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My poetry from days of yore....

I have run a thread like this elsewhere, so in effect, mainly cut and paste. With various results.....😀

Here we go:-


I gave up writing poetry many years ago. I began to enjoy the poetry of various poets and my own efforts seemed not quite up to the mark. Sad in a way. Self expression is good whatever the standard. I think now that beauty and insight can be found in the works of others, however "poor" at a certain level of judgement.

Anyway, I'll use this thread to post various poems written in my twenties. Maybe with a few intros and biographical details.

The first was my only "success" in recognition terms. I entered it in a local competition and it was chosen as one of the top ten and read out at the prize giving ceremony. I remember how it was read, seriously and even pompously, while I myself saw it as light and even satirical. Such is life!

It is called "Before Bacon (An Ode to Despair)". Nothing to do with pigs, the "bacon" refers to one of the precursors of "modern thought", Roger Bacon. I was going through my existentialist phase, Jean Paul Sartre [i]et al,[/i] the "absurdity" of the world and such. Fortunately just a phase. I was moving onto the so called Copernican Revolution, the shift of earth and man from the centre to the periphery and all its subsequent angst....😀

Well, here it is.....

[i]Oh! I wish I'd been born before Bacon
When the sun still moved in the sky,
When hope was in more than a daydream
And beauty in more than the eye.

When the Great Chain of Being had God at the top
And Old Nic down below in his lair,
When people were burnt for love of their souls
And not just because they were there.

Back in those days before Auschwitz
When there was still trust to betray,
Before Symbol and Myth became Number
And the Cross became DNA.

Oh! I wish I'd been born before Bacon
When Saints trod the Pilgrim's Path,
When people still jumped at a bump in the night
And not at a bump in a graph.

When Crusades were fought for Truths believed
And Faith was the Devils hammer,
Nothingness only the clay God used,
The Absurd a Bishop's stammer!

When Man was seen as something more
Than atoms swirling in air,
Before the face of the Risen Christ
Became the face of despair.

Yes, I wish I'd been born before Bacon
Though there's not much to choose in the end;
But I might have had serfs and a castle
And I might have had Christ as a friend.[/i]
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I have often come in for some stick on various forums for my extensive use of Quotes. To quote (😀) A.A.Milne, the creator of Winnie the Pooh:- "A quotation is a handy thing to have about, saving one the trouble of thinking for oneself, always a laborious business. " We must think for ourselves, be ourselves, cry the ardent. Yes indeed!

My next ancient ode seems appropriate to the idea of "thinking for oneself", perhaps suggesting that I was ruminating on such things about 50 years ago!

I was struck once when hearing an office colleague offer some sort of response in a situation. Being instinctively judgemental I saw "fault", a lack of sincerity, a grasping after "received truths" and saw no "heart".

Anyway....

[i]Convention speaks
The heart is dead
Only the remembered said.

The mind revolves
Within its files
Choosing words
And picking smiles
To convey to watching eyes
If the heart laughs or cries.

But it does neither.
It is dead.
Only the remembered said.[/i]

Anyway, back to quotes, and of "being oneself", here is one of my favorite Dharma writers, Stephen Batchelor.

After speaking of a psuedo integrity that responds to a moral dilemma only by repeating the gestures and words of a parent, an authority figure or a religious text, he writes:-

[i]( we sometimes act ).... in a way that startles us. A friend asks our advice about a tricky moral choice. Yet instead of offering him consoling platitudes or the wisdom of someone else, we say something that we did not know we knew. Such gestures and words spring from body and tongue with shocking spontaneity. We cannot call them "mine" but neither have we copied them from others. Compassion has dissolved the stranglehold of self. And we taste, for a few exhilarating seconds, the creative freedom of awakening.
[/i]