My life as a coble (for DA). A Poem by Marie Marshall.
I examine my bones, tibia,
fibula, made new each morning,
as things of wonder
to crawl my fingers over;
*
it has been this way since birth,
a boat launching, clinker-built,
ribs and thighbones my strakes,
that way I can be beached
high on life;
*
humerus, ulna, radius,
from keel to hog to apron,
from garboard to sheer,
the face of each land is beveled,
and the resulting, exulting song
is the little tremor of the water
as I force through;
*
I can’t remember the day
I was first beached,
but it must have been with
the groaning of new planks –
they say boats, before they’re built
exist in a putative sea,
that it is the karma
of the best trees to know chainsaw,
plane, and ocean, to be water-tight
without caulking, to be painted
red-below-white-below-black,
to have a girl’s name;
*
I love wriggling cargoes of fish
and hate fire;
*
I look down on the carvel-built
with their oakum and pitch,
the fast, twisting Lateen whores –
always have, always will;
tarsals and carpals
have taken on the torque
of the currents and undertow,
I tack ceaselessly, new rope coiled,
uncoiled, coiled while I see
white houses cling to cliffs,
white birds describe the sky;
*
drifted in, drifted out,
harboured on a dayglo ball,
bumped and scratched,
the slap of halyard on mast
playing amongst the mathematical
music of the marina;
*
such times of inertia,
barely lifting, barren
in the bob of flotsam,
held against the times
of chop and roll;
*
there is a god of cobles,
half-boatbuilder, half-commodore,
that’s who answers the marine radio;
*
sternum, vertebrae, no heart,
no soul [to speak of], so
when I am beached the last time
I’ll be a perch for gulls,
no shame in that, no shame
to have blistered paint
and a faded name,
no shame at all, nor to forget
my mother who was a tree,
my father who was a rove-punch;
*
the white houses are still there,
voiceless beyond the rattling diesel
and the rasp of tide against the cliffs,
the land is still here, and each day
a different sea reflects a different sky,
there’s no shame in that;
*
the white, broken wake,
the forgotten messages it writes,
there is no shame in that either;
*
up and down, up and down,
ankle to skull, woman to girl,
new, pine-smelling timber
to beached hull, there is no shame
in any of this;
*
sit and sing in your accents,
tell stories, I won’t hear them,
no shame, I won’t want to,
it’s my life as a coble,
not a telling and a hearing of stories,
and that’s a fact.
Marie Marshall is an Anglo-Scottish author, poet and editor. Her first collection of poems, Naked in the Sea, was published in 2010 and reviewed in Sonnetto Poesia that same year, and her second collection, I am not a fish, in 2013. Since 2005 she has published over two hundred poems, mainly in magazines and anthologies, but the most extraordinary places in which a poem of hers has appeared include on the wall of a café in Wales, and etched into an African drum at the New Orleans Museum of Art. Her first novel, Lupa, was published in 2012. She is well-known in Scotland for her macabre short stories. Her web site can be found at mairibheag.com. Of writing poetry and sonnets she says, “I did not start writing until 2004, so I am very much a twenty-first century writer. I write anything, any kind of poetry that I feel the urge to tackle ― sonnets included.”
***
Sections of Seam. Poem.Laura Lamarca.Audio Kate-Taylor-Davies
Audioboo / Sections of Seam by Laura Lamarca.
She could remember those 8pm skies,
that slumbered with a tamarind tinge
and the rustling of rainfall
as it slid inside her pain.
Their expressions etched themselves
on musical scores, that they wept
on blank-paper pages and
candle-smoked hopes that she’d kept.
They were a lighter shade of lust,
following fantasies of a deeper thirst,
that went just like water
through the skin of their sighs…
but they’d blown baby kisses
through betrayal’s fresh scent,
while forever crawled inside cavities–
yet neither chose to repent.
They’d risen through varying odours
of oregano’s subtle hues,
whilst his roaming tabletops had turned
on red buses and lying dreams
and the screams of her silence
settled, to give her second sight…
when thoughts wandered to Her–
the queen of his night.
Envy engraved itself into her palms
shivering sorrow through shared regrets,
while her self-worthiness withered
to such a saddened state.
Yet fate flexed her fingers
within forgiveness’ flame,
whilst the need of their connection
plays a dangerous game.
She’s mistress of her own heart,
yet lets him breathe through her veins–
like TV addiction
and many smudges of soft.
She adores him…yet holds back
because she’s taught herself of
the fear of deceit’s discovery
and his inability to love.
***
About The Author
Laura Lamarca is a 39 year old widowed mother of three teenagers originally hailing from the northern county of Lancashire, but now residing on the South coast of England.
Laura is a professional poet and author of three books of poetry and one Chapbook to date, the latest book was released in December 2011 by GJBPublishing.co.uk titled “Donec Alius Diei”.
Laura is also the creator of 18 globally recognized forms of formal poetry, these include “The Licentia Rhyme Form”, the “La`Tuin” and the L`Arora” forms. She has also recently created 3 more forms…these are the “Jordec Verse”, “La Dan Form” and a collaborated and highly technical form with Poet Jem Farmer titled the “LaJemme”.
In her spare time, she teaches the art of expression through the written word to pupils all over the world at no cost to them. She also writes hugely for charity and actively supports charities that raise awareness for cancer, third world plight, dolphins and gun and knife crime.
She has the belief that there is a brighter day for all, given the compassion and commitment of others…one voice can raise a thousand voices, a thousand voices can raise the whole world. She is of the belief that ultimate truth does not exist, that everything is personal perspective and probable outcome.
***
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Infusoria.(The Voyage of the Beagle) poem. audio. Ian Irvine
Having swum in the ocean of stars
calling them Gods—their campfires, their monumental
sorrows, our bliss at a faith-conceived heaven—
we are driven back by heavy gales.
*
Few living creatures inhabit these broad
flat-bottomed valleys, abode of kingfishers
grass-hoppers, lizards—not much else
a ruined fort in a dull brown landscape.
*
Relief to find a small stream threading
clefts of rock, greening, here and there,
otherwise barren soil. Onwards then, to a flat plain
stunted acacias—until a flock of guinea fowl.
*
Anxious panorama of time: jagged cliffs,
lava-rock, distant mountains enveloped in
dark blue clouds. It’s coming: the storm
of the modern. The monkey likes bananas.
*
I’m collecting dust: the air is ion charged,
flashes of lightning, the will to see
the infusoria: African sunsets, the question
of microbes, my lens, my imperfect vision.
*
And then another island—fertile, volcanic
red cinder hills, everything slopes toward the
interior. But I will paddle the rock pools
notice: sea slugs, cuttle-fish all arms and suckers.
*
Having swum in the ocean of stars
we are driven back by heavy gales
It’s coming, the storm of the modern,
anxious panorama of time.
*
The air is ion charged.
***
Ian Irvine is an Australian-based poet/lyricist, fiction writer and non-fiction writer. His work has featured in many Australian and international publications, including Fire (UK) ‘Anthology of 20th Century and Contemporary Poets,’ (2008) which contained the work of poets from over 60 nations.His work has also appeared in a number of Australian national poetry anthologies, and he is the author of three books and co-editor of many more (including Scintillae 2012, an anthology of work by over 50 Victorian and international writers and poets). He currently teaches writing and literature at Bendigo TAFE and Victoria University (Melbourne) and lives with fellow writer Sue King-Smith and their children on a 5 acre block near Bendigo, Australia.
Links related to his work are as follows:
robin@artvilla.com
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There I Sat at Copper’s Point. Poem. Eric Mellen
There I sat at Copper’s Point
My head lowered between my tattered brown britches’ knees.
My shift was over, (barefoot) watching that lonely lighthouse,
sandy beige, the same color as my beach hat,
and then, on the windiest day in September,
I remembered.
Zoo. A delicately conscientious zookeeper’s assistant,
those sunny days, wild you could say.
I ran from cage to cage, feeding–
orange.
tigers, orangutans, monarch butterflies,
all waiting for the feast
and treats
which they got.
Hot.
The team of cheerleaders,
the mist-machines cooled
their cheery faces, sweaty
and sentimentally proportioned.
I once gave a rose to one
but was shot down.
Bang!
A thousand thoughts collected into one emotion:
that disparaged rejection.
I knew it only too well.
The hell, sometimes grieving
sometimes relieving me of the boy
I was meant to be.
And then, there she was.
“Sarah”
was her name, and no rose for her,
not yet anyway.
This time a cool chat
relieving me of my duties.
I could go into detail.
But suffice it to say,
all the animals reveled in harmony
with me
that day.
“Blue”,
Our love–
oh, the romantics would not have thought
of a more eloquent combination of words to describe it.
She died yesterday,
And now I reside in this lighthouse
where we stood alone, and outside the window
I cast a view
and recognize
the “Blue” that is everywhere around me.
***
Bio: Eric Mellen is a young freelance writer who currently writes poems and short stories. He has been published by Nostrovia! poetry and is currently pursuing multiple publishing opportunities. When he is not writing, he is studying to under the psychology curriculum, and plans to one day become a clinical psychologist.
***
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Prometheus Bound.Frederick.L.Light.Translation.Audio.Jack Nolan.
Prometheus Bound Aeschylus Translation by F L Light Rapid Traffic Press New York. The opinions expressed in this manuscript are solely the opinions of the author and do not represent the opinions or thoughts of the publisher. The author has represented and warranted full ownership and/or legal right to publish all the materials in this book. Prometheus Bound: Translated by F L Light ISBN-13: 978-1477684016 ISBN-10: 1477684018 All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2012 Frederick Lazarus Light, lightforth@gmail.com
*
After Zeus has learned that Prometheus stole his sovereign property, fire, and conveyed it to mankind, he orders Hephaistos, under the direction of Power and Force, to bind his adversary to an arduous crag of most difficult remoteness on the earth. As the Titan responds to this punishment, the reader is inspired with the fire of individual affirmation, devoted indomitably to life and liberty
Prometheus Bound Audio Jack Nolan 15 minutes
Power and Force
Hephaistos
Prometheus
Daughters of Ocean
Ocean
Io
Hermes
*
1
Enter Power and Force, leading Prometheus in chains.
Hephaistos comes with them.
Of earth, in Scythia intraversable,
By men untraced, of no man’s realm a tract,
On this sequestered precipice recessed
Alone, we’ve mounted, where, Hephaistos, be
This duty yours, by dictates laid upon
You by the Father: here his shackled lich set fast!
This vaulting overreacher in revolt
With fettered punishment now fasten here
In this immense removedness on high,
Leaving him with adamantine tautness
Reclusely manacled to rock. Your flower,
In every art effectual, lucent fire,
He reaved and to the mortals gave. This fact
Therefore by forfeit to the gods he must
Avow, in shackles schooled to suffer Zeus
And learn in painful awe what lordship is,
Philanthropy disowning in effect.
You’ve done your part, no longer stayed. But I
Lack mettle, truly loath that ligatures
Upon a kindred deity must be laid
With muscled rigor in this brumal rift
Where winter reigns. But for all that I must
Begin, emboldened by necessity,
By absolute exigencies; for who
May lightly heed the word of Zeus without
Reward? You, of ascendant prospects, son
Of right-proposing Themis, now I pierce,
Against your will and mine, with bronze constraints
Of indissoluble abuse, annealed the best,
Your members to this far recess, reserved
From men, where voice nor form shall human be.
But under Helios, desiccated scathe
2
Beneath his arid glance you’ll bear and lose
The bloom of youth. When Night behind her vestment of
The stars shall veil this blaze, you’ll savor peace,
And when the sun on dawn-frost comes, the thaw
May grateful prove. But everforth abide
In vitiated weariness, effete at length,
For not yet born your liberator is.
Such mede you profit in, philanthropy
Maintaining. Not of Heaven terrified,
Olympian odium never daunted you,
A god among the gods. But honors out
Of measure to the mortal sort you sped.
So this sore ledge you’ll suffer like a ward,
Where insultation is insomnolent
Forever, as you stand in sleepless rue,
Not left to bend your legs. With sacred cries,
Your liefest prayers, lamenting pain, will not
Be heeded. For the head of Zeus in zeal
Is hateful, hardest to his foes. And those
Empowered lately fulsome power inflict.
In vain? A god in basest odium deemed
No friend, whom gods detest, wherefore not hate?
Since mortals gracing, mordant grief to you
He meant, your prize betraying, all for men.
Devout companionship not lightly deaded.
No doubt when Zeus imposes on your will.
This vanity where nothing you’ll achieve.
Are not imputed to your sacred forge!
3
All grace, and none has liberty save Zeus.
Who will observe you lagging in abuse.
With hammered concentration maul them in,
Compressive rivets bringing home in rocks.
Your stress! Leave nothing loose by limb. He is
Prodigious, legerly deliverance
Seeking, howbeit fixed in boulders fast.
Though for mechanic prudence most renowned,
What little prescience lights his brain compared to Zeus.
But he due reprehension might impress.
His breast, amain to breach it with a blow.
Again you dote on the Olympian’s foe.
Erelong, you might, bethink you, mourn yourself.
Proportioned. Now his loins with girdles lap.
Is overhard, on duty to enlarge.
Should bite. Now bending down, encompassment
About his legs begin, with links intent.
Perfected, without much mechanic pain.
4
Our critic in this work is rigorous.
Tendentious constancy to me nor grudge
What moody dourness may be mine in Power.
Exit Hephaistos.
To men, as evanescent as ephemeral,
The prizes meant for gods conveying. Will
Your muscled dolors fall away by mortal hands?
You were, Prometheus, by the gods misnamed,
For now a true promethean you require
To set you from this fabrication free.
(Fxeunt Power and Force.)
O aerial mercy all for life on earth,
O swiftest taking wing, you sudden winds,
O mobile rivers melted from the hills;
O roundge of Ocean risible in scope to rise
Like cacchination on a shore; 0 Earth
Omnimaternal, and thou god in ken
Of all, by sight to compass land and sea,
Lord Helios; thus I cry you, crucified
By gods, observe the torture I abide.
Behold, embodied with indignities
To bear this teen, millenia timed, a doom
Allotted, eldritch hourly whilst I howl.
Such is the bondage, abject sacredly,
That this new master of Olympians has
For me discovered. Pheu, pheu, everforth
To pine as now in pain, and thus I moan,
No term foretelling of the dire at length
Ordained, in full extended to the fine.
5
What’s this I say? All that shall be, I’ve known
Betimes correctly, never to abye
A sudden daunt. So with the lightest grace
Of patience left to me, this fated dole
I must support, aware a sacred force,
Necessity, will not be checked. I can
Neither bear silence nor unsilenced truth
Sustain about my lot. This falls by me
Because I granted fiery guerdons to
Mankind; this yoked affliction, over me
Enforced, ensues therefore. By Zeus unseen,
My trace was furtive to the source of fire.
A fennel stalk I filled therewith. For men
Didactic light then blazed, all daily arts
Evoking, and a mighty furtherance
To them it proved. For such a peccant fact
I’ve earned this pain, here overborne, constrained
Under the pervious skies with perceant nails.
Eala, ea, ea!
What sound by wing, what scent would come about
Me, not perceived by form? Is it divine
Or human or a cross of both? Upon this rock,
Peripheral afar, what advent might
Ascend in search of pain to see me peak?
Or what in meaning might proceed? Alas,
In gyves behold me girt, a god benign,
My fate abusive, to the Father Zeus
A foe, by all in loathing held that haunt
The sovereign’s hall, for having charity
Too much on men conferred, with love confirmed!
Pheu, pheu, the whirring hither, once again
I hear it, likely of a flock. Upon
Their flicker, lightly vibrant, now the air
Reverbs. But fear ensues, whatever comes.
Chorus:
6
No dread avow. Our advent, drawn
By love, this ledge surmounted. Leagued
In flight, a winged agon we maintain.
Our father’s leave uneathe we have.
With all traversing speed, at length
In Zephyr’s hand, ascent continued.
In depths recessed beneath our dome of caves
The clang of ferric clatter could
Be heard. Our deepest pudor, verecund
In Ocean, was effaced, affrighted thence
Thereby. And thus unshod, ascending
On this car, we shot to you.
Aiai, aiai,
Of breeder Tethus, of prolific geneses
In broods of goddesses, you all are born,
Of Father Ocean, whose insomnolent
Domain of currents the circumference
Of earth completes, conducive to all tides.
Observe me, by these fetters see
How on the uppermost abyss of earth
I am held fast, the bleakest watch enduring.
I see, Prometheus; and upon mine eyes,
In spread suffusion like a mist, now tears come
forth,
Since under this embodied adamant
You’re bound to waste on these chasmatic rocks,
In caitiff insultation cadent seen.
For on Olympos the new helmsmen lead,
Where Zeus, with novel laws, would reign
Perforce awry; and what held good
Before in prime has been dissolved like death.
If he precipitated into depths
Below terrestrial bournes myself in bonds
7
As low as Hades, loathly hosteler
Of liches in the earth, where Tartarus
Unpierced incarceration keeps, then no
God in malignant gloating or none else
Would at these wretched throes look down on me.
But now a hapless bauble for the winds I am
And grieve as much as Zeus rejoices at my grief.
Which god is pleased to see it? Who would not
Condole your subject dolor, who but Zeus?
A god too wreakful to surcease revenge.
By toughest constance the Titanic kind
He’d quell. Surcease before satiety
This god allows not till another’s hand
May his unseizable domain command.
The time ensues, assure you soon or late,
Though here in twist the bonds are tied,
For torture binding with each turn,
When He, that marshal of the blessed,
Shall suffer need, myself in prayer
Seeking about the latest plot,
How it would shift him from the throne
And sceptre. Then his sweetest spell
Of sugared cant will savor ill,
Not win me over. Shall I then
Before his menace quail or at
Monitions tell? These violent gyves
Must be dissolved, and guerdons, just
In godly recompense, he must
Be willing to convey before
He learn the secrets of my lore.
F L Light in three categories of poetry has produced most of his work:
In epic his original works are Fighter Herakles Perforce, Shakespeare Undiminished, The Woman of Venereal Furies, A Book of Girds for Bob Giroux, and Cleopatra’s Kingdom of Idolatry. These are all in sonnets written. His translated epics are The Iliad in 1823 sonnets, and the Argonautica, about seven hundred sonnets.
In drama, he has written twenty eight dramas, all in his own form of Greek tragedy. Twenty four of them comprise the Gouldium, a series about Jay Gould and his enemies.
Light has also translated six Greek tragedies, four of which have been produced for Audible.
Light has published about thirty five books of couplets, most of them on economics. Shakespeare Versus Keynes is now in production for Audible.
Buckle &, Lucid Rhythms, Raintree Review, International Poetry Review, Cowboy Poetry Press, Mobius, Hrafno, and Troglodyte are some of the magazines he has appeared in.
Why. Poem. Sonnet. David J Delaney.
New morning sun brings forth her warming rays
while dying leaves drift gently to the ground.
Approaching winter soon will dampen days,
when ice will hang from barren trees abound.
Korea’s changing beauty I have seen,
penned every scene for all the world to read.
I miss so much your sparkling eyes of green,
while for your love, my heart again will bleed.
The freezing snow will cover all that lives
I hope I will survive this daily fight.
A priest once said that Jesus Christ forgives,
though what I do, he could not see as right.
My helmet sits upon my weary head ─
My rifle, now replaces pencil lead.
***
For my Uncle, Lawrence George Delaney, 1st Battalion RAR, who served in Korea.
***
Here is a short bio for you:
As a award winning poet, and recently a memoir/short story writer, I have had wonderful support, in Cairns , Queensland , Australia and worldwide. My love for writing and the impact it has on everyday people, has, definitely been an inspiration to continue with something I honestly enjoy, and, if I inspire one person to write and or showcase their work, then I have done my job.
David J Delaney
Internationally published Australian Poet.
http://www.asapublishingcompany.com/#!books
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1886528012/ref=nosim/theplanningsh-20
colour
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0615467806/ref=nosim/theplanningsh-20
black & white
http://www.amazon.com/Out-of-Australia-ebook/dp/B007TSBVZ4/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1334352429&sr=1-1
Kindle
http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/out-of-australia-david-delaney/1105126786?ean=2940014726337
Nook
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J0oOCth_0u4&feature=youtu.be
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rzqZNwh086M (Preview) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D9Wuw5RlmRI (Preview) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z95sY_B_jtY (Preview)
***
Pimp Shoes. Poem. Sonnet. Phillip Fried.
Did I mean to stalk the streets in cothurni? Shit, no.
I just failed to foresee the precarious vaudeville wobble
as the head with its chorus surveys what’s unsteady below,
its kibitzing voices tsk-tsking a double hobble
(another fine mess chalked up to clueless hubris),
hands groping for balance but looking as if I would break
into patter-song: oh hamartia, convivial riff.
And a fool might truly say, he’s a dupe of the Fate
that dogs the consumer, scammed with apotheosis
and the heady allure of a glowing ocher toe cap.
But watch me teeter in glory, a pimp Oedipus,
eyes level with second-floor shops for Pedi-Mani.
Elevation was my downfall, catastrophe
my rise. And my marrow’s red honey—fear, pity.
“Pimp Shoes” by Philip Fried was published in Cohort [Salmon Poetry, Ireland, 2009.
Philip Fried (1945― ), earned a B.A. in English at Antioch College, an M.F.A. in Poetry at the Writers Workshop, University of Iowa, and a Ph.D. in Literature at the State University of New York, Stony Brook. On writing sonnets, he has this to say, “I draw inspiration from the sonnet’s origins to update it for the Digital Age. Linked from its earliest days to legal proceedings and a modern psychology of conflicted love, the sonnet held together what wanted to fly apart. I have re-conceived the contemporary sonnet as an arena where fragments of self and samples of lingo play off against one another.” His poems have appeared in such journals as Beloit Poetry Journal, New Orleans Review, Partisan Review, Paris Review and Tin House. The most recent of his five published books of poetry is Early/Late: New and Selected Poems (Salmon Poetry, Ireland, 2011), which was called “skillful and memorable” by Publishers Weekly.
This sonnet is pre-published with the permission of the Editor-in-chief from:Richard Vallance, editor-in-chief. The Phoenix Rising from the Ashes: Anthology of sonnets of the early third millennium = Le Phénix renaissant de ses cendres : Anthologie de sonnets au début du troisième millénaire. Friesen Presse, Victoria, B.C., Canada. © 2013. approx. 240 pp. ISBN Hardcover: 978-1-4602-1700-9 Price: $28.00 Paperback: 978-1-4602-1701-6 Price: $18.00 e-Book: 978-1-4602-1702-3 Price: TBA
300 sonnets & ghazals in English, French, Spanish, German, Chinese & Persian. Selected sonnets are pre-published by our permission in Poetry Life & Times (UK) which has exclusive sole rights prior to the publication of the anthology itself. Readers may also contact Richard Vallance, Editor-in-Chief, at: vallance22@gmx.com for further information. http://vallance22.hpage.com/
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