weed outbraves his dignity: For sweetest things turn sourest by their deeds; Lilies that fester smell far worse than weeds.
Ogden Nash was one of my mother's favorite poets and this is one of my favorite poems by him.
Are You a Snodgrass, Too?
It is possible that the most individual and international, social and economic collisions Result from humanity's being divided into two main divisions. Both of which are irreconcilable. And neither is by the other beguilable Their lives are spent in mutual interference And yet you cannot tell them apart by their outward appearance. Instead the only way in which you are able to tell one group from the other Is to observe them at the table. Because the only visible way in which one group from the other varies, Is in the treatment of the cream and sugar on cereal and berries. Group A, which we will call the Swozzlers Because it is a very suitable name I deem First applies the sugar, then swozzles it all over the place Pouring on the cream; And as fast as they pour the sugar on, they swozzle it away but such thriftlessness means nothing to ruthless egotists like they. They just continue to scoop and swozzle and swozzle and scoop, Until there is nothing left for the Snodgrasses or second group. A Snodgrass is a kind handsome intelligent person Who pours on the cream first And then deftly sprinkles the sugar over the cereal or berries After they have been properly immersed, Thus assuring himself that the sugar will remain on the cereal and berries Where it can do some good—which is his wish Instead of being swozzled away to the bottom of the dish. The facts of the case for the Snodgrasses are so evident That it is ridiculous to debate them. But this is unfortunate for the Snodgrasses as it only causes The sinister and vengeful Swozzlers all the more to hate them. Swozzlers are irked by the superior Snodgasses' intelligence and nobility, And they lose no opportunity of inflicting on them every kind of incivility. If you have read that somebody has been run over by an automobile, You may be sure that victim was a Snodgrass and a Swozzler was at the wheel. Swozzlers start wars and Snodgrasses get killed in them. Swozzlers sell waterfront lots and Snodgrasses get malaria when they try to build in them. Swozzlers invent fashionable diets and drive Snodgrasses crazy With tables of vitamins and calories Swozzlers go to Congress and think up new taxes And Snodgrasses pay their salaries. Swozzlers bring tigers back alive and Snodgrasses get eaten by anacondas; Snodgrasses are depositors and Swozzlers are absconders. Swozzlers hold straight flushes and Snodgrasses hold four of a kind. Swozzlers step heavily on the toes of Snodgrasses' shoes as soon as they are shined. Whatever achievements Snodgrasses achieve, Swozzlers always top them; Snodgrasses say stop me if you've heard this one And Swozzlers stop them. Swozzlers are teeming with useful tricks of the trade That are not included in a standard university curricula. The world in general is their oyster, And the Snodgrasses in particular. So I hope that for your sake dear reader that you are a Swozzler, But I hope for everybody's that you're not. And I also wish that everybody else was a nice amiable Snodgrass too, Because then Life would be just one sweet, harmonious mazurka or gavotte.
I spent seven hours yesterday at my daughter's house helping her expand their garden by at least ten times. We dug up sod by the shovelful, shook off the dirt as best we could; sod into the wheelbarrow and off to the pile at the edge of the yard. Then all that over and over again. Five hours total work-time, with time out for lunch and supper. By the time I got home I knew all too well that seventy-two is not thirty-five; I could barely move.
I got to quit earlier than Nadine. She told me I'd done enough and that I should go get a beer and lie down on the chaise lounge and cheer her on, which is what I did.
All this made me remember my father forty years ago helping me with my garden. My father's dead now, and has been dead for many years, which is how I'll be one of these days too. And then Nadine will help her child, who is not yet here, with her garden. Old Nadine, aching and sore, will be in my empty shoes, cheering on her own.
So it goes. The wheel turns, generation after generation, around and around. We ride for a little while, get off and somebody else gets on. Over and over, again and again.
Always was a sinner Never could deliver Coming late for dinner Really not a pleaser Could i just remember First time that i loved her Bring it all together Make me a believer Only nails and hammer Pounding pounding harder Until the blood splatter Tell me what's the matter Could i just remember Fall in love all over Feel the feeling dearer Drown my soul forever Ears are getting bigger Guess i'm getting older Drifting down the river Poisoning my liver...