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ASF Poetry Thread

http://www.fullbooks.com/Poems-by-Adam-Lindsay-Gordon1.html
http://www.fullbooks.com/Poems-by-Adam-Lindsay-Gordon2.html
http://www.fullbooks.com/Poems-by-Adam-Lindsay-Gordon3.html
http://www.fullbooks.com/Poems-by-Adam-Lindsay-Gordon4.html
http://www.fullbooks.com/Poems-by-Adam-Lindsay-Gordon5.html
http://www.fullbooks.com/Poems-by-Adam-Lindsay-Gordon6.html

This one is one of myfavourite Adam Lindsay Gordon poems ..
pages 2 and 3 (above) :-
excerpts from …
The Roll of the Kettledrum; or, The Lay of the Last Charger

One line of swart profiles and bearded lips dressing,
One ridge of bright helmets, one crest of fair plumes,
One streak of blue sword-blades all bared for the fleshing,
One row of red nostrils that scent battle-fumes.

Forward! the trumpets were sounding the charge,
The roll of the kettledrum rapidly ran,
That music, like wild-fire spreading at large,
Madden'd the war-horse as well as the man.

Forward! still forward! we thunder'd along,
Steadily yet, for our strength we were nursing;
Tall Ewart, our sergeant, was humming a song,
Lance-corporal Black Will was blaspheming and cursing.

Open'd their volley of guns on our right,
Puffs of grey smoke, veiling gleams of red flame,
Curling to leeward, were seen on the height,
Where the batteries were posted, as onward we came.

Spreading before us their cavalry lay,
Squadron on squadron, troop upon troop;
We were so few, and so many were they --
Eagles wait calmly the sparrow-hawk's stoop.

Forward! still forward! steed answering steed
Cheerily neigh'd, while the foam flakes were toss'd
From bridle to bridle -- the top of our speed
Was gain'd, but the pride of our order was lost.

One was there leading by nearly a rood,
Though we were racing he kept to the fore,
Still as a rock in his stirrups he stood,
High in the sunlight his sabre he bore.

Suddenly tottering, backwards he crash'd,
Loudly his helm right in front of us rung;
Iron hoofs thunder'd, and naked steel flash'd
Over him -- youngest, where many were young.

Now we were close to them, every horse striding
Madly; -- St. Luce pass'd with never a groan; --
Sadly my master look'd round -- he was riding
On the boy's right, with a line of his own.

Thrusting his hand in his breast or breast-pocket,
While from his wrist the sword swung by a chain,
Swiftly he drew out some trinket or locket,
Kiss'd it (I think) and replaced it again.

Burst, while his fingers reclosed on the haft,
Jarring concussion and earth shaking din,
Horse 'counter'd horse, and I reel'd, but he laugh'd,
Down went his man, cloven clean to the chin!

Wedged in the midst of that struggling mass,
After the first shock, where each his foe singled,
Little was seen, save a dazzle, like glass
In the sun, with grey smoke and black dust intermingled.

Here and there redden'd a pistol shot, flashing
Through the red sparkle of steel upon steel!
Redder the spark seem'd, and louder the clashing,
Struck from the helm by the iron-shod heel!

Over fallen riders, like wither'd leaves strewing
Uplands in autumn, we sunder'd their ranks;
Steeds rearing and plunging, men hacking and hewing,
Fierce grinding of sword-blades, sharp goading of flanks.

Short was the crisis of conflict soon over,
Being too good (I suppose) to last long;
Through them we cut, as the scythe cuts the clover,
Batter'd and stain'd we emerg'd from their throng.

Some of our saddles were emptied, of course;
To heaven (or elsewhere) Black Will had been carried!
Ned Sullivan mounted Will's riderless horse,
His mare being hurt, while ten seconds we tarried.

And then we re-formed, and went at them once more,
And ere they had rightly closed up the old track,
We broke through the lane we had open'd before,
And as we went forward e'en so we came back.

Our numbers were few, and our loss far from small,
They could fight, and, besides, they were twenty to one;
We were clear of them all when we heard the recall,
And thus we returned, but my tale is not done.

For the hand of my rider felt strange on my bit,
He breathed once or twice like one partially choked,
And sway'd in his seat, then I knew he was hit; --
He must have bled fast, for my withers were soak'd,

And scarcely an inch of my housing was dry;
I slacken'd my speed, yet I never quite stopp'd,
Ere he patted my neck, said, "Old fellow, good-bye!"
And dropp'd off me gently, and lay where he dropp'd!

Ah, me! after all, they may call us dumb creatures --
I tried hard to neigh, but the sobs took my breath,
Yet I guess'd gazing down at those still, quiet features,
He was never more happy in life than in death.
….

Our gallant old colonel came limping and halting,
The day before yesterday, into my stall;
Oh! light to the saddle I've once seen him vaulting,
In full marching order, steel broadsword and all.

And now his left leg than his right is made shorter
Three inches, he stoops, and his chest is unsound;
He spoke to me gently, and patted my quarter,
I laid my ears back, and look'd playfully round.

For that word kindly meant, that caress kindly given,
I thank'd him, though dumb, but my cheerfulness fled;
More sadness I drew from the face of the living
Than years back I did from the face of the dead.

For the dead face, upturn'd, tranquil, joyous, and fearless,
Look'd straight from green sod to blue fathomless sky
With a smile; but the living face, gloomy and tearless,
And haggard and harass'd, look'd down with a sigh.


Scoff, man! egotistical, proud, unobservant,
Since I with man's grief dare to sympathise thus;
Why scoff? -- fellow-creature I am, fellow-servant
Of God, can man fathom God's dealings with us?

The wide gulf that parts us may yet be no wider
Than that which parts you from some being more blest;
And there may be more links 'twixt the horse and his rider
Than ever your shallow philosophy guess'd.

You are proud of your power, and vain of your courage,
And your blood, Anglo-Saxon, or Norman, or Celt;
Though your gifts you extol, and our gifts you disparage,
Your perils, your pleasures, your sorrows we've felt.

We, too, sprung from mares of the prophet of Mecca,
And nursed on the pride that was born with the milk,
And filtered through "Crucifix", "Beeswing", "Rebecca",
We love sheen of scarlet and shimmer of silk.

We, too, sprung from loins of the Ishmaelite stallions,
We glory in daring that dies or prevails;
From 'counter of squadrons, and crash of battalions,
To rending of blackthorns, and rattle of rails.

In all strife where courage is tested, and power,
From the meet on the hill-side, the horn-blast, the find,
The burst, the long gallop that seems to devour
The Champaign, all obstacles flinging behind,

To the cheer and the clarion, the war-music blended
With war-cry, the furious dash at the foe,
The terrible shock, the recoil, and the splendid
Bare sword, flashing blue, rising red from the blow.

I've borne ONE through perils where many have seen us,
No tyrant, a kind friend, a patient instructor,
And I've felt some strange element flashing between us,
Till the saddle seem'd turn'd to a lightning conductor.

Did he see? could he feel through the faintness, the numbness,
While linger'd the spirit half-loosed from the clay,
Dumb eyes seeking his in their piteous dumbness,
Dumb quivering nostrils, too stricken to neigh?

And what then? the colours reversed, the drums muffled,
The black nodding plumes, the dead march and the pall,
The stern faces, soldier-like, silent, unruffled,
The slow sacred music that floats over all!

Cross carbine and boar-spear, hang bugle and banner,
Spur, sabre, and snaffle, and helm -- Is it well?
Vain 'scutcheon, false trophies of Mars and Diana, --
Can the dead laurel sprout with the live immortelle?

It may be, -- we follow, and though we inherit
Our strength for a season, our pride for a span,
Say! vanity are they? vexation of spirit?
Not so, since they serve for a time horse and man.

They serve for a time, and they make life worth living,
In spite of life's troubles -- 'tis vain to despond;
Oh, man! WE at least, WE enjoy, with thanksgiving,
God's gifts on this earth, though we look not beyond.

YOU sin, and YOU suffer, and we, too, find sorrow,
Perchance through YOUR sin -- yet it soon will be o'er;
We labour to-day, and we slumber to-morrow,
Strong horse and bold rider! -- and WHO KNOWETH MORE?

* * * * *

In our barrack-square shouted Drill-sergeant M'Cluskie,
The roll of the kettledrum rapidly ran,
The colonel wheel'd short, speaking once, dry and husky,
"Would to God I had died with your master, old man!"
 
FIVE HUNDRED ODD POEMS.

five Hundred odd poems about this and that,
Well certainly odder than most,
Nothing to really write home about,
And certainly nothing to boast,
Grab at your heartstrings, or drag at your lead,
But most of ‘em breezy and light,
And those that are heavy or hard to read, 
It’s because they were easy to write.  

Five hundred poems when you add ‘em all up, (+)
The product of what I think, (x)
The critics divided twixt “maybe” and “nup”, ( / )
Or whether they bloodywell stink,
Or whether you somehow could rescue the page,
If you’d just take away the ink, ( - ) 
Or the sum of decreasing mental age, (- - -)
And increasing time to think. ( + + +)
- But in truth it’s a square on an empty stage, ( ^2)
and a cubic TV on the blink. (  ^3)

Five hundred poems about this and that,
And a few through the eyes of my dog, 
What we see in a bird or a fleeting cat, 
Or a rare and so-kissable frog,
And a few poems thrown in, well, just for a chat, 
Like the chimps in the family log, 
And a few more poems there, where my heart is at, ,
Or my head after nights on the grog.

Some about Rugby World Cups and the like,
And sportsmen, their madness, their colours,
And some are a mixture of Shakespeare and Spike,
And Hamlet and all those great fellas;
Of dogs ever faithful, of war and of dove,
And photos of memories old,
The quandary of trees, and the quantum of love,
Rabid yarns that grow rapid with mould.

Five hundred poems about climate and warming,
And trying to live on the land,
Moonbeams and lightning, droughts and/or storming -
Prayers in the hour glass sand;
Some there of bushfires and bites of a snake,
Of poet’s clubs, pathways and pollies,
Some there of gambling or taking a break,
Or a beer with a bunch of wallies.

Five hundred poems about love and lust,
And the market that peaks and then crashes,
Five hundred poems about just and unjust,
And big bangs and solar flashes;
Cattle and satellites, kettles and rust,
And toasts with old mates and/or clashes,
That’s life my friend till our bones become dust,
And our writings are literally ashes.

Five hundred poems as I walked the odd mile,
And things that have caught my eye,
And things that have prompted a laugh or a smile,
And some that damned near made me cry,
Or just observing life’s o’er-flowing cup,
Or to quell the quill in the kid,
Merry Xmas, - till next year the quill is hung up,
And in parting, I dips me’ lid.​
 

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HOW TO DOUBLE YOUR MONEY

To double your nickels or double your dimes
this is all (they say) you need do -
in these days of turbid and troubled times
try the rule of 72.

Just bet 6 bets at 12 per cent each,
or otherwise 12 bets at 6
presto - double is where your account should reach
and get you out of a fix.

But don’t forget not to have any minuses
and a trade is a bet is a gamble :cool:
they mess up the maths - and your tears glands and sinuses
(they leave that bit out in the preamble). :eek:



https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?p=275590
 
OPTIMISM ABOUT THE TREND FOR THE WORLD

why sure I’m optimistic 'bout the future of the planet
the kids will take the helm soon and it’s high time that they ran it
instead of dumb grandparents who will argue till they’re granite
they'll act on fossil burning, unlike fossils who just fan it. :eek:
 
LAST WORDS

The wording of a letter, from a parent to his kids
whether rich or poor or debtor, at that moment when the skids
hit some hump upon the highway, that then bumps them ‘somewhere west’
- words sky-written in some ‘skyway’, it’s that last and final test.
 
There's a quote by Mark Twain ...
"We have not the reverent feeling for the rainbow that a savage has, because we know how it is made. We have lost as much as we gained by prying into that matter."
- Mark Twain

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rainbow
My Heart Leaps Up When I Behold The Rainbow
W. Wordsworth

My heart leaps up when I behold
A rainbow in the sky:
So was it when my life began;
So is it now I am a man;
So be it when I shall grow old,
Or let me die!

The Child is father of the Man;
And I could wish my days to be
Bound each to each by natural piety

"The Newtonian deconstruction of the rainbow is said to have provoked John Keats to lament in his 1820 poem "Lamia":"

Do not all charms fly
At the mere touch of cold philosophy?
There was an awful rainbow once in heaven:
We know her woof, her texture; she is given
In the dull catalogue of common things.
Philosophy will clip an Angel's wings,
Conquer all mysteries by rule and line,
Empty the haunted air, and gnomed mine –
Unweave a rainbow

"In contrast to this is Richard Dawkins; talking about his book Unweaving the Rainbow: Science, Delusion and the Appetite for Wonder:"

"My title is from Keats, who believed that Newton had destroyed all the poetry of the rainbow by reducing it to the prismatic colours. Keats could hardly have been more wrong, and my aim is to guide all who are tempted by a similar view, towards the opposite conclusion. Science is, or ought to be, the inspiration for great poetry."
:2twocents Some top photos out there ..
http://www.jal.cc.il.us/~mikolajsawicki/rainbows.htm
The primary rainbow results from a single internal reflection of refracted light inside a raindrop, and the secondary rainbow results from a double internal reflection. But the additional rainbows are not explainable by geometric optics, and hence had been termed "supernumerary".

As Descartes might have said (not)
"Without geometry , life is pointless" :eek:
 

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The Poetry of Bad Weather
Debora Greger

Someone had propped a skateboard
by the door of the classroom,
to make quick his escape, come the bell.

For it was February in Florida,
the air of instruction thick with tanning butter.
Why, my students wondered,

did the great dead poets all live north of us?
Was there nothing to do all winter there
but pine for better weather?

Had we a window, the class could keep an eye
on the clock and yet watch the wild plum
nod with the absent grace of the young.

We could study the showy scatter of petals.
We could, for want of a better word, call it “snowy.”
The room filled with stillness, flake by flake.

Only the dull roar of air forced to spend its life indoors
could be heard. Not even the songbird
of a cell phone chirped. Go home,

I wanted to tell the horse on the page.
You know the way, even in snow
gone blue with cold.



from Southwest Review(USA), 2006
Volume 91, Number 1, Page 90
 
A CENTURY OF CO2 CATCHING UP WITH US

Imagine a hundred room hostel
and each door with a year embossed
we all live in each room
set the heaters to “doom”
then move on and monitor the cost.

Rooms we’ve lived in are left half ajar
so the warmth builds first near and then far;
so how long does it take
for a difference to make
and the 'hostel' starts to feel like a star?.

The heat due to CO2 gases
caused by man, in his myriad masses
takes a while to hit peak
just a fraction a week
but still builds slow and sure as time passes.

How long does it take for full warming?
how much in a year of gas forming?
- a fifth says the graph; (** see note)
… in a hundred a half,
and the rest whilst the locusts are swarming.
(and 'full' , long after man’s “reforming”).

As we look round to how the world’s shaping
we are reaping the effects of our raping
and there’s naught we can do
for an increase of 2 (degC)
but at least leave a route for escaping.

give the critters their due
we have f***ed up times two
we must find a way somehow to plot a path through
or leave this world to the “lesser ape” we are aping.

(** Note. Some poetic licence taken here ... Flannery, in the Introduction to The Weather Makers, says that the warming effects of CO2 (and other GHG's) is

a) possibly twice as bad as allowed for to date, and
b) develops over the approx time frame as follows :-
"one third in the first few years
three quarters of the full warming will be felt within 250 years
and all within a millenium."

I've interpolated, very approx and not critical to the point, to get the 1 year and 100 year values - 20% and 50% resp)
 

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The Bat
Theodore Roethke

By day the bat is cousin to the mouse.
He likes the attic of an aging house.

His fingers make a hat about his head.
His pulse beat is so slow we think him dead.

He loops in crazy figures half the night
Among the trees that face the corner light.

But when he brushes up against a screen,
We are afraid of what our eyes have seen:

For something is amiss or out of place
When mice with wings can wear a human face.



from Collected poems of Theodore Roethke
My Doubleday, 1938 (USA)
 
For My Daughter
by David Ignatow

When I die choose a star
and name it after me
that you may know
I have not abandoned
or forgotten you.
You were such a star to me,
following you through birth
and childhood, my hand
in your hand.

When I die
choose a star and name it
after me so that I may shine
down on you, until you join
me in darkness and silence
together.


from Against the Evidence: Selected Poems 1934-1994
Wesleyan University Press, Middletown, Conn., USA
 
following on from this one ..
https://www.aussiestockforums.com/forums/showthread.php?p=174382

the same story set to verse ... (a loose definition of verse conceded)...

PETROLEUM JELLY JARS on the CITY2SURF

there are ambos at the 4K mark, and 8K and the 12
with a giant jar of jelly into which the world can delve
it's the cure for knee to navel, and the cure for tortured crutch :eek:
and the runners queue for handfuls sighing "wow that helps so much" :eek:

here's a handful for this dero with a super juicy loin
closely followed by applying it where legs and body join
here's another curried nether region - rub it round and fan it
and a double dip by this girl cos her crutch is off the planet -

then we all go bandy-legged to the next jar up the road
where we queue up like some beggers - one more "dobbed" three-finger load
yes it's marvellous this fun-run, with its sun and gorgeous weather ...
and we'll all get herpes, pregnant piles, and galloping thrush together.

only four weeks to go ;)
 
Recently watched a great show about the latter days of the war - including USA ignoring Winston Churchill's advice to advance in the Balkans - and indeed, Churchill being on the outer of the Allied discussions about postwar Europe.

TELL THE POLES THEY WERE FREED IF YOU DARE

Strange bedfellows war makes of strangers
where the mean justify any end
- shortsighted Yanks blind to dangers
and a Satanist Stalin for friend;
Whilst Winnie knew better than trust him
and pleaded more freedom for more flags
the Yanks continued to filabust him
with gobbleygook garbage and gags.

There was only one "Ally" had been there
since the day that the war was declared
There was only one party had seen the injustice
of Poland in chains – or who cared;
One party alone saw the Nazi greed
and foretold of the brutal red Bear.
Check with Balkans or Czechs, did the war see them freed?
Tell the Poles they were freed – if you dare!

You’d have to agree that when Russia changed sides
- or when “Barbarossa” changed their minds for them -
that they subsequent pushed back the Nazi tides
albeit with minimal decorum;
And you’d have to agree that the Yanks had the numbers
once the sleep was removed from their eyes
once “Tora” awoke hidden “truth” from its slumbers
after which they were knee deep! – surprise!

Hey, Winnie alone did not win the war
but he could have done better if cloned,
If the Yanks had foreseen what would happen in Warsaw
when the war saw them Soviet-owned;
If Winnie'd been wrong about post war Russia
or the Yanks has listened to his advice,
we'd have been the first to enter Vienna
and halved the cold war price.

vodka bedfellow's breath, (much like trusting Macbeth),
such a bridal-price - vampire - not nice .
 
.................................
Continuing in the same vein...

WORLD WAR II, 1941 to 1945 (According to the Yanks and the Russians).
IF IT WEREN’T FOR REDBEARD AND THE TIGER

“Barbarossa” = code name for the Nazi attack on Russia, 22 Jun 1941 = named after Emperor Frederick Barbarossa, King of Germany, thence of (northern) Italy, and of Burgundy, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, 1122-1190, died by drowning leading the Third Crusade. … The name Barbarossa came from the northern Italian cities he attempted to rule, and means "red beard".

“Tora” = Japanese code name for attack on Pearl Harbour, 7 Dec 1941 = Tiger.
“Tora Tora Tora” = successful strike
If it weren’t for “Red Beard” and the “Tiger”,
they would never have joined Winnie’s cause
did that stop them excluding old Winnie
from their plans for the USSR?
Preferring that soldiers lay idly by (1943-4)
instead of a Balkan advance
Yanks ignored old Winnie’s empassioned cry
for a stronger negotiating stance.

If it weren’t for the British codebreakers
who did all the basic deducting
From Kharkov to Kursk they’d have met their makers
(helped by Hitler’s compulsive conducting);
From Normandy and over the River Seine
they’d have lost many more who battled
yet they left Winnie out of the postwar game
and the world with incompetence saddled.

If it weren’t for “Red Beard” and the “Tiger”,
full twenty months into the war
they’d have stayed on the side with no virtue or pride
neither backbone not guts and no core;
Strange bedfellows indeed, Yanks, Poms and Russians,
and full strange how their history unfolds
but for virtuous ways, I’d take poms any day
and the commonwealth of Britain holds.

If it weren’t for “Red Beard” and the “Tiger”,
there’d be Britain alone in the fight
plus some lost Grecian souls and some Croats and Poles
and some whisky-filled bulldogs to bite;
and some Commonwealth hacks, Aussies, Kiws, Canaks
against Hitler and all of his might !
had they lost to the hun, there’d be buga all fun
and the world would have turned sharp right.

Dates on which independent states joined the Allies:-

After the invasion of Poland·
Poland: 1 September 1939
· United Kingdom 3 September 1939
· Australia: 3 September 1939
· New Zealand 3 September 1939
· ………… the principled response …. (do we have reason to be proud?)
· France: 3 September 1939
· Nepal: 4 September 1939
· South Africa 6 September 1939
· Canada 10 September 1939

After the invasion of Denmark and Norway
· Denmark: 9 April 1940
· Norway: 9 April 1940

After the invasion of The Netherlands and Belgium
· Netherlands: 10 May 1940
· Belgium: 10 May 1940
· Luxembourg: 10 May 1940
· Greece: 28 October 1940
· Yugoslavia: 6 April 1941

After the invasion of the USSR , "Barbarossa”
· Soviet Union: 22 June 1941 (formerly allied with Nazi Germany during 1939)

After the attack on Pearl Harbor "Tora"
· Panama 7 December 1941
· United States: 8 December 1941
· Costa Rica: 8 December 1941
· Dominican Republic: 8 December 1941
· El Salvador: 8 December 1941
· Haiti: 8 December 1941
· Honduras: 8 December 1941
· Nicaragua: 8 December 1941
· China : 9 December 1941
· Philippines: 9 December 1941
· Guatemala: 9 December 1941
· Cuba: 9 December 1941

After the Declaration by United Nations
· Mexico: 22 May 1942
· Brazil: 22 August 1942
· Ethiopia: 14 December 1942 (formerly occupied by Italy)
· Iraq: 17 January 1943 (occupied by Allies in 1941)
· Bolivia: 7 April 1943
· Colombia: 26 July 1943
· Iran: 9 September 1943 (occupied by Allies in 1941)
· Yugoslavia: 1 December 1943
· Liberia: 27 January 1944
· Peru: 12 February 1944
· Italy: After the arrest of Mussolini in 1943, northern Italy was occupied by Germany while the south under the Italian King Victor Emmanuel I joined the Allies against the Axis.

After Operation Bagration and D-Day
· Romania: 23 August 1944 (formerly a member of the Axis)
· Bulgaria: 8 September 1944 (formerly a member of the Axis)
· San Marino: 21 September 1944 (formerly a member of the Axis)
· Albania: 26 October 1944 (formerly occupied by Italy and later Germany)
· Bahawalpur: 2 February 1945
· Ecuador: 2 February 1945
· Paraguay: 7 February 1945
· Uruguay: 15 February 1945
· Venezuela: 15 February 1945
· Turkey: 23 February 1945
· Egypt: 27 February 1945
· Lebanon: 27 February 1945
· Syria: 27 February 1945
· Saudi Arabia: 1 March 1945
· Argentina: 27 March 1945
· Chile: 11 April 1945
 
THE SENATE ESTIMATES ON UTEGATE

how tortuous and fractured, and/or back-room-manufactured
were the puffy-cheeked disclosures of the gulping Godwin Grech
memories far-fetched, half etched, half-lapsed, with that clever rider "praps...
and praps again I may be wrong, it's just the vaguest sketch".

maybe half truthed? - maybe tutored? spoken half aloud but muted?
but it all became so neutered when the email turned out fake.
now i'm guessing he is hopin' that the floor will somehow open
and the words that he had spoken, would dissolve
... for pity's sake. :(

and it's interesting that Howard , was the arguable coward
cos he changed the public service to his lackies when he won
whereas Rudd just trusted each - that includes one Godwin Grech
and it's interesting which hunter/hunted finally came undone.
 

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To the bloke whose hindsight is clear
And a propensity for Obama to cheer
Will you hang your head in shame
When the sea level is the same
In the future, when you look to the rear

:batman:

You ask sir will I apologise
If my forecast doesn’t come true?
...
Hell yes I will ! – if the sea doesn’t rise
But if it does – then the sorry's on you?
 
Sitting in an almost forgotten Restaurant with Die Lorelei in the distance.

The city sprawls like Die Lorelei
on the far side of the lake
like a girl I recall from days gone by
and a conquest I'll never make,
It's one of those things you long learnt to accept
we were close in a bygone era
and we parted just friends (how Jesus wept)
yet I wonder if lovers were nearer.

A memory of a previously forgotten page
and some price long settled and paid
from those times when the red blood stormed and raged
now those ravenous bloodcells fade;
though I tried my best to swing her around
she remained rather sadly unswayed,
she was once the unmade Die Lorelie maid
lovely "lady-of-old-never-laid" :2twocents
 
Rain Dogs by Tom Waits.



Inside a broken clock
Splashing the wine with all the rain dogs
Taxi, we'd rather walk
Huddle a doorway with the rain dogs
For I am a rain dog too

Oh, how we danced and we swallowed the night
For it was all ripe for dreaming
Oh, how we danced away all of the lights
We've always been out of our minds

The rum pours strong and thin
Beat out the dustman with the rain dogs
Aboard a shipwreck train
Give my umbrella to the rain dogs
For I am a rain dog too

Oh, how we danced with the Rose of Tralee
Her long hair black as a raven
Oh, how we danced and you whispered to me
You'll never be going back home

Oh, how we danced with the Rose of Tralee
Her long hair black as a raven
Oh, how we danced and you whispered to me
You'll never be going back home

Written by: Tom Waits

gg
 
Rain Dogs by Tom Waits.



Inside a broken clock
Splashing the wine with all the rain dogs
Taxi, we'd rather walk
Huddle a doorway with the rain dogs
For I am a rain dog too

Oh, how we danced and we swallowed the night
For it was all ripe for dreaming
Oh, how we danced away all of the lights
We've always been out of our minds

The rum pours strong and thin
Beat out the dustman with the rain dogs
Aboard a shipwreck train
Give my umbrella to the rain dogs
For I am a rain dog too

Oh, how we danced with the Rose of Tralee
Her long hair black as a raven
Oh, how we danced and you whispered to me
You'll never be going back home

Oh, how we danced with the Rose of Tralee
Her long hair black as a raven
Oh, how we danced and you whispered to me
You'll never be going back home

Written by: Tom Waits

gg

Oooh I love Tom Waits. Especially his earlier stuff. The 1972 gig "Nighthawks at the Diner" is amazing :). Here is from his newer stuff: Alice

It's dreamy weather we're on
You waved your crooked wand
Along an icy pond with a frozen moon
A murder of silhouette crows I saw
And the tears on my face
And the skates on the pond
They spell Alice

I disappear in your name
But you must wait for me
Somewhere across the sea
There's a wreck of a ship
Your hair is like meadow grass on the tide
And the raindrops on my window
And the ice in my drink
Baby all I can think of is Alice

Arithmetic arithmetock
Turn the hands back on the clock
How does the ocean rock the boat?
How did the razor find my throat?
The only strings that hold me here
Are tangled up around the pier

And so a secret kiss
Brings madness with the bliss
And I will think of this
When I'm dead in my grave
Set me adrift and I'm lost over there
And I must be insane
To go skating on your name
And by tracing it twice
I fell through the ice
Of Alice

And so a secret kiss
Brings madness with the bliss
And I will think of this
When I'm dead in my grave
Set me adrift and I'm lost over there
And I must be insane
To go skating on your name
And by tracing it twice
I fell through the ice
Of Alice
There's only Alice
 
Oooh I love Tom Waits. Especially his earlier stuff. The 1972 gig "Nighthawks at the Diner" is amazing :). Here is from his newer stuff: Alice

It's dreamy weather we're on
You waved your crooked wand
Along an icy pond with a frozen moon
A murder of silhouette crows I saw
And the tears on my face
And the skates on the pond
They spell Alice

I disappear in your name
But you must wait for me
Somewhere across the sea
There's a wreck of a ship
Your hair is like meadow grass on the tide
And the raindrops on my window
And the ice in my drink
Baby all I can think of is Alice

Arithmetic arithmetock
Turn the hands back on the clock
How does the ocean rock the boat?
How did the razor find my throat?
The only strings that hold me here
Are tangled up around the pier

And so a secret kiss
Brings madness with the bliss
And I will think of this
When I'm dead in my grave
Set me adrift and I'm lost over there
And I must be insane
To go skating on your name
And by tracing it twice
I fell through the ice
Of Alice

And so a secret kiss
Brings madness with the bliss
And I will think of this
When I'm dead in my grave
Set me adrift and I'm lost over there
And I must be insane
To go skating on your name
And by tracing it twice
I fell through the ice
Of Alice
There's only Alice

Thanks ivant mate, Tom Waits crosses poetry, rock, country and just being different , poor and ****ed up.

So I thought I'd start a thread just on Tom Waits and I'd appreciate your input in to that thread.

We'll probably get lots of utubes and mp3s but the words particularly , and the music are equally important.

All one armed dwarfs and one legged puerto ricans are particularly invited to the thread, as are you and me and everyman and everywoman.

What a genius Tom Waits.

gg
 
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