Proms Poetry Competition (and your favourite musical poetry)

Collapse

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    #16
    Very nice! And in that spirit, here's another one about the beauty of early autumn by Rimbaud...I read this one sitting by the statue on the steps a few minutes ago, actually.

    MY BOHEMIA (FANTASY)

    I lit off with my hands in my torn pockets,
    My overcoat worn down to a notion;
    Walking beneath the sky, Muse! I was all yours.
    And oh my! What marvellous loves I dreamed of!

    My only trousers had a major hole.
    A dreamy Tom Thumb, I scattered verses in my path
    Like seed. I lodged under the Great Bear,
    My stars rustled gently in the sky.

    Sat on the road's edge, I listened out for them
    On fine September evenings sampling the dew
    On my face like a heady wine,

    And rhyming in the thick of unfamiliar shadows,
    As I strummed the laces of my devastated boots
    Like lyre-strings, one foot by my heart.

    Comment


      #17
      Hmmm. My late father's torn pack-a-mac, together with the cheap and now sole-destroyed shoes I obtained 2 years ago in Peckham, look to be a good combination for an early autumnal appreciation experience. Roll on, season of fruitful mellowness!

      Comment


        #18
        Originally posted by cavatina View Post
        Very nice! And in that spirit, here's another one about the beauty of early autumn by Rimbaud...I read this one sitting by the statue on the steps a few minutes ago, actually.

        MY BOHEMIA (FANTASY)

        I lit off with my hands in my torn pockets,
        My overcoat worn down to a notion;
        Walking beneath the sky, Muse! I was all yours.
        And oh my! What marvellous loves I dreamed of!

        My only trousers had a major hole.
        A dreamy Tom Thumb, I scattered verses in my path
        Like seed. I lodged under the Great Bear,
        My stars rustled gently in the sky.

        Sat on the road's edge, I listened out for them
        On fine September evenings sampling the dew
        On my face like a heady wine,

        And rhyming in the thick of unfamiliar shadows,
        As I strummed the laces of my devastated boots
        Like lyre-strings, one foot by my heart.
        ... and he was sixteen, I think, when he wrote it. Here it is in Frog -

        Je m'en allais, les poings dans mes poches crevées;
        Mon paletot soudain devenait idéal;
        J'allais sous le ciel, Muse, et j'étais ton féal;
        Oh! là là! que d'amours splendides j'ai rêvées!
        Mon unique culotte avait un large trou.
        Petit-Poucet rêveur, j'égrenais dans ma course
        Des rimes. Mon auberge était à la Grande-Ourse.
        Mes étoiles au ciel avaient un doux frou-frou

        Et je les écoutais, assis au bord des routes,
        Ces bons soirs de septembre où je sentais des gouttes
        De rosée à mon front, comme un vin de vigueur;

        Où, rimant au milieu des ombres fantastiques,
        Comme des lyres, je tirais les élastiques
        De mes souliers blessés, un pied près de mon coeur!

        Comment


          #19
          Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
          ... and he was sixteen, I think, when he wrote it. Here it is in Frog -
          Thanks! If you like, I'll be glad to post the original French and German alongside the English from now on.

          One of my favourite Tagore settings was the one adapted for Zemlinsky's Lyrical Symphony in Seven Songs (1923) - imo a truly worthy successor to Mahler's "Das Lied" in terms of carrying the harmonic language forward and offering a helpful bridge to those attempting the step from Mahler to the Schoenberg school. (Berg quoted from it in his Lyric Suite).
          I agree...absolutely gorgeous.

          I'll never forget the first time I heard it at the LA Phil, years ago when Salonen was just settling in and I was young: fresh out of school and the music world had yet to put me through the wringer. Would you believe I can even describe what the soloists were wearing and the way the stage was arranged? I was third-row left and had an anxious eye out for the artistic administrator to bustle her way to her seat like a grumpy pigeon so the concert could finally begin. Isn't it funny the things that stick in your mind when you're really excited? I'll remember that forever.

          Anyway, it's quite long, but here are a few of them...enjoy!


          I AM RESTLESS

          I am restless. I am athirst for far-away things.
          My soul goes out in a longing
          to touch the skirt of the dim distance.
          O Great Beyond, O the keen call of thy flute!
          I forget, I ever forget,
          that I have no wings to fly,
          that I am bound in this spot
          evermore.

          I am eager and wakeful,
          I am a stranger in a strange land.
          Thy breath comes to me
          whispering an impossible hope.
          Thy tongue is known to my heart
          as its very own.
          O Far-to-seek, O the keen call of thy flute!
          I forget, I ever forget,
          that I know not the way,
          that I have not the winged horse.

          I am listless, I am a wanderer in my heart.
          In the sunny haze of the languid hours,
          what vast vision of thine takes shape
          in the blue of the sky!
          O Farthest end, O the keen call of thy flute!
          I forget, I ever forget,
          that the gates are shut everywhere in the house
          where I dwell alone!


          O MOTHER, THE YOUNG PRINCE IS TO PASS BY

          O mother, the young Prince is to pass by our door, --
          how can I attend to my work this morning?
          Show me how to braid up my hair;
          tell me what garment to put on.
          Why do you look at me amazed, mother?
          I know well he will not glance up once at my window;
          I know he will pass out of my sight in the twinkling of an eye;
          only the vanishing strain of the flute
          will come sobbing to me from afar.
          But the young Prince will pass by our door,
          and I will put on my best for the moment.

          O mother, the young Prince did pass by our door,
          and the morning sun flashed from his chariot.
          I swept aside the veil from my face,
          I tore the ruby chain from my neck
          and flung it in his path.
          Why do you look at me amazed, mother?
          I know well he did not pick up my chain;
          I know it was crushed under his wheels
          leaving a red stain upon the dust,
          and no one knows what my gift was nor to whom.
          But the young Prince did pass by our door,
          and I flung the jewel from my breast before his path.


          YOU ARE THE EVENING CLOUD

          You are the evening cloud
          floating in the sky of my dreams.
          I paint you and fashion you
          ever with my love longings.
          You are my own, my own,
          Dweller in my endless dreams!

          Your feet are rosy-red
          with the glow of my heart's desire,
          Gleaner of my sunset songs!
          Your lips are bitter-sweet
          with the taste of my wine of pain.
          You are my own, my own,
          Dweller in my lonesome dreams!

          With the shadow of my passion
          have I darkened your eyes,
          Haunter of the depth of my gaze!
          I have caught you and wrapt you,
          my love, in the net of my music.
          You are my own, my own,
          Dweller in my deathless dreams!
          Last edited by Guest; 22-08-11, 02:48.

          Comment


            #20
            Originally posted by cavatina View Post
            Thanks! If you like, I'll be glad to post the original French and German alongside the English from now on.



            I agree...absolutely gorgeous.

            I'll never forget the first time I heard it at the LA Phil, years ago when Salonen was just settling in and I was young: fresh out of school and the music world had yet to put me through the wringer. Would you believe I can even describe what the soloists were wearing and the way the stage was arranged? I was third-row left and had an anxious eye out for the artistic administrator to bustle her way to her seat like a grumpy pigeon so the concert could finally begin. Isn't it funny the things that stick in your mind when you're really excited? I'll remember that forever.

            Anyway, it's quite long, but here are a few of them...enjoy!


            I AM RESTLESS

            I am restless. I am athirst for far-away things.
            My soul goes out in a longing
            to touch the skirt of the dim distance.
            O Great Beyond, O the keen call of thy flute!
            I forget, I ever forget,
            that I have no wings to fly,
            that I am bound in this spot
            evermore.

            I am eager and wakeful,
            I am a stranger in a strange land.
            Thy breath comes to me
            whispering an impossible hope.
            Thy tongue is known to my heart
            as its very own.
            O Far-to-seek, O the keen call of thy flute!
            I forget, I ever forget,
            that I know not the way,
            that I have not the winged horse.

            I am listless, I am a wanderer in my heart.
            In the sunny haze of the languid hours,
            what vast vision of thine takes shape
            in the blue of the sky!
            O Farthest end, O the keen call of thy flute!
            I forget, I ever forget,
            that the gates are shut everywhere in the house
            where I dwell alone!


            O MOTHER, THE YOUNG PRINCE IS TO PASS BY

            O mother, the young Prince is to pass by our door, --
            how can I attend to my work this morning?
            Show me how to braid up my hair;
            tell me what garment to put on.
            Why do you look at me amazed, mother?
            I know well he will not glance up once at my window;
            I know he will pass out of my sight in the twinkling of an eye;
            only the vanishing strain of the flute
            will come sobbing to me from afar.
            But the young Prince will pass by our door,
            and I will put on my best for the moment.

            O mother, the young Prince did pass by our door,
            and the morning sun flashed from his chariot.
            I swept aside the veil from my face,
            I tore the ruby chain from my neck
            and flung it in his path.
            Why do you look at me amazed, mother?
            I know well he did not pick up my chain;
            I know it was crushed under his wheels
            leaving a red stain upon the dust,
            and no one knows what my gift was nor to whom.
            But the young Prince did pass by our door,
            and I flung the jewel from my breast before his path.


            YOU ARE THE EVENING CLOUD

            You are the evening cloud
            floating in the sky of my dreams.
            I paint you and fashion you
            ever with my love longings.
            You are my own, my own,
            Dweller in my endless dreams!

            Your feet are rosy-red
            with the glow of my heart's desire,
            Gleaner of my sunset songs!
            Your lips are bitter-sweet
            with the taste of my wine of pain.
            You are my own, my own,
            Dweller in my lonesome dreams!

            With the shadow of my passion
            have I darkened your eyes,
            Haunter of the depth of my gaze!
            I have caught you and wrapt you,
            my love, in the net of my music.
            You are my own, my own,
            Dweller in my deathless dreams!
            Must admit to being a bit of an addict for "swoony" music - Bridge's "Enter Spring", Szymanowsky's Third Piano Sonata f.e., anyone? So much stuff just sounds put together, however skilfully. Or music one feels just had to be composed - as Kandinsky put it in a related activity. The Schumann Piano concerto strikes me as being one such.

            The incorrigeable romantic - anticipations unrealistically raised, hopes dashed...

            Attachment v detachment - the big one eh...

            S-A
            Last edited by Serial_Apologist; 22-08-11, 13:48. Reason: Further thoughts...

            Comment


              #21
              Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View Post
              Must admit to being a bit of an addict for "swoony" music - .... Or music one feels surged forth as though incapable of being stopped.
              The incorrigeable romantic - anticipations unrealistically raised, hopes dashed...

              Attachment v detachment - the big one eh...

              S-A
              ah, S-A, I fear that everything you say makes me realise more and more strongly how un-romantic - anti-romantic indeed - are my own relationships with music and the other arts - and in fact the whole Weltangschuung bizniss -

              What I respond to in music is form, poise, clarity, wit, emotion conveyed by use of the constraints of form, gusto, sparkle, - did I say wit? - intelligence, craftsmanship, colour, pace, stylish panache, restraint, discipline, joy, delight, humour, self-awareness.

              What I dislike is 'emoting', splurging, wearing one's heart on one's sleeve (and thrusting it in yer face), gushing, sentimentality, 'enthusiasm', personal references, cow-pats, showing the need to demonstrate that you have Great Passions and can do Despair and Grief (sob, sob), swooniness, over-egged puddings, film music...

              You get the picture

              Comment


                #22
                Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
                ah, S-A, I fear that everything you say makes me realise more and more strongly how un-romantic - anti-romantic indeed - are my own relationships with music and the other arts - and in fact the whole Weltangschuung bizniss -

                What I respond to in music is form, poise, clarity, wit, emotion conveyed by use of the constraints of form, gusto, sparkle, - did I say wit? - intelligence, craftsmanship, colour, pace, stylish panache, restraint, discipline, joy, delight, humour, self-awareness.

                What I dislike is 'emoting', splurging, wearing one's heart on one's sleeve (and thrusting it in yer face), gushing, sentimentality, 'enthusiasm', personal references, cow-pats, showing the need to demonstrate that you have Great Passions and can do Despair and Grief (sob, sob), swooniness, over-egged puddings, film music...

                You get the picture
                I had to think quite hard and mess around with the following before posting, so I hope this comes across as articulate...

                I don't think one necessarily has to equate spontaneity - which I find exemplified in my above-cited works - with impulsiveness. Would you consider John Coltrane's music 'emoting', wearing one's heart on one's sleeve (and thrusting it in your face), gushing? An awful lot of jazz falls into that category. That's what appeals to me in or as great art, or great in music. Not - I hasten to qualify - sentimentality, personal references (I presume you mean "me talking about me", as it were) or most if not all the other things listed in that sentence. Nostalgia is borderline. If someone wants to know something about me, apart from what I hope will be of use to them, they usually have to drag it out of me, these days.

                Anyway, points taken - and it's not that I dislike what you best like, vinteuil... My next-door neighbour paints the most turbulent of landscapes and cityscapes, after the manner of David Bomberg and Frank Auerbach, but on personal acquaintance he comes across as the very opposite of in yer face. I often wonder - maybe he and I are "just too British"; and maybe, just maybe the reason we are attracted to powerfully emotional art and music is to live what we deny in ourselves vicariously through their vision?

                Comment


                  #23
                  All that glorious flute music this afternoon at Cadogan somehow put me in the mood for Verlaine...hope you enjoy these two poems as much as I do!

                  MUTED

                  Calm in the half-day
                  That the high branches make,
                  Let us soak well our love
                  In this profound silence.

                  Let us mingle our souls, our hearts
                  And our ecstatic senses
                  Among the vague langours
                  Of the pines and the bushes.

                  Close your eyes halfway,
                  Cross your arms on your breast,
                  And from your sleeping heart
                  Chase away forever all plans.

                  Let us abandon ourselves
                  To the breeze, rocking and soft,
                  Which comes to your feet to wrinkle
                  The waves of auburn lawns.

                  And when, solemnly, the evening
                  From the black oaks falls,
                  The voice of our despair,
                  The nightingale, will sing.


                  EN SOURDINE

                  Calmes dans le demi-jour
                  Que les branches hautes font,
                  Pénétrons bien notre amour
                  De ce silence profond.

                  Fondons nos âmes, nos coeurs
                  Et nos sens extasiés,
                  Parmi les vagues langueurs
                  Des pins et des arbousiers.

                  Ferme tes yeux à demi,
                  Croise tes bras sur ton sein,
                  Et de ton coeur endormi
                  Chasse à jamais tout dessein.

                  Laissons-nous persuader
                  Au souffle berceur et doux
                  Qui vient, à tes pieds, rider
                  Les ondes des gazons roux.

                  Et quand, solennel, le soir
                  Des chênes noirs tombera
                  Voix de notre désespoir,
                  Le rossignol chantera.


                  THE WHITE MOON

                  The white moon
                  shines in the woods.
                  From each branch
                  springs a voice
                  beneath the arbor.
                  Oh my beloved...

                  Like a deep mirror
                  the pond reflects
                  the silhouette
                  of the black willow
                  where the wind weeps.
                  Let us dream! It is the hour...

                  A vast and tender
                  calm
                  seems to descend
                  from a sky
                  made iridescent by the moon.
                  It is the exquisite hour.


                  LA LUNE BLANCHE

                  La lune blanche
                  luit dans les bois.
                  De chaque branche
                  part une voix
                  sous la ramée.
                  O bien aimé[e]....

                  L'étang reflète,
                  profond miroir,
                  la silhouette
                  du saule noir
                  où le vent pleure.
                  Rêvons, c'est l'heure.

                  Un vaste et tendre
                  apaisement
                  semble descendre
                  du firmament
                  que l'astre irise.
                  C'est l'heure exquise!

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Originally posted by vinteuil View Post

                    What I respond to in music is form, poise, clarity, wit, emotion conveyed by use of the constraints of form, gusto, sparkle, - did I say wit? - intelligence, craftsmanship, colour, pace, stylish panache, restraint, discipline, joy, delight, humour, self-awareness.
                    Why not post some of your favorite poetry as a counterpoint to mine? I'm sure we'd all be glad to read it.

                    over-egged puddings
                    Well, all I can say is if you over-egg your pudding hard enough, you end up with flan de huevo (Spanish crème caramel) and it's delicious.

                    Comment


                      #25
                      In honor of the marvelous Dutilleux we heard this evening, let's have a little Baudelaire. Did you know Dutilleux once planned to write a ballet on Fleurs De Mal, the grand masterpiece of decadence and eroticism? From that collection, two of my favorites...


                      POISON

                      Wine knows how to adorn the most sordid hovel
                      With a miraculous luxury,
                      And calls forth more than one fabled portico
                      In the gold of its red vapor,
                      Like a sun setting in a nebulous sky.

                      Opium enlarges that which has no bounds,
                      Lengthens the limitless,
                      Deepens time, hollows out voluptuousness,
                      And fills the soul beyond its capacity
                      With black and dismal pleasures.

                      None of that equals the poison that flows
                      From your eyes, from your green eyes,
                      Lakes in which my soul trembles and sees itself reversed ...
                      My dreams crowd about
                      To quench their thirst in these bitter abysses.

                      None of that equals the terribly prodigy
                      Of your corrosive saliva,
                      Which plunges my soul into oblivion without remorse,
                      And, conveying giddiness,
                      Rolls it swooning to the shores of death!


                      LE POISON

                      Le vin sait revêtir le plus sordide bouge
                      D'un luxe miraculeux,
                      Et fait surgir plus d'un portique fabuleux
                      Dans l'or de sa vapeur rouge,
                      Comme un soleil couchant dans un ciel nébuleux.

                      L'opium agrandit ce qui n'a pas de bornes,
                      Allonge l'illimité,
                      Approfondit le temps, creuse la volupté,
                      Et de plaisirs noirs et mornes
                      Remplit l'âme au delà de sa capacité.

                      Tout cela ne vaut pas le poison qui découle
                      De tes yeux, de tes yeux verts,
                      Lacs où mon âme tremble et se voit à l'envers ...
                      Mes songes viennent en foule
                      Pour se désaltérer à ces gouffres amers.

                      Tout cela ne vaut pas le terrible prodige
                      De ta salive qui mord,
                      Qui plonge dans l'oubli mon âme sans remord,
                      Et, charriant le vertige,
                      La roule défaillante aux rives de la mort!


                      MUSIC

                      Music often takes me like the sea!
                      Toward my pale star,
                      Under a ceiling of fog or in a vast ether,
                      I set sail;

                      Chest thrown forward and my lungs filled
                      Like sails,
                      I climb the back of the gathered waves
                      Veiled from me by the night;

                      I feel vibrating inside of me all of the passions
                      Of a ship in trouble;
                      Favorable winds or the tempest and its turmoil

                      Upon the immense abyss
                      Rock me to sleep. At other times, dead calm, great mirror
                      Of my despair!


                      LA MUSIQUE

                      La musique souvent me prend comme une mer!
                      Vers ma pâle étoile,
                      Sous un plafond de brume ou dans un vaste éther,
                      Je mets à la voile;

                      La poitrine en avant et les poumons gonflés
                      Comme de la toile,
                      J'escalade le dos des flots amoncelés
                      Que la nuit me voile;

                      Je sens vibrer en moi toutes les passions
                      D'un vaisseau qui souffre;
                      Le bon vent, la tempête et ses convulsions

                      Sur l'immense gouffre
                      Me bercent. D'autres fois, calme plat, grand miroir
                      De mon désespoir!

                      Comment


                        #26
                        I decided to enter although, like most of my poems, Resurrection is probably too conventionally structured for a lot of tastes.

                        Resurrection

                        Inspired by Mahler’s Symphony No 2

                        Open graves, last trumpet sounding,
                        woodwinds’ lonely birdsong cry.
                        Strings at twilight, bows descending,
                        as the world prepares to die.

                        Choirs process across the wasteland,
                        pilgrims on the final day.
                        Baton raised as if in judgement,
                        sweeping life and death away.

                        Broken rock and broken temple,
                        terror in the wilderness.
                        Good and evil weighed and measured,
                        darkness waiting to confess.

                        Now the sun and moon are equal,
                        now the void is bright with stars.
                        Cymbals crashing, souls believing,
                        salvation in the closing bars.

                        All is finished, all beginning,
                        silence fills the crowded hall.
                        Baton lowered, hands applauding,
                        saved at last from mankind’s fall.

                        Stephen O

                        Comment


                          #27
                          Thanks for that! Curious, did you listen to the concert at home, or in the hall? Did you set out to find inspiration as you were listening, or did it all come to you later? Do let us know more about your thought process; I always find that sort of detailed "backstory" fascinating.

                          Well, I've been back home from the concerts for a while now, but am still floating on air. Actually, I feel too good right now to read the rest of the forum, so all that other stuff can wait. I'm completely exhausted, and it would be so pleasant to drift off to sleep feeling like this--why spoil it?

                          Anyway, here are two beautiful poems by the great Russian poet A.K. Tolstoy, as set by Tchaikovsky. If you only know the other Tolstoy, here's a great introduction:



                          Anyway, enjoy!

                          ***

                          I BLESS YOU

                          I bless you, forests, valleys, fields, mountains, waters,
                          I bless freedom and blue skies.

                          I bless my staff and my humble rags.
                          And the steppe from beginning to end,
                          And the sun's light, and night's darkness,

                          And the path I walk, pauper that I am,
                          And, in the field every blade of grass,
                          and every star in the sky!

                          O! if only I could encompass all life,
                          And join my soul with yours.
                          O! if only I could embrace you all,
                          Enemies, friends and brothers, and all nature,
                          And enfold all nature in my arms!


                          IN THE MIDST OF THE BALL

                          In the midst of the noisy ball,
                          amid the anxious bustle of life,
                          I caught sight of you,
                          your face, an enigma.

                          Only your eyes gazed sadly.
                          Your divine voice
                          Sounded like pipes from afar,
                          Like the dancing waves of the sea.

                          Your delicate form entranced me,
                          and your pensiveness,
                          your sad yet merry laughter,
                          has permeated my heart since then.

                          And in the lonely hours of the night,
                          when I do lie down to rest,
                          I see your pensive eyes,
                          hear your merry laugh...

                          And wistfully drifting
                          into mysterious reveries,
                          I wonder if I love you,
                          but it seems that I do!

                          ***

                          To celebrate the programme of the Late-Night Prom, here's a prose poem Baudelaire wrote as a tribute to Liszt:

                          The Thyrsus - To Franz Liszt
                          Blogger is a blog publishing tool from Google for easily sharing your thoughts with the world. Blogger makes it simple to post text, photos and video onto your personal or team blog.
                          Last edited by Guest; 25-08-11, 09:32.

                          Comment


                            #28
                            And now, two poems set to music by Handel--the first by an anonymous author, the second after Donne:


                            ART THOU TROUBLED?

                            Art thou troubled? Music will calm thee
                            Art thou weary? Rest shall be thine
                            Music, source of all gladness heals thy sadness at her shrine.
                            Music, music ever divine.
                            Music, music calleth with voice divine.

                            When the welcome spring is smiling,
                            all the earth with flow'rs beguiling after winter's dreary reign,
                            sweetest music doth attend her,
                            heavenly harmonies doth lend her,
                            chanting praises in her train.



                            THE PRAISE OF HARMONY

                            Look down, harmonious Saint,
                            whilst we do celebrate thy art and thee!
                            of Musick's force the wonders show,
                            the most of Heav'n we here can know.

                            Sweet accents all your numbers grace,
                            touch ev'ry trembling string;
                            each note in justest order place
                            of Harmony we'll sing.

                            It charms the soul, delights the ear,
                            to it all passions bow,
                            it gives us hope, it conquers fear,
                            and rules we know not how.


                            Handel also composed many lieder after the poetry of Barthold Heinrich Brockes...I like this one:


                            SUMMER DELIGHT

                            In the multicolored blooming fields,
                            into shadow-rich forests,
                            rule in quiet isolation,
                            innocence, and satisfaction.
                            Far from urban tumult,
                            as in an earthly heaven,
                            I find here the golden time.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              ah, such wonderful poems. Must revisit e e cummings. Meantime, here's one I'd like to share...

                              When the circles stop

                              There are 18 people on the stage.
                              Wood.
                              A sweet croaking forest.
                              Cave.
                              Bass and break-neck speed
                              Hits - humbling, soft,
                              shifts our spines into shape,
                              chimes our souls awake,
                              spirals into the arena then pulsates
                              like two grass snakes intertwined.

                              Nobody up front stakes a solo claim.
                              Here lives harmony.
                              Everything with horse-ears tamed
                              to listen to the earth clock we’re inside,
                              to the rising tide,
                              to the crickets and tree-frogs,
                              to the funk of sound that intoxicates
                              like lingering frangipani.

                              When the circles stop
                              we walk to the underground,
                              catch the last tube,
                              sit under neon lights.
                              Astounded.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Good evening, littlefox, and welcome

                                Nice poem - is it yours?
                                It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X