[ARTS]: Big and Little Poetry--free verse, any verse.

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    Deepest Thee Well of Health

    Finding more of light
    Farmland of this place
    Prairie of corn, beans
    Those who farm as
    In families old generations
    Boldly remain for families,
    Those dear old houses
    In Hartford our town
    Of three thousand next
    To Sioux Valley, place
    Of Sioux Empire, Sioux
    Stampede no more, set
    Aside, and who moved
    Away from that very land
    Once bison strode land
    That land of corn, beans
    Once of bison streamlets
    Brought water so dear
    Needed water to flatland
    Now rain soaks no field,
    Grow dry, as rain comes
    Not, and farms sweltering
    In drought, land slaked
    To dust again, wind storm
    One hundred more miles
    An hour now destroys
    Roofs of Dakota, White
    Lakota all affect comes
    Torrent of feeling, Nakota
    Sioux to ancient Days
    Where yet some people
    Come to inhabit what
    Is left of Priene Land...
    Gone to Earthquake

    Gassho
    Tai Shi
    We invite all who would write are welcome, write all poetry for heart.
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 02-12-2023, 09:37 PM. Reason: edit

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    This is for the poetry of Rich and the first free women who write with humility.


    ABHIRUPANANDA
    DELIGHTING IN BEAUTY

    Haven't you spent enough time
    comparing your hair
    and your clothes
    and your face
    to the hair
    and the face
    and the clothes
    of those around you?

    See the body of what it is.

    Real beauty is in
    the clear open light
    of the nonjudgmental heart.

    The First Free Women

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    Having Made Mistakes

    Though like most editors
    Poetry of women, written
    In calm daylight in day calm,
    Giving into the other, one
    Sits, daily, sits daily
    Shokai, Zenkon status, living
    Life everlasting without
    Salvation, saved without
    Repenting, Verse of Atonement
    Wish of the realizid, Priests
    Ubasoku all nine of us, Onkai--
    Newly transmitted, one year
    ago, Kokuu, stone grace,
    Each of the Others who
    I shall know as I have loved
    Shokai, Kokuu, Sekishi red beard,
    Those who achieve priesthood
    Someday, Zenkon shall,
    You are old like me, Shokai
    All four have taught me--
    Shall even we be like one
    Another speaking of the best
    Of The Lotus Sutra, equality
    Forgiven as we forgive our
    Doctors having made mistakes.

    Gasho
    Tai Shi
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 02-10-2023, 06:41 PM. Reason: addition of the equals

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    ARTS: Poetry

    Watching fog descend,
    White misty plains sweet moisture
    With palms up, hands cold

    Gassho
    sat/lah


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 02-06-2023, 06:51 PM.

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    Rhyme for There are No Words.

    The empty space is
    Not his bonded
    Pain that she takes
    in spite of his rigid
    Spine that makes it hard

    For her to sleep. He takes
    Her when she is so sweet
    They are hard together
    They love with joy

    So Deep, she is not
    Coffee, his is not chocolate
    Chips their is soft marriage Bed
    Though as old people

    They could not sleep, bower
    Never had been bliss, but prejudice
    Because she loved so deep
    Breath She never said “I love you?”

    Yet In a billion ways She caressed
    his head,
    She touches his hand
    What they will do
    When they are gone,

    And probably down the aisle,
    It was their tears, that she had
    They loved each other forever
    No smile he was his or hers

    Always his own best man
    As be what she sought
    His love with depth, Which he
    Would not behold

    She could not hold,
    Unless just the two
    Of of them never leave,
    Time eternally to be

    She saw at three a.m.
    When the brain surgeon
    Took away part of his skull,
    She could not know

    What to expect
    Would she would find
    An empty shell,
    Or an Imbecile,

    All that she could do
    Was Watch him talk
    What she had found
    Was brilliant poet always

    Writing songs about her,
    His steadfast light
    Shining through blue eyes
    Her eyes. both of them

    She was not blind,
    Her man she realized talked
    He saved their lives
    More than once

    Driving through deepest black
    Pouring rain blinding night
    The adventure in stratified
    Rock where prejudice

    Hate, and despair ruled education
    Desperate with an iron fist.
    They left to found their child
    A home in South Dakota

    All alone, their intellect
    For little one their Fulbright scholar
    They gave all to go away
    To make alternative books

    For little one's mom worked
    Quietly to find father proud.
    Then they had so much
    That they would keep

    Each other warm
    Until the rainbow melt
    In paradise
    They would keep
    Earth until death

    Which slept separately eternal
    in brilliant bed of flowers
    Near the stone marker
    Never read or left

    To have, or hold
    Until darkness take
    One of them went home
    Two follow in their

    Own Karma
    Some salvation in books,
    Melting deeds. Some ideas,

    Had to be deep.
    They tried to keep
    Their warmth
    Neighbors never really slept.

    There was no grave stone
    As they will wept
    There was only fevrid bow,
    No death because in peace.

    At last all reality
    As in depth forever dust
    In the soil, toiled never
    To trust every sentient
    Being could rise

    Rectifying their steadfast
    Reconciliation their fright
    Forever deep in stars,
    Galaxies exploding

    Leaving nothing, but supper
    Nova, flying atoms
    As sparks of life
    Into universal dark.

    Freedom forever
    Found in space.


    Tai Shi
    Charles E Taylor
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 02-06-2023, 04:21 PM. Reason: Line break

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    I read Every Poem

    It is but 4:58 a.m.
    My heart take wing
    Friends this for you
    I sit daily for Friends,
    Family, Dear friends
    Of Unitarian Universalist
    Seeking their own right
    Spirituality, regarding
    Unconditional as woman
    For man and man, woman
    For woman, man for woman
    As the Tathagata spoke
    Loving Kindness one
    For many, many for one
    An one for one, loving
    Self actualized. One seeks
    As parents taught mirror
    Behavior as the Buddha
    Taught Love or Jesus,
    To Kind parents, give
    As mother would give
    Also father hurts
    Same in regard always
    Child's operation father
    Deep in the brain
    Does not walks not
    Simple as not desire
    Desire so straight to doctor
    For his child I did
    Seek in solitude weep
    There winter, done
    With others love each
    Other as in our marriage
    When now we seek, my
    Best Friend, frail two
    Years, bab cry not
    Removed not AVM
    Not relive, Karl Rogers
    Sought to show child
    Learns in more ways
    Understanding love
    Dad direction in classes
    Took to literacy priority
    Books stones in soup
    Mom conservation
    Montessori studied child
    Learning in freedom.
    Actualized love never
    Always learned nightly
    AS SHE READ BEDTIME
    In habitation stotrove
    Equanimity, alone,

    Together is their home,
    Beautify those desires
    To make reason never
    Shown and plaything
    Medicine for psychology
    For teacher, I helped
    Girl publish in small
    Magazine understanding
    My Little Book of Poetry
    Another wishful in dreams
    Her notebook of silent need
    On Yellow mountain, letter
    Becomining bright Marge
    Chuck way to Peace.
    Child of Loving-kindness.

    Gassho
    Deep Bows`
    sat/lah

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    As i wrote in simple
    Dignified praise from beginning
    Of our verse wringing
    As is this back not
    Supporting today without pain
    The advent of my pain
    Curse me disease bones
    Into my back, neck
    Sacrum, Ankylosing
    Spondylitis breaks
    My Eyes, my every step,
    Even as I sit crooked,
    Invisible to much,
    To most I am but figure
    Straight, Amen.
    Pain again, again.

    Gassho
    sat/ lah
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 01-30-2023, 03:19 PM. Reason: one letter.

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    For me, I have worked to allow, as Tate did, my keyboard to follow where his pen lead him in a manner of free verse to see where my thoughts might take me and I usually compose where I am as I have done with my poetry since I was 16, and now I am 71. I enjoy all of you.
    Gassho
    Tai Shi
    saat/lah

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  • Jishin
    replied
    The Treeleaf Sangha, now online we find,
    A virtual community, connecting minds.
    Through screens and wires, we come together,
    To sit in silence, now or whenever.

    With every breath, we let go of our fears,
    With every click, we enter the present here.
    No longer bound by distance or time,
    We find true connection in this online climb.

    We share our thoughts and stories, near and far,
    And find in others, a reflection of who we are.
    We laugh and cry, and learn to be at peace,
    In this online sanctuary, we find release.

    Though screens may separate, our hearts remain as one,
    In the Treeleaf Sangha, true freedom is won.
    Our virtual zendo, a place to heal,
    Where mind and body find a sense of real.

    A space for growth, for learning, for change,
    Where we can find a new range.
    So let us join, in this digital space,
    And find true peace, in the Treeleaf Sangha's grace.

    Gassho, Jishin, ST, LAH

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    James Vincent Tate (December 8, 1943 – July 8, 2015) was an American poet. His work earned him the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. He was a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts Amherst[1][2][3] and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.

    Biography
    Tate was born in Kansas City, Missouri, where he lived with his mother and his grandparents in his grandparents' house. His father, a pilot in World War II, had died in combat on April 11, 1944, before Tate was a year old. Tate and his mother moved out after seven years when she remarried. The eventual poet said he belonged to a gang in high school and had little interest in literature. He planned on being a gas station attendant as his uncle had been, but finding that his friends to his surprise were going to college, he applied to Kansas State College of Pittsburg (now Pittsburg State University) in 1961. Tate wrote his first poem a few months into college with no external motivation; he observed that poetry "became a private place that I was hugely drawn to, where I could let my daydreams—and my pain—come in completely disguised. I knew from the moment I started writing that I never wanted to be writing about my life."[4] In college he read Wallace Stevens and William Carlos Williams and was "in heaven". He received his B.A. in 1965, going on to earn his M.F.A. from the University of Iowa's famed Writer's Workshop. During this period he was finally exposed to fellow poets and he became interested in surrealism, reading Max Jacob, Robert Desnos, and André Breton; for Benjamin Péret he expressed particular affection. Of poets writing in Spanish, César Vallejo "destroyed" him but he was not so taken by the lyricism or romanticism of Pablo Neruda or Federico García Lorca.

    He was married to Dara Wier. Tate died on July 8, 2015 at the age of 71.[5]

    Career
    From Wikipedia, "Talk"

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    I really, really like "Consider Another Point of View."
    Gassho
    sat/lah

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    Newspaper Route

    My morning today,
    With Orange Spiced Tea,
    Wheat cereal, with milk,
    Chocolate protein drink,

    Warmed and today hot
    My stomach, my taste
    I enjoyed sweet, and spiced,
    Applesauce with cinnamon.

    I remembered mother's buttermilk
    Pancakes with homemade maple syrup,
    Brother asking for shapes of cakes
    Together our seldom breakfasts.

    We gathered, mom, Dougie, and me.
    Then I had walked several miles
    Delivering newspapers to Corcoran's,
    For Mike their two bedroom house
    Shared one room with brother Donald,

    No better than our one room, snow
    On the ground, Temple of Worldly
    Hughes. I warmed myself in corduroy
    Coat I bought with money
    Earned grooming cattle

    At Iowa State Fair, the second
    Largest behind Texas State Fair.
    This special morning as these holidays
    Screeched weeks away from school,
    Which I had finally learned to love.

    Gassho
    sat/ lah
    Tai Shi

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  • Tai Shi
    replied
    Jishin, good morning! I do like "I do not like poetry..." You have a way with words Jishin, try your hand at some open forms? I too have written closed couplets. There are critics who claim the free verse forms are the only remaining forms, and as I like Eliot and Wallace Stevens, some of this may be true. I like very much the play and writing
    with verses
    That you compose.
    Gasho
    Tai Shi
    Last edited by Tai Shi; 01-26-2023, 01:32 PM. Reason: line. word

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  • Jishin
    replied
    Consider Another Point of View

    Consider another point of view,
    Even if it's not the one you choose,
    For in its consideration,
    A deeper understanding we'll muse.

    As an open-minded Zen student true,
    We must be open to different ways,
    For in their examination,
    Greater wisdom and understanding stays.

    Critical thinking it does encourage,
    Forces us to evaluate and see,
    Bringing us closer to the truth,
    As our biases and assumptions flee.

    Different perspectives we must bear,
    To develop empathy and care,
    For all beings and their plight,
    In compassion, let us share.

    So advocate for another point of view,
    For it promotes a more informed mind,
    And in this open-mindedness,
    Let wisdom and understanding bind.

    Gassho, Jishin, ST, LAH

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  • Jishin
    replied
    Dewdrop on a leaf,
    A glistening pearl of the morning,
    Nature's own gemstone.

    A symbol of purity,
    A reminder of the fleeting,
    A beauty that is brief.

    It clings to the green,
    A reflection of the sky,
    A mirror of the world.

    It sparkles in the sun,
    A dance of light and shadow,
    A symphony of form.

    It drips to the ground,
    A journey to the earth below,
    A return to the source.

    It joins the rivers flow,
    A part of the great cycle,
    A link in the chain of life.

    In this dewdrop, we see
    The wonder of existence,
    The mystery of being.

    So let us take a moment,
    To appreciate this small thing,
    And in doing so, find peace.

    Dewdrop on a leaf,
    A glistening pearl of the morning,
    Nature's own gemstone.

    Gassho, Jishin, ST, LAH

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