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Poetry
#1
Poetry
I think we lack poetry in here, personally I suck at writing it, and absolutely *hated* it in school because it was all forced and unoriginal. But, I appreciate a well written poem, especially when it's on my favourite topic of discussion. I have a few that are actually pro-religion but, given the focus of the forum I'll leave them on the shelf for now but, anyone else wanting to share a poem, do not feel you have to use the same restraints. all are welcome.

I'll start, a poem I found online by a user named Brian37.

Brian37 - How great thour art.

How great thou art,

To let them suffer

Pestulance and famine

And wars that linger



How great thou art

Your ambiguous hands

Threaten with fear

We all be damned



The wallet is love

And you have the gun

Aimed at our heads

Refusing to give

Will make us all burn



What kindly thoughts

To frighten us

To bow to you

Because it's love?



I have a choice

This much is true

Discarding myth

Is that I value



Discard the pitchforks

And halo's due

Just like red noses

And sugarplums too



How great the farce

And fantacy

A D&D game

Deadly reality



How great thou art

To give us this orb

Full of desease

And hateful hords



I know thy name

It is not divine

Tis a creation

Of ancient minds



Thor and Isis

Marduke extinct

Their magical spells

Have the same link



How great thou arnt

And nothing new

History is full

Of claims like you



A day may come

When we Cruise by

A statue of Hubbard

Billions rely



How great thou arnt

In Genisis

You stole your story

From polytheists



Ugartic text

Is older motif

So too the flood

In Gelgimesh



Hardly original

Nor does it prove

That spirts knock up girls

Gabriel "Mary, God is in the mood".



Thot cured an eye

Long before Jesus

Rabbits and hats

Are still slight of hand



How great thou arnt

This human mind

The mental slight

Is the bind



It's fuzzys are warm

And grandious

The lure of a promise

That doesn't exist



How fake thou art

By any name

Apollo to Allah

It's all the same



It's in their heads

And all made up

The past is the present

And they don't give up



How great thou arnt

This tribalism

Leading to death

Over fiction



Magic and myth

In the span of time

Change their colors

But never decline



How great the mind

When set free

From the binds

Of mythology
http://ca.youtube.com/user/DemonAuraProductions - Check out my videos if you have spare time.
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Atheist
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#2
RE: Poetry
No offence, but I think it is rather mediocre. Personally, I perfer Byron, Shelly, Keats, Yeats, Milton, Chaucer, Wordsworth, Blake, Burns and even Edgar Alan Poe. Frost, Shakespeare and the 1st World War poets are really good too, but I have to be in the mood.

That brings up another subject; who is everyones favorite poet? Mine is Lord Byron.
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#3
RE: Poetry
(March 26, 2009 at 11:58 am)dagda Wrote: That brings up another subject; who is everyones favorite poet? Mine is Lord Byron.

The guy who wrote "Here I sit so broken hearted".
Best regards,
Leo van Miert
Horsepower is how hard you hit the wall --Torque is how far you take the wall with you
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#4
RE: Poetry
(March 26, 2009 at 11:58 am)dagda Wrote: No offence, but I think it is rather mediocre. Personally, I perfer Byron, Shelly, Keats, Yeats, Milton, Chaucer, Wordsworth, Blake, Burns and even Edgar Alan Poe. Frost, Shakespeare and the 1st World War poets are really good too, but I have to be in the mood.

That brings up another subject; who is everyones favorite poet? Mine is Lord Byron.

Shelley.
Not for his lyrical poems but for his political stuff. He was a revolutionary and early socialist.
His epic " Queen Mab " does it for me.
HuhA man is born to a virgin mother, lives, dies, comes alive again and then disappears into the clouds to become his Dad. How likely is that?
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#5
RE: Poetry
A boat beneath a sunny sky
by Lewis Carroll.

A boat beneath a sunny sky,
Lingering onward dreamily
In an evening of July

Children three that nestle near,
Eager eye and willing ear,
Pleased a simple tale to hear

Long has paled that sunny sky:
Echoes fade and memories die:
Autumn frosts have slain July.

Still she haunts me, phantomwise,
Alice moving under skies
Never seen by waking eyes.

Children yet, the tale to hear,
Eager eye and willing ear,
Lovingly shall nestle near.

In a Wonderland they lie,
Dreaming as the days go by,
Dreaming as the summers die

Ever drifting down the stream
Lingering in the golden dream
Life, what is it but a dream?
"Isn't it enough to see that a garden is beautiful with out having to believe there are fairies at the bottom of it to?" -Douglas Adams.Heart
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I Evolved!
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#6
RE: Poetry
(March 26, 2009 at 3:41 pm)bozo Wrote:
(March 26, 2009 at 11:58 am)dagda Wrote: No offence, but I think it is rather mediocre. Personally, I perfer Byron, Shelly, Keats, Yeats, Milton, Chaucer, Wordsworth, Blake, Burns and even Edgar Alan Poe. Frost, Shakespeare and the 1st World War poets are really good too, but I have to be in the mood.

That brings up another subject; who is everyones favorite poet? Mine is Lord Byron.

Shelley.
Not for his lyrical poems but for his political stuff. He was a revolutionary and early socialist.
His epic " Queen Mab " does it for me.

I have to say, I do like Shelley. I prefer The Mask of Anarchy to Queen Mab right enough. In my opinion, Shelley is not given enough recognition as the brilliant poet. One of the great tradgeties of the English lanuage.
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#7
RE: Poetry
(March 26, 2009 at 11:58 am)dagda Wrote: No offence, but I think it is rather mediocre. Personally, I perfer Byron, Shelly, Keats, Yeats, Milton, Chaucer, Wordsworth, Blake, Burns and even Edgar Alan Poe. Frost, Shakespeare and the 1st World War poets are really good too, but I have to be in the mood.

That brings up another subject; who is everyones favorite poet? Mine is Lord Byron.

No offense taken, I didn't write it lol. I never got into it enough to particularly care who the author was. It's more like, I read a bunch and some will sound good to me. A very similar poem may sound terrible to me so, it's not like certain styles or authors is a major thing, just how well it feels to me.

I'd have to say if in the right mood I enjoy shakespheares works but, at the moment I am particularly enjoying Tim Michin's 'Storm'.
http://ca.youtube.com/user/DemonAuraProductions - Check out my videos if you have spare time.
Agnostic
Atheist
I Evolved!
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#8
RE: Poetry
Don't read poetry and have never written things like that. I prefer rather to play music or write , I've acctually written a book that will probably be published in my country, quite proud of that Big Grin. Just needed to brag a little, it's has quite the same style as Terry Pratchett.

But anyway, about the poetry. Why don't people write their own poems here instead of quoting other?Even though that perhap are quite nice to read. I think it would be a good way of getting some response.
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#9
RE: Poetry
Here's a Poem from A Bit of Fry and Laurie that I like. I quite like comic poems - I haven't really read much poem to be fair though...

- I've read poetic writings...writings that are also kind of a bit poetic, but no some much poetry. Anyway I like the following strange and amusing poem from ABOFAL -

Hugh's Poem

'Underneath the bellied skies
Where dust and rain find space to fall
To fall and lie and change again
Without a care or mind at all
For art and life and things above
In that there look just there
No right left up down past or future
We have but ourselves to fear.'

Lol.

P.S: Here's the non-embeddable link to the BBC youtube clip of the sketch that the poem is from - and the poem is included right at the start. He goes on to two shorter poems after and they are both also part of the overall sketch 'about poems': http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0nTmSu6v0LA

'Suitable poetry'.

...I quite like strange poetic musings. Or strange poetic philosophical musings. They are also welcome.

EvF
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#10
RE: Poetry
Quote:The blacksmith slave

Captive in the rainforests of the West
they brought you to Rome, slave,
they gave you the blacksmith work
and you make chains.
The red iron that you carry out the oven
can be adapted as you want,
you can make swords
in order that your people could break the chains,
but you, this slave,
you make chains, more chains.
:Joseba Sarrionandia

In basque:

Quote:Esklabu erremintaria

Sartaldeko oihanetan gatibaturik
erromara ekarri zinduten, esklabua,
erremintari ofizioa eman zizuten
eta kateak egiten dituzu.
Labetik ateratzen duzun burdin goria
nahieran molda zenezake,
ezpatak egin ditzakezu
zure herritarrek kateak hauts deitzaten,
baina zuk, esklabu horrek,
kateak egiten dituzu, kate gehiago.
:Joseba Sarrionandia
- Science is not trying to create an answer like religion, it tries to find an answer.
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