Proms Poetry Competition (and your favourite musical poetry)

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    #61
    A few more lovely lyrical poems for you that somehow speak to me this evening...hope you're enjoying them as much as I am.

    DRUNK AS DRUNK
    Pablo Neruda

    Drunk as drunk on turpentine
    From your open kisses,
    Your wet body wedged
    Between my wet body and the strake
    Of our boat that is made of flowers,
    Feasted, we guide it - our fingers
    Like tallows adorned with yellow metal -
    Over the sky's hot rim,
    The day's last breath in our sails.

    Pinned by the sun between solstice
    And equinox, drowsy and tangled together
    We drifted for months and woke
    With the bitter taste of land on our lips,
    Eyelids all sticky, and we longed for lime
    And the sound of a rope
    Lowering a bucket down its well. Then,
    We came by night to the Fortunate Isles,
    And lay like fish
    Under the net of our kisses.


    DANCERS
    Sarojini Naidu

    EYES ravished with rapture, celestially panting,
    what passionate bosom aflaming with fire
    Drink deep of the hush of the hyacinth heavens
    that glimmer around them in fountains of light;
    O wild and entrancing the strain of keen music
    that cleaves the stars like a wail of desire,
    And beautiful dancers with houri-like faces
    bewitch the voluptuous watches of night.
    The scents of red roses and sandalwood flutter
    and die in the maze of their gem-tangled hair,

    And smiles are entwining like magical serpents
    the poppies of lips that are opiate-sweet;
    Their glittering garments of purple are burning
    like tremulous dawns in the quivering air,
    And exquisite, subtle and slow are the tinkle
    and tread of their rhythmical, slumber-soft feet.

    Now silent, now singing and swaying and swinging,
    like blossoms that bend to the breezes or showers,
    Now wantonly winding, they flash, now they falter,
    and, lingering, languish in radiant choir;
    Their jewel-girt arms and warm, wavering, lily-long
    fingers enchant through melodious hours,
    Eyes ravished with rapture, celestially panting,
    what passionate bosom aflaming with fire!


    from LA MELINETE
    Arthur Symons

    Alone, apart, one dancer watches
    Her mirrored, morbid grace;
    Before the mirror, face to face,
    Alone she watches
    Her morbid, vague, ambiguous grace.

    Before the mirror's dance of shadows
    She dances in a dream,
    And she and they together seem
    A dance of shadows,
    Alike the shadows of a dream.

    The orange-rosy lamps are trembling
    Between the robes that turn;
    In ruddy flowers of flame that burn
    The lights are trembling:
    The shadows and the dancers turn.

    And, enigmatically smiling,
    In the mysterious night,
    She dances for her own delight,
    A shadow smiling
    Back to a shadow in the night.


    SONG OF THE SOUL
    Khalil Gibran

    In the depth of my soul there is
    A wordless song - a song that lives
    In the seed of my heart.
    It refuses to melt with ink on
    Parchment; it engulfs my affection
    In a transparent cloak and flows,
    But not upon my lips.

    How can I sigh it? I fear it may
    Mingle with earthly ether;
    To whom shall I sing it? It dwells
    In the house of my soul, in fear of
    Harsh ears.

    When I look into my inner eyes
    I see the shadow of its shadow;
    When I touch my fingertips
    I feel its vibrations.

    The deeds of my hands heed its
    Presence as a lake must reflect
    The glittering stars; my tears
    Reveal it, as bright drops of dew
    Reveal the secret of a withering rose.

    It is a song composed by contemplation,
    And published by silence,
    And shunned by clamor,
    And folded by truth,
    And repeated by dreams,
    And understood by love,
    And hidden by awakening,
    And sung by the soul.

    It is the song of love;
    What Cain or Esau could sing it?

    It is more fragrant than jasmine;
    What voice could enslave it?

    It is heartbound, as a virgin's secret;
    What string could quiver it?

    Who dares unite the roar of the sea
    And the singing of the nightingale?
    Who dares compare the shrieking tempest
    To the sigh of an infant?
    Who dares speak aloud the words
    Intended for the heart to speak?
    What human dares sing in voice
    The song of God?
    Last edited by Guest; 09-09-11, 04:46.

    Comment


      #62
      I did enter the Poetry Prom competition. I was a runner up, and my poem was read by Imogen Stubbs and broadcast on Tuesday. I'm fairly new to writing poems, and this sort of forum. I would love to know others' opinion of the poem, I think.
      JACOB and the ANGEL

      fearsome black and no moon
      wading I was, it
      caught me off balance
      grabbed, gripped
      then grappling
      shove trip brace kick
      heaving sweating
      in slippery wet cold
      and them, my family
      waiting throughout the struggle
      hearing
      splash and grunt and
      none of us knowing
      who or why
      sinew tendon muscle-knot
      the strain the pain determined
      not to drop
      not to give in
      as though the world
      depended on it …..

      surely an angel
      could’ve beaten me easy ?
      he wasn’t trying
      was he ?

      Comment


        #63
        Originally posted by JAK View Post
        I would love to know others' opinion of the poem, I think.


        Well, many congratulations on running up - and welcome to the forum!

        I didn't hear the HB work but the poem sounds a bit Birtwistlian.
        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


          #64
          Originally posted by french frank View Post


          Well, many congratulations on running up - and welcome to the forum!

          I didn't hear the HB work but the poem sounds a bit Birtwistlian.

          Comment


            #65
            It was intended as a compliment!
            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


              #66
              I liked the Birtwistlian bit

              Comment


                #67
                Thanks very much for that! For what it's worth, your poem was the only one at the reading that really grabbed me, and I liked it far and above the "winner". What they saw in his poem over yours, I'll never know...perhaps it's just a matter of a shared sensibility. Anyway, congratulations for a job well done!

                And now, here are a few more erotically lyrical poems for a dark, rainy evening that seem to glow with an inner fire...hope you're enjoying them!


                LAST GODS
                Galway Kinnell

                She sits naked on a rock
                a few yards out in the water.
                He stands on the shore,
                also naked, picking blueberries.
                She calls. He turns. she opens
                her legs showing him her great beauty,
                and smiles, a bow of lips
                seeming to tie together
                the ends of the earth.
                Splashing her image
                to pieces, he wades out
                and stands before her, sunk
                to the anklebones in leaf-mush
                and bottom-slime—the intimacy
                of the geographical. He puts
                a berry in its shirt
                of mist into her mouth
                She swallows it. He puts in another.
                She swallows it. Over the lake
                two swallows whim, juke jink,
                and when one snatches
                an insect they both whirl up
                and exult. He is swollen
                not with ichor but with blood.
                She takes him and talks him
                more swollen. He kneels, opens
                the dark, vertical smile
                linking heaven with the underearth
                and murmurs her smoothest flesh more smooth.
                On top of the rock they join.
                somewhere a frog moans, a crow screams.
                The hair of their bodies
                startles up. They cry
                in the tongue of the last gods,
                who refused to go,
                chose death, and shuddered
                in joy and shattered in pieces,
                bequeathing their cries
                into the human breast. Now in the lake
                two faces, floating, see up
                a great maternal pine whose branches
                open out in all directions
                explaining everything.


                AT THE THEATRE
                C.P. Cavafy

                I got bored looking at the stage
                and raised my eyes to the box circle.
                In one of the boxes I saw you
                with your strange beauty, your dissolute youthfulness.
                My thoughts turned back at once
                to all they’d told me about you that afternoon;
                my mind and body were aroused.
                And as I gazed enthralled
                at your languid beauty, your languid youthfulness,
                your tastefully discriminating dress,
                in my imagination I kept picturing you
                the way they’d talked about you that afternoon.


                BLOW OUT THE LAMP
                Nanduri Subbarao

                Blow out the lamp.
                My mind can't hold you in the light.

                I want the garden totally dark.
                I want to see your eyes shine.

                Blow out the lamp.
                My mind can't hold you in the light.

                I will think of your beauty over and over
                peering until I see all of you.

                Blow out the lamp.
                My mind can't hold you in the light.

                We'll stop looking and forget form
                and fall asleep unaware of each other.

                Blow out the lamp.
                My mind can't hold you in the light.


                I DREAMT
                Rabindranath Tagore

                I dreamt that she sat by my head, tenderly ruffling my hair with
                her fingers, playing the melody of her touch. I looked at her face
                and struggled with my tears, till the agony of unspoken words burst
                my sleep like a bubble.
                I sat up and saw the glow of the Milky Way above my window,
                like a world of silence on fire, and I wondered if at this moment
                she had a dream that rhymed with mine.


                LOVE HAS NO OTHER DESIRE
                Kahlil Gibran

                Love has no other desire but to fulfill itself.
                But if you love and must needs have
                desires, let these be your desires:
                To melt and be like a running brook that
                sings its melody to the night.
                To know the pain of too much tenderness.
                To be wounded by your own understanding of love;
                And to bleed willingly and joyfully.
                To wake at dawn with a winged heart and
                give thanks for another day of loving;
                To rest at the noon hour and meditate
                love's ecstasy;
                To return home at eventide with gratitude;
                And then to sleep with a prayer for the
                beloved in your heart and a song of praise
                upon your lips.


                LAST NIGHT AS I WAS SLEEPING
                Antonio Machado

                Last night as I was sleeping,
                I dreamt—marvelous error!—
                that a spring was breaking
                out in my heart.
                I said: Along which secret aqueduct,
                Oh water, are you coming to me,
                water of a new life
                that I have never drunk?

                Last night as I was sleeping,
                I dreamt—marvelous error!—
                that I had a beehive
                here inside my heart.
                And the golden bees
                were making white combs
                and sweet honey
                from my old failures.

                Last night as I was sleeping,
                I dreamt—marvelous error!—
                that a fiery sun was giving
                light inside my heart.
                It was fiery because I felt
                warmth as from a hearth,
                and sun because it gave light
                and brought tears to my eyes.

                Last night as I slept,
                I dreamt—marvelous error!—
                that it was God I had
                here inside my heart.

                Comment


                  #68
                  Thanks for taking the time to select and post these poems, Cavatina

                  Not everyone could be bothered, and some found it more amusing to jeer from the sidelines

                  Comment


                    #69
                    No, No, No, we were in the front bloomin row....[at the click of a mouse, some louse mocked the poems of the house of cards....]
                    bong ching

                    Comment


                      #70
                      May I be a guard for those who are protectorless
                      A guide for those who journey on the road;
                      For those who wish to go across the water,
                      May I be a boat, a raft, a bridge.

                      May I be an isle for those who yearn for landfall,
                      And a lamp for those who long for light;
                      For those who need a resting place, a bed;
                      For all those who need a servant, may I be a slave.

                      May I be the wishing jewel, the vase of plenty,
                      A word of power; and the supreme remedy.
                      May I be the tree of miracles,
                      And for every being, the abundant cow.

                      Like the great earth and the other elements,
                      Enduring as the sky itself endures,
                      For the boundless multitude of living beings,
                      May I be the ground and vessel of their life,

                      Thus, for every single thing that lives
                      In number like the boundless reaches of the sky,
                      May I be their sustenance and nourishment
                      Until they pass beyond the bounds of suffering.
                      bong ching

                      Comment


                        #71
                        Originally posted by eighthobstruction View Post
                        No, No, No, we were in the front bloomin row....[at the click of a mouse, some louse mocked the poems of the house of cards....]
                        ... all of us soaking up the vibes right there too, as it were....

                        Comment


                          #72
                          Oh yeah.... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8jNEGTS62JA
                          bong ching

                          Comment


                            #73
                            Originally posted by Al R Gando View Post
                            Thanks for taking the time to select and post these poems, Cavatina (
                            Glad you liked them! I've been devouring so much poetry these days (and nights!) it's the least I could do.

                            Well, to round off my Proms poetry thread contributions this year, I found a few more for you--and thought I'd kick things off with the ne plus ultra of "What was the narrator thinking at a music festival?" poems. That is, if you're willing to count an Ancient Greek Dionysian music festival in honor of Priapus...more like a musical orgy. Improbably enough, the subject is unrequited love. For those of you who don't have a classical education, here's a little more of a historical context:

                            "Originally worshipped by Greek colonists in Lampsacus in Asia Minor, the cult of Priapus spread to mainland Greece and eventually to Italy during the 3rd century BC....by the people of Lampsacus he is more revered than any other god, being called by them a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite. [...]Priapus was mostly worshiped in gardens or homes.

                            So now you know what the author is getting at with references to Lucius the Lampsacene with his "courts that gleam with forbidden light", days and nights of music and dancing, etc. Warning: it's a bit overheated, and probably makes a lot more sense with a glass or two of wine in you. I like to think so, at any rate. So without further ado...

                            AD LUCIUM from WHITE STAINS, E.A. Crowley



                            TWO
                            Hugo von Hofmannsthal

                            She brought a drinking-cup to him,
                            Her chin and mouth were like its rim.
                            So light and steadily she stept,
                            No drop from out the goblet leapt.

                            He reined, with light and steady hand,
                            A fiery stallion unspent,
                            And, with a gesture negligent.
                            He brought it trembling to a stand.

                            Yet when he reached his hands to take
                            The cup with such a light thing filled,
                            It was too heavy by a pound !
                            For so the two of them did shake,
                            That neither hand the other found.
                            And dark wine on the ground was spilled.


                            MAGNETS
                            Lawrence Binyon

                            A FAR look in absorbed eyes, unaware
                            Of what some gazer thrills to gather there;
                            A happy voice, singing to itself apart,
                            That pulses new blood through a listener's heart;
                            Old fortitude; and, 'mid an hour of dread,
                            The scorn of all odds in a proud young head;--
                            These are themselves, and being but what they are,
                            Of others' praise or pity have no care,
                            Yet still are magnets to another's need.
                            Invisibly as wind, blowing stray seed,
                            Life breathes on life, though ignorant what it brings,
                            And spirit touches spirit on the strings
                            Where music is: courage from courage glows
                            In secret; shy powers to themselves unclose;
                            And the most solitary hope, that gray
                            Patience has sister'd, ripens far away
                            In young bosoms. Oh, we have failed and failed,
                            And never knew if we or the world ailed,
                            Clouded and thwarted; yet perhaps the best
                            Of all we do and dream of lives unguessed.


                            A MOON SO BRIGHT
                            Su Tung P'o

                            Will a moon so bright ever arise again?
                            Drink a cupful of wine and ask of the sky.
                            I don't know where the palace gate of heaven is,
                            Or even the year in which tonight slips by.
                            I want to return riding the whirl-wind! But I
                            Feel afraid that this heaven of jasper and jade
                            Lets in the cold, its palaces rear so high.
                            I shall get up and dance with my own shadow.
                            From life endured among men how far a cry!

                            Round the red pavilion
                            Slanting through the lattices
                            Onto every wakeful eye,
                            Moon, why should you bear a grudge, O why
                            Insist in time of separation so to fill the sky?
                            Men know joy and sorrow, parting and reunion;
                            The moon lacks lustre, brightly shines; is all, is less.
                            Perfection was never easily come by.
                            Though miles apart, could men but live for ever
                            Dreaming they shared this moonlight endlessly!


                            IN WOODS AND MEADOWS
                            James Stephens

                            Play to the tender stops, though cheerily:
                            Gently, my soul, my song let no one hear:
                            Sing to thyself alone; thine ecstasy
                            Rising in silence to the inward ear
                            That is attuned to silence: do not tell
                            A friend, a bird, a star, lest they should say--
                            _He danced in woods and meadows all the day,
                            Waving his arms, and cried as evening fell,
                            'O, do not come,' and cried, 'O, come, thou queen,
                            And walk with me unwatched upon the green
                            Under the sky.'_


                            DRINKING ALONE BY MOONLIGHT
                            Li Bai

                            A cup of wine, under the flowering trees;
                            I drink alone, for no friend is near.
                            Raising my cup I beckon the bright moon,
                            For he, with my shadow, will make three men.
                            The moon, alas, is no drinker of wine;
                            Listless, my shadow creeps about at my side.
                            Yet with the moon as friend and the shadow as slave
                            I must make merry before the Spring is spent.
                            To the songs I sing the moon flickers her beams;
                            In the dance I weave my shadow tangles and breaks.
                            While we were sober, three shared the fun;
                            Now we are drunk, each goes his way.

                            May we long share our odd, inanimate feast,
                            And meet at last on the Cloudy River of the sky.

                            Comment


                              #74
                              Laurence Binyon details:

                              Comment


                                #75
                                Ref the new added poems of the Great Beast E.A.Crowley....I believe this version is in fact a second drafting of his original version....

                                I only bring a gift to him tonight,
                                Being the mockery of his rods distress.
                                His balls are aluminium
                                And so is his William;
                                On nights he always plays with them
                                At the back of the pavilion....
                                bong ching

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