At 4:08:06 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: | At 4:10:00 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:Someday
If I'm hungry
maybe I will go down
that great big slope
down into the regions
near the marshes
and the river
where within the thickets
deep with ticks and mice
dwell those things
that's good eatin'
But not today
just ate.
besides
there might be other
people there already
it's hunting season.
| At 4:16:40 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:Comment:
I have issues with my last poem
that I wrote so much better in
my mind before
I got distracted by the
wine of life and taxes
ranting into the night
all night driving on a furious
blog journey to no where.
no answers living on the sky
in the winded heights.
no poems left lonely on stone markers
in the blizzard light
on a stone wall
so far away from it all . . .
That last poem didn't have a
reason.
It din't serve a purpose.
The water drips all day all night
out of the gold mine cliff out
in Berkshire Heavan of long forgotten
yesterdays.
Out on the horizon there are trees
dancing to Music of the
wild wind of Summer Highland
midnight hiking trips
with all your buds and bros.
A cucu bird or something
lets loose a pleative mating
wail, some ritual developed
in long ago flok places on
some
far away beach
now burried way below the flooding flowing
sands and muds of lost eons
You get the house two more weeks here
at this uncountry lake
so a night of walking the winded bliss
shores of dawning Adirondacks
take short winter walks towards
rivers of deceiet and
bummer time LSD letdowns.
Yes, I have issues with this last poem.
| At 4:25:52 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:Pleaidees on Saturday night
with you upon the rock ridge
where cherry-trees dance and
Wicken lovers marry for their
eternities of rebirthing
to be you and me and Santa Claus
from 1935 living in a bowery hide-holl
with his collicy triplets and
their other seven brothers
with Grandma Wheeze and Sunshine
Uncle Charlie who he always loved.
Butter is too much to pay but she
loves it more with the toast in the
morn, the more to have
breads and wheats like
sunny Christmas blizzard short-crackers
called pious offerings but
too many knickels and too many dimes
lost for tracking the trail of tears
and buying old books and cards and letter
of history. . . .
it's for the children.
But Butter bean (from the other poem)
comes skamppering back in time down
that New York Loser streets before
she took him back to Maine to
be with the family who (always) love them
outside of time, deep secret chocholate
love afairs with out the knowledge
of sexuality but the sensation
of mountaintimes in bliss (the high country)
far off in the eternities of the
golden dawns (always happeing some
where)
Happy happy Butter skitter skatter bean
choclate doggie lab happy waggy back
in time 3 score years to 1935 Christmas
time sad drunk broke Santa walking
home butter bean is happy and
scattering love in that
doggie quantum dog buddha waggy
love puppy way that only doggie dogs
can (and will do)
Unconditional love even across the
eons of time, infinities of
love. . . and free puppies.
Free puppies. So he'll take
his 10 children and grandma and
uncle lucky and go to Maine in
the morning rain.
And
on the road
somewhere in places
on the way, maybe
after passing over a
mountaintop
in central Conneticuit,
route 144? route 6? Somewhere,
there will be free puppies.
He will stop the old car (and
the 13 riders) and add three more,
three little puppydogs for
the farm up in Maine.
Happy Family Christmases for all
always.
| At 4:32:04 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:Weepmiester on your
day off
you drove all the way
to Ridley Creek State Park
ripping up your notebooks
on an alkoloid induced
barf festival someone left
paper in the icetea
that you didn't know about,
puppy eyed and tired you can
only hope for awakening into a better
day,
less cleche
and over with you say
out the door.
how do you get out and into the world?
I took that trip that day with you
to be free of the pain of the sad
class failings that I would otherwise do
my broken festival lighting candles
had cracked the linolium of
Eames table from bad wiring.
my heartache ears listened to your
snotty chuckles like this was
the sound of the wine
being poured into the holiest of holy
chalacies . . .
Someone strumping a rubber band
was as harpists at
the twelve always open gates
and in full site of God and angels
do we confess our eternal love.
Oh Kay, now, as a test, when
we cum down and we
we're sober again
we got ta live out
the
rest of these many lives
before we get to the place of
promise
where it is all still true
our eternal love,
me an you,
many many life timeslater, down time
when the rivrs all
flood and flow in different
patterns (great brandywine stories
of lusty love be told for
freedom)
It was you
I landed on the branch next over.
it was you.
you flew away, you already had
another.
it was you
your love is always true.
| At 4:34:40 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: Meek sharks of deep waters only
timid if they are saited
and fed of bloody offerings not
like Jesus.
jesus who could be 40 days
without food and
not take it
when offered.
Shark tank wall-street sharks like
lions in a collesium and
companies are the offered sport while
we all watch.
see and be seen is what she told me
that one who stands disgraced now.
I didn't say anything bad
about her. She was always
nice to me.
But she wasn't good for me.
I loved her but I had to walk away.
I loved her.
now she is a pillar of salt.
| At 4:35:11 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: | At 4:39:27 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: Mini tiny trees
on a tiny tiny knoll
on a massive mountain
miles above the town,
miles away from the
rushing flood.
A dam breech in the valley
far across time,
in another season
resurfaced the valley
by changing the course
of the rain and rivers.
When a mountain washes away
hillocks skip like lambs off towards
the sky
cause gravity has stop for a brief time
causing some anomaly in the rhyme . . .
my heart broke long ago,
now you can just see the faultlines
of my psychological breakdowns, now
healed, now done with,
giant oak trees hang sweetly over
those ridge lines and weepy down
below the willows sing and sashche away
the river's guilt of loving you,
loving you
forever.
forever.
I had that guilt of loving you
forever.
and then when the earthquake hit
that guilt was forever subsumed
and forgotten.
The band played on and into the night
and everybody was dancing.
| At 4:43:40 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: Martin
Martin in his confusion
he was walking alone
down the highway
alone
and afraid of the coming
dark
the coming dark
into which he walked slowly
picked up the pace a little
when the wind got strong
because it pushed him along
that wind
it pushed him along.
Could he have found a place
near some craggy cliffs
out of the wind?
Or travelling alone
that winded night
far from home, afoot,
would it
be better to move along
let the wind take him where it will
the wind is strong.
Martin. He stood against the wind.
he didn't let it push him into a cave.
he stood up and raged against his
inner hates
his self-immolations of
recognising sin within
himself
sin
within himself
and freed
him self by
forgivness
not just of self
but of others.
Forgiveness of others.
In this way did Martin free the world
forever onward
from those hatereds and falacies
of social order.
Freed us always.
| At 4:44:18 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: | At 4:52:25 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:
Reflections of a bridge
at the end of day
all those folks
in their cars
safely crossing over.
Cold Winter awnings unwound
and Winter snugglies snuggled inward
to keep those tootsie toes so warm and
kind and light (of the sun)
Berry sweet drink pushed toward
you too much vitamins
in your hair make it droop but
school is next so don't be late.
Tomorrow.
I won't be late tomorrow
even in my sorrow which
teacher can not know
and I won't tell him.
Won't tell him.
I just stair outside into
the November gloom all first period
in mathclass unaware of
what is being taught if anything.
Mr. Sighs and heartaches, he calls me.
Think of the pains you will have
that that river will someday
always be washing away.
And even though you know this,
Mr. Sighs and Heartaches,
you will have your teenage angst,
no stopping you.
And you will find your
very loves
being flooded and washed away,
your very coveted loves, your
child loves of me me me.
What do you say to a teacher
who is also a prophet?
And all I had to learn
that day
were quadratic equations.
But instead he taught me about
mystic burning love
(and the infinities of lifetimes
in heartache and suffering
if you let yourself and
which he has now forever taught
me how to avoid)
May God always bless the
teachers of math and
algebra, both of numbers
and of souls locked in
eternal fellowship.
| At 5:00:24 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:All of this is, of course, copyrighted
2008.
It is currently only available
as a curtesy.
Availability may be limited in the future.
| At 5:02:47 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: | At 5:03:50 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote:Above we have a view of the mountain from the raod through the state park.
This was taken on Friday Nove 6, 2008 in
Easthampton.(Southampton?)
| At 5:04:52 PM EST on Sun Nov 9, 2008 bperil wrote: |
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