This is the new blog...CONFESSION ZERO

Back to the Future



Want to know what was on my mind one year ago today?


It is time to bring `em home.

Time to call it what it is,
What it's always been
And will remain.

It is time to bring `em home.
Occasion is now not later.
Later's mere deceit
Waiting to be slain.

It is time to bring `em home.
Bomb no more, unlock,
Unload their weapon
And to us return.

It is time to bring `em home.
To terminate our mourning,
To heal our grievance
And say lesson learned.

It is time to bring `em home.
That our love might come
Yet again upon the dream
And embrace our soul.

It is time to bring `em home.
To air the people’s voice
As one of peace and joy
And unite the breathing fold.

It is time to bring `em home.
Time to call it what it is,
What it's always been
And will remain.

It is time to bring `em home.
End our hold upon Iraq.
Later's just a parade
Waiting on the rain.



Copyright © 2006 mrp / thepoetryman

One of the Many Reasons to Withdraw





THE BEST WE'VE TO OFFER



High Court Rules Race Out
(Another sad day)


Is this really the best that our great thinkers have to offer?
Bringing the good ol’ boy conformist roaring to his feet?
To rejuvenate ignorance and send Latinos packing?
Separation's a gift! To hell with diversity!

These thinkers with their backward ideals
And old school divisions
Knuckle dragging the country right off a cliff!


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman


TONY'S HANDS

EXPAND THE POST +/-
If that isn’t just a kick in the teeth!
Tony’s going to usher in peace...
That’s just so goddamned precious!
Tony Blair as a peace man
With all that blood on his hands?
Think again.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman

Blair Steps Down, Takes up Mideast Peace

UNDISCLOSED HISTORY



The Cheese Stands Alone
By Dana Milbank - The Washington Post
Tuesday, June 26, 2007



We'll make statements only today," President Bush announced to reporters yesterday as he sat with the Estonian president in the Oval Office.

No surprise there. Vice President Cheney's recent declaration that he is not part of the executive branch has prompted hard questions, and nobody in the White House has a good answer for why Cheney -- who hovered near Bush's desk while the president spoke -- had turned himself into a fourth branch of government.
The explanatory task fell to White House spokeswoman Dana Perino, whose skin reddened around her neck and collar as she pleaded ignorance during the daily briefing: "I'm not a legal scholar. . . . I'm not opining on his argument that his office is making. . . . I don't know why he made the arguments that he did."
"It's a little surreal," remarked Keith Koffler of Congress Daily.
"You're telling me," Perino agreed.
"You can't give an opinion about whether the vice president is part of the executive branch or not?" Koffler pressed. "It's a little bit like somebody saying, 'I don't know if this is my wife or not.' "
Give the flushed and flustered Perino credit for trying. The vice president had put her in an impossible position. Already under fire for his secretive ways, Cheney has refused to comply with an order governing the care of classified documents; his office concluded that the order does not apply because he is not "an entity within the executive branch."
That's quite opposite the argument Cheney made in 2001, when he said that a congressional probe into the workings of his energy task force "would unconstitutionally interfere with the functioning of the executive branch." Cheney has, in effect, declared himself to be neither fish nor fowl but an exotic, extraconstitutional beast who answers to no one.
As if to demonstrate his status as the fourth branch, Cheney left the White House yesterday and made his way to the Capitol, escorted by eight police motorcycles, three police cruisers, two armored limousines, and five SUVs and minivans packed with aides and armed Secret Service agents. Cheney spent all of six minutes on the Senate floor, fulfilling his legislative obligations as president of the Senate.
His task was simple -- swearing in a newly appointed senator, Republican John Barrasso of Wyoming -- and was designed to be foolproof. He had a brief parliamentary script to read, and a laminated card printed with the oath of office. But the executive-branch refugee showed himself to be equally unimpressed with legislative custom. Instead of reading the oath of office and having the new senator merely say "I do" at the end, Cheney ordered Barrasso to "repeat after me."
Barrasso, unprepared to utter the entire oath, got tripped up on the line about "mental reservation or purpose of evasion" -- and asked Cheney to repeat it. The fourth branch of government, his duties thus completed, applauded, left the floor and returned downtown in his motorcade. (See link above to read full article.)

Washington Post Staff Writers
Monday, June 25, 2007

From that moment, well before previous accounts have suggested, Cheney turned his attention to the practical business of crushing a captive's will to resist. The vice president's office played a central role in shattering limits on coercion of prisoners in U.S. custody, commissioning and defending legal opinions that the Bush administration has since portrayed as the initiatives, months later, of lower-ranking officials. (See link above to read full article.)

UNDISCLOSED HISTORY

Deep beneath the aching ground of our state, writhing,
twisting in the blood soaked layer below the screams
of the tortured and weep-filled living flesh, subdued,
a powerful schemer hunkers down
within his coward’s cave,
cackling of the anguish wrought by his reign
and sneering unto himself and the fool.
Mountains majesty, amber waves of grain
Blown back of the voice of shackles
and ropes tightly bound to their pain…

O! The sand and dust walking over the sorrow-born, lifeless limbs
making chains with the wind around the hopeless, must weep…

Deep below, the schemer whispers, “I’m the king”
from out his sallow lips to messengers sworn to secrecy
while the bombs above fall void unto his ears.
Evoking now the quietude of tyranny’s frame
he brings, blaring, the monstrous memories of what men can do!
And as they each move within the spiritless cave
he bows unto them, knees bent in half worship
uttering “What fools these patriots be.”
And the bombs fall silent unto this horde
of deviant beasts hunkered with themselves
and the stench of wafting hell,
yet only one shadow is cast across the floor…

Deep thundering now rolls, callous and yellow
like unending parades of pride filled processions;
lockstep, closed mind, tight fisted, greedy and senseless;
marching in honor of tomorrow’s bereavement,
inventing a country’s God-spurned eternity
of falling, plummeting rockets red glare
tumbling down, down, down
to the echoes of the past…

O hubris fondling the earth,
filling placid waters and pawing the trees, come!
End this! Thrust thy spear through the breach,
surprise even the memory of monstrous history
that death has found them there…


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman





WORDS (A eulogy for my Aunt Dorothy)




My Aunt Dorothy loved words.
She loved to write, read, create, speak and have them.
In the last five or six years Dorothy and I played more games of Scrabble than anyone here could imagine, except perhaps, Tom and Jan, Dorothy’s next door neighbors, who had to have heard us arguing about a word one of us had just played. Dorothy and I were both somewhat amazed that they had never come over to check and see if the argument had ended in fisticuffs. Of course it never did, much to my relief.

Last count we were at about 400 games. That, my friends, is a lot of words. But it wasn’t just about the love of words that she and I shared. It was also the love of coffee. And competition. And companionship. And caring. And her cooking (she loved to cook and I loved eating her cooking.) ...And it was about the laughter and even the tears. Which, when all combined; competition, companionship, caring, cooking, laughter and tears you get a sense of why most of our nearly 400 games took anywhere between three to four hours to complete.

One time when I won two games in a row Dorothy accused me of reading the dictionary before I came up to visit. Of course I never read the dictionary, not like one reads a novel or the newspaper anyway, so I asked, “You mean did I read the entire dictionary before coming here?” and she said, “Of course I mean the entire dictionary! Is there a half-dictionary out that I’m not aware of?”... To which I replied “Are you crazy? Of course I didn’t read the entire dictionary! Just the Q, X and Zs.” And we would laugh. Oh my! How we would laugh.

Dorothy, even before words, above all else, loved to laugh. Hers was infectious; a big, warm and brassy laugh... the kind of laugh that comes from an unbridled joy of living; undeniably full of her special brand of love.

I remember having to pick up the Scrabble board and letter tiles from off of the floor only once. Once due to my playing a triple/triple word score on my next to last play. Next thing I knew words were flying. Figuratively and literally... all over the kitchen. As a matter of fact for a month or so after her tossing the letters everywhere we played our games minus one of the “E” tiles. I told her to make sure to keep an eye on Feister, her dog, when she’d take him out to go to the bathroom. Just in case. We were both convinced that he’d eaten the letter “E”. All Dorothy could say was, “How lucky for you that it wasn’t a Q, X or Z!
Eventually, like most things with Dorothy, the letter was missing because Uncle JC had come in and hidden it from us. She said, “Your uncle may have passed on, but believe you me he’s still playing his little pranks!” Now I think you see why Dorothy and I spent half of our time together arguing, crying, sleeping, eating, and playing Scrabble and the other half laughing. …I am, after all, one of JC’s nephews, right?

She eventually found the letter behind the tv stand. I said, “What? Did JC come in and tell you not to sweep back there?” She laughed, flipped me on the ear, and then we promptly fell into a blistering game of Scrabble with all the tiles while watching The Price is Right….

Aunt Dorothy kept a meticulous score sheet of our games, too. This is the second notebook full of scores. The first notebook is missing; no doubt hidden away by Uncle JC.

Dorothy, like her husband, loved children. I think she realized long ago that they need us most of all. She knew that the children required words spoken with kindness and love. Dorothy may have loved to cook, but she never minced her words. If she thought it, felt it, or imagined it, you can bet your bottom dollar you’d hear it, much to our and the children’s delight. She loved children and she let them know this by her unselfish, unflinching contact with them. Any child that ever spoke with Dorothy surely felt her warmth, whether she was disciplining them, merely conversing with them or pulling their chain they knew they were safe in her presence by her words and grace.

Now Dorothy would say that “grace” is the wrong word to use for her because it doesn’t sound right, or it’s too short and not worth enough points, which is why I wish she and I were playing scrabble right now so maybe I could come up with a word that started with a Q, X or Z that meant “grace”. Yes. If a child had talked with Aunt Dorothy they knew that they had been graced with her unique sense of humor and unwavering love.

We agreed on many things, even politically, but if we got into a debate over it her favorite line was, “You’re just trying to get me riled up so I’ll lose the game!” You see, Dorothy, in my experience, loved words, but hated losing. I think much of it was due to the fact that she despised numbers. Words, in a sentence, she could change the order and come out with something altogether different… except perhaps “Dorothy, you lost that game.”, but numbers…? Well numbers were a problem for her, because, as she put it, “It doesn’t matter how you arrange them they just keep adding up!” She often said things that reminded me of Yogi Berra. But it was her loathing of numbers that was just another reason that Aunt Dorothy seemed ageless; she’d rather subtract than add, rather celebrate anything before being reminded that it’s her birthday.

--Regret… There’s a word for you… probably not worth much in Scrabble, but I can tell you, because I know if for a fact, that Aunt Dorothy lived without regret. So, today, I say let us celebrate Dorothy’s memory as one without regret, neither ours, nor hers.

After all, Regret is nothing if not a heavy rain waiting on a storm cloud.
Regret is nothing if not a beautiful hat waiting on the wind.
Regret is nothing if not a face waiting on a mirror.
Regret is nothing if not a kind word that stays inside the mouth.
So let us not regret, instead let us celebrate all of the selfless laughter and joy and kindness and beauty that we shared because of this incredible woman.

--The artist, poet and philosopher Kahlil Gibran finally reminds us that,
our joy is our sorrow unmasked. And the selfsame well from which our laughter rises is oftentimes filled with our tears. The deeper that sorrow carves into our being, the more joy we can contain. When we leave here today and onward, as Dorothy would surely have wanted, let us know that when we are joyous, to look deep into our hearts and find it is only that which has given us sorrow that is giving us joy. And when we are sorrowful let us look again into our hearts, and we shall see that in truth we are weeping for that which has been our delight. …Aunt Dorothy Schell.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



BACK TO ANGUISH!



(A Poetic Justice Photomontage)

Family fled Iraq 14 years ago, might now face deportation

The neighborhood Dallal Muhamed lives in is like her life.

Near her house in the stretches of Mountain's Edge is a lot losing dust to the wind, the skeleton of another house, some homes where the last roof tile was laid a week ago and a few houses with families unloading groceries from the car.
There's an air of instability, the not-yet-ready, the soon-to-arrive, the just-left, the settling in.
Muhamed has lived like this for 14 years, moving from Baghdad to Yemen, Munich, Tijuana and finally Las Vegas. She has been a civil engineer, a secretary, a real estate agent and a card dealer in a casino, all while raising a son and daughter.
Soon, she may have to pick up again, if immigration authorities deport her to Iraq - the country she fled after being raped, she says, by a gang member with ties to one of Saddam Hussein's sons.
Muhamed, who last month lost her bid to stay in this country in the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, would be one of the very few people the U.S. government has sent back to Iraq in recent years. Over the past three fiscal years, 38 Iraqis have been deported, 13 of them criminals, according to federal authorities.
Virginia Kice, spokeswoman for Immigration and Customs Enforcement, said the Department of Homeland Security "is still trying to develop a procedure" with the Iraqi government on deportations and is reviewing the issue case by case.
The situation confronting Muhamed is two-edged, observers say.
Sending someone to a country at war, especially when the U.S. is involved, is "extremely troubling," said Kareem Shora, national director of the American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee.

Back to anguish!
O the grief alone!
Your asylum has departed, you’re vanishing;
a flower without light .

You will remember the days of dread. The many,
unlike you, who’ve tasted but the one world;
beaten, tortured, unloved and now crucified,
wish that you stay removed.
The country, the liberator that you adore
has traded `way a dictator for a thousand ghosts…

O! Back to anguish!
Returned to gloom!
Your asylum has departed. You’re vanishing;
a flower without light.

Your story is one of an even more scaly grief
than those you left long ago, who’ve never known
the counterfeit security tasted by your children, or
been witness to this; our freedom’s ebbing flame.

Your nation’s crumbling from the violent edges
of your redeemers scheming hands,
and only this story, your plight,
has chance of giving hope,
For, even if you wanted to return,
You could not, the country’s now a ghost.



© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman

Hat Tip to C & L

OF NO USE



PBS - Frontline THE TORTURE QUESTION (Laying the groundwork)

I don’t want to alarm you, but we seem to have lost our way.

The sleeping heads aren’t seeing the grave sins we’re painting;
-Vengeance is a nasty and rumbling ogre that folds down over
Our sorrowful eyes and shackles us behind the plow.
-Noses packed heavy with settling a score can sense nothing,
Save for the fury crackling in their overwrought darkness.
-Clinched fists held within the smoldering rubble are dead
And will be of no use in the summoning of peace.

Surely the sons and daughters of the worlds terrified offspring
Can only bring about an immensely swift and bloodstained justice;
The merciless dogs of vengeance seem to have come full circle.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman

See all 6 installments of PBS Frontline's THE TORTURE QUESTION
Prepare yourself to enter the dark underworld of our foreign policy...


CRASHING THE SURFACE



(A Poetic Justice Photomontage)


Sitting here in the dark I’ve nothing but my thoughts
drifting merrily just outside of my reach;
-A log cabin in the middle of nowhere-
-A greenwater pond-
-A full moon-
I am at once reminded of a place of memory…perhaps it is home.
I scan the surface of the water and see the reflection of the moon.
Suddenly an army of great golden lions bursts through the green
with mighty kings riding upon their backs.

A moment ago I was staring into the water that kissed the moon
and now I’m witnessing this glorious spectacle of mighty beasts
crashing through the surface, their riders golden crowns glimmering upon
their foreheads, black hair lifting up off their shoulders as they
lean back and roar triumphant!

Now, as suddenly as they came forth, they are gone and I’m looking
into the still water reflecting a green and glorious moon.

In need of sleep, I turn and make my way toward the cabin.
I will soon look back at the water
hoping to again glimpse the lions
and hear the victorious roar of a multitude of kings.



© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman


THE LOSS OF LIBERTY



Libby Loses Liberty

Another man is destined to lose his freedom, the same water that feeds our wellspring, and we celebrate with the wingless corpse of justice that dots the landscape we move upon searching for an identity. There is no celebration in such loss.

This land lays down its lambs for the blade, the blood, awash over our two-headed righteousness, stooped and bleeding, holding tight the country’s sword in one hand and with the other lobs the sinless stone.

So, I weep at our oceans of loss. I cry for the world’s demise. Justice is swift- and blind- and stumbling over errant stones. O! There is no delight in our living if we will not see our way!
Had we ended this folly long ago our joy might have seemed fitting in this; our fleshy requiem.

O! The path needs our joy and it must also have our light!

Death. O! Death he does not celebrate without first crushing something!
And life. O Life! She does not celebrate living that lunges back again and again and again!

Rifles remain slung over our children’s shoulders
On the stone strewn streets of Mesopotamia!
Bombs are still dropping and igniting on Baghdad!
Death’s hands are bulging with stolen lives
And oil runs out the clenched fist...without merriment.



© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman


Libby Loses Liberty (Firedoglake)


Photomontage above includes Gibran's artwork shown here.



The Loss of Liberty inspired by Kahlil Gibran's "The Prophet" (Chapter 12 in part)


Then one of the judges of the city stood forth and said, "Speak to us of Crime and Punishment."
And he answered saying:
It is when your spirit goes wandering upon the wind,
That you, alone and unguarded, commit a wrong unto others and therefore unto yourself.
And for that wrong committed must you knock and wait a while unheeded at the gate of the blessed.
Like the ocean is your god-self;
It remains for ever undefiled.
And like the ether it lifts but the winged.
Even like the sun is your god-self;
It knows not the ways of the mole nor seeks it the holes of the serpent.
But your god-self does not dwell alone in your being.
Much in you is still man, and much in you is not yet man,
But a shapeless pygmy that walks asleep in the mist searching for its own awakening.
And of the man in you would I now speak.
For it is he and not your god-self nor the pygmy in the mist, that knows crime and the punishment of crime.
Oftentimes have I heard you speak of one who commits a wrong as though he were not one of you, but a stranger unto you and an intruder upon your world.
But I say that even as the holy and the righteous cannot rise beyond the highest which is in each one of you,
So the wicked and the weak cannot fall lower than the lowest which is in you also.
And as a single leaf turns not yellow but with the silent knowledge of the whole tree,
So the wrong-doer cannot do wrong without the hidden will of you all.
Like a procession you walk together towards your god-self.
You are the way and the wayfarers.
And when one of you falls down he falls for those behind him, a caution against the stumbling stone.
Ay, and he falls for those ahead of him, who though faster and surer of foot, yet removed not the stumbling stone.
And this also, though the word lie heavy upon your hearts:
The murdered is not unaccountable for his own murder,
And the robbed is not blameless in being robbed.
The righteous is not innocent of the deeds of the wicked,
And the white-handed is not clean in the doings of the felon.
Yea, the guilty is oftentimes the victim of the injured,
And still more often the condemned is the burden-bearer for the guiltless and unblamed.
You cannot separate the just from the unjust and the good from the wicked;
For they stand together before the face of the sun even as the black thread and the white are woven together.
And when the black thread breaks, the weaver shall look into the whole cloth, and he shall examine the loom also.



THE ARTIST'S LITTLE BOY (Happy birthday, Ben Heine)



(A Poetic Justice Photomontage)

There are painters who transform the sun into a yellow spot, but there are others who, thanks to their art and intelligence, transform a yellow spot into the sun.
__Pablo Piccaso


Teach me to paint!
Teach me to paint the sun like you, daddy!

It’s better that your life be painted first, my child,
And from its color you might then paint the sun.

You mean like you?

No… I mean like you.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



Happy Birthday, Ben!


(Ben Heine - Cartoons)




FREEDOM REVISITED




US told to free 'enemy combatant'

A US appeals court has ruled that the government does not have the authority to detain on American soil an alleged al-Qaeda member who is a legal US resident, without pressing charges.
The court on Monday ordered the release of Ali Saleh Kahlah al-Marri, a Qatari national held since 2003 over the September 11 attacks, from military custody.
But al-Marri, 41, can still be tried on criminal charges in a civilian court or be deported, the three judges ruled in a split two-one decision.


The freedom that he wanted couldn’t bring itself through the gates
So he imagined it pressing its paws to the soil beyond the walls,
That he heard it weeping plaintively just outside his tiny room.
Said he could smell it in the breath of every passing spring,
Spoke of its splendid dance waiting with shoes for his feet.
He said he'd heard its velvet voice flecking upon his ears
And that he tasted it in the warm water gracing his lips,
Yet the long shadows that stirred beneath his door
Startled him with their quick and brutal motions
And consoled him with torturous laughter.
They never once had spoken of freedom,
Made no mention of its demise.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman




LOVELESS BALM



Conn. Senator Says The U.S. Should Strike If Tehran Keeps Helping Anti-U.S. Forces In Iraq

(CBS) The United States should launch military strikes against Iran if the government in Tehran does not stop supplying anti-American forces in Iraq, Sen. Joe Lieberman said Sunday on Face The Nation. "I think we've got to be prepared to take aggressive military action against the Iranians to stop them from killing Americans in Iraq," Lieberman told Bob Schieffer. "And to me, that would include a strike into... over the border into Iran, where we have good evidence that they have a base at which they are training these people coming back into Iraq to kill our soldiers."
The Indepedent former Democrat from Connecticut said that he was not calling for an invasion of Iran, but he did say the U.S. should target specific training camps. "I think you could probably do a lot of it from the air, but they can't believe that they have immunity for training and equipping people to come in and kill Americans," Lieberman said. Lieberman, who has been one of Congress's most outspoken supporters of the Bush Administration's Iraq war policies, said that confronting continuing the fight in Iraq and confronting Iran are necessary for achieving a wider peace in the Middle East. If the U.S. does not act against Iran, "they'll take that as a sign of weakness on our part and we will pay for it in Iraq and throughout the region and ultimately right here at home," Lieberman said. He said that he has seen evidence that the Iranians are supplying insurgents and foreign fighters in Iran.


Lieberman: Bomb Iran If It Doesn't Stop

O! Your jagged lips again are upon my throat. Made rough by their drought
Hiding behind the broker of death.

There upon them is certain madness puckered and prepared to kiss,
To wet their looming course with deceit and blood.

Are these bone-dry lips not pursed upon my willful sightlessness,
Yet succulent in their own lusty course?

Your parched and loveless words lick the heels of a world’s sorrow
And I'll not soothe them with the balm of innocents.

I will not gaze upon their countenance or even touch them
To arouse their hunger or give them any weight.

They’ve not extended any love to me
or the world.

They can only teach the craving for it...
They cannot teach its need.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman

Iranologie


GONZALES



Friends,
I just called on congressional leaders to demand that Attorney General Alberto Gonzales resign or be removed from office. The recent scandals involving the dismissals of eight U.S. Attorneys and the report that the F.B.I., which is part of the Department of Justice, violated the law and abused its authority under the Patriot Act to obtain personal information about American citizens are just the most recent in a series of failures.
This Attorney General puts the President above the people. He has shown a deeper fidelity to the political interests of President Bush than to the public interest and the rule of law. It is in the nation's best interest for the Attorney General to resign, and if he fails to do so, President Bush should remove him from office.
The New York Times recently called for removing Gonzales from office. Can you join me - and a growing chorus of voices - by speaking out and signing the emergency petition that Congress demand Gonzales resign or be removed from office?
Click here to
sign the petition.

(One year ago today) THE SENSE OF THE WHITE BIRDS



O! White birds fly down the raging river line
And white hot are the sun’s rays bathing the shore,
And I think of this war and of my own borrowed complicity
That will be my shrieking, loathsome marrow felt forevermore!

You cast it masterfully, dangling your lure
Of every feeble people’s swindler in your damn book.
You’d rather not have “pull out” swim the raging water,
But it’s out there! The nibblers bleed from your despotic hook!

I think of all the Iraqi people, and I weep.
And of their homes and shame at having believed in us;
Freedom, democracy, clean water, safe streets, living;
I think of your lies and at once am asphyxiated by our oily lust!

O! The white birds flying the river can see it,
They can see the shoreline and they can see the nectar,
They glimpse a fabrication in America’s half-truths,
For they see the ancient beauty of Iraq swilling in fumes of war!

The bird senses our pandering, illicit ambition,
The looming and buckling hell of shorelines stony crust
As the warring winds change course for eastern shores
And would hold you from humanity if given reign over the quaking dust!



Copyright © 2006 mrp



(One year ago today) DRIPPING MOUTH




The West won the world not by the superiority of its ideas or values or religion but rather by its superiority in applying organized violence. Westerners often forget this fact, non-Westerners never do."
-Samuel P. Huntington

O heal thy heart,
Thou white steely souls
Whose bleeding desire is to rule the world.

American knights, heal this offense.
Heal thy spirit of this dreadful lust.
Do away with it…
There is much hunger for peace,
For love.
There is much yet to be spoken,
Much to heal of thy sickly onslaught,
Much to be gleaned of this world
And its hunger for salvation.
O! the breath of man
Need be sweetened!
Softness need envelop her,
And the wanton paws of this;
Thy dominant voyage need come to an end,
For it serves only to shackle and bloody
The supple lips of hope
Upon divinity’s dripping mouth.



Copyright © 2006 mrp


ARROGANT SEA



The grand vessel has tilted its lustrous bow
Into the heavy remnants of an arrogant sea
And is set to acquire more useless weight.

In this great ship now grounded we passengers must ask:
Where are the voices thundering with rescue?
Where are the weapons of mutiny buried?
Deep beneath the dismal granite of a callous sea?
Or here, in the thickset shell of humankind
Where heroes have beaten back upon greater odds?

Might they have died for nothing?
Might we squander their hope given us,
Their lives plunge `neath the icy waters?

The grand vessel has tilted its lustrous bow
Into the heavy remnants of an arrogant sea
And is set to acquire more useless weight.

Where? Where is the anger in our voices?
Where are the urgent pleas in our bearings?
Where are the new heroes most willing to march sternward
Lifting voices with the immense weight of atonement?




© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



BUYING THE WAR




NOW on the News Cindy Sheehan Interview PBS


Under a starless sky the mounds move like an ebbing sea
As the moon stands sentry with an uncomfortable glow
Peering below for obscure foes prowling the dark.
Night’s mortal choir can be unforgiving to our mind's eye,
Bringing visions of godless armies tramping ever near,
Their bitter throats puffed with god-filled vengeance.

The night bird no longer croons for our fluttering glory,
Instead she travels toward her family, as it should be,
Her voice banking off watery lips of listless nations;
The echo felled empty as we creatures of madness roar,
Crying out to the mythical army that they cease their tide
And evaporate to shadow so we can tell our tales of yore;
When we were free and a gallon of gas didn't murder a child.


© 2007 mrp/thepoetryman



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