by ladylazarus on September 8th, 2009

ladylazarus

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Do you have a favorite poem, what is it?

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  • by Ditto on September 14th, 2009

    Ditto

    Robert Frost's "Road less traveled".


    ROAD LESS TRAVELED

    Two roads diverged in a yellow wood
    And sorry I could not travel both
    And be one traveler, long I stood
    And looked down one as far as I could
    To where it bent in the undergrowth

    Then took the other as just as fair
    And having perhaps the better claim
    Because it was grassy and wanted wear
    Though as for that, the passing there
    Had worn them really about the same

    And both that morning equally lay
    In leaves no step had trodden black
    Oh, I kept the first for another day!
    Yet, knowing how way leads onto way
    I doubted if I should ever come back

    I shall be telling this with a sigh
    Somewhere ages and ages hence
    Two roads diverged in a wood
    And I took the one less traveled by
    And that has made all the difference


    Robert Frost

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  • by C-man on September 14th, 2009

    C-man

    it is one that i wrote... im not sure if i want to share it... do you want to see it?

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  • by Takei-Shihan on September 14th, 2009

    Takei-Shihan

    The Perfect High - a poem by Shel Silverstein

    There once was a boy named Gimme-Some-Roy ... He was nothin' like me or you,
    'cause laying back and getting high was all he cared to do.

    As a kid, he sat in the cellar sniffing airplane glue.
    And then he smoked banana peels, when that was the thing to do.
    He tried aspirin in Coca-Cola, he breathed helium on the sly,
    and his life became an endless search to find the perfect high.

    But grass just made him wanna lay back and eat chocolate-chip pizza all night,
    and the great things he wrote when he was stoned looked like shit in the morning light.
    Speed made him wanna rap all day, reds laid him too far back,
    Cocaine-Rose was sweet to his nose, but the price nearly broke his back.

    He tried PCP, he tried THC, but they never quite did the trick.
    Poppers nearly blew his heart, mushrooms made him sick.
    Acid made him see the light, but he couldn't remember it long.
    Hash was a little too weak, and smack was a lot too strong.
    Quaaludes made him stumble, booze just made him cry.
    Then he heard of a cat named Baba Fats who knew of the perfect high.

    Now, Baba Fats was a hermit cat ... lived high up in Nepal,
    High on a craggy mountain top, up a sheer and icy wall.
    "Well, hell!" says Roy, "I'm a healthy boy, and I'll crawl or climb or fly,
    Till I find that guru who'll give me the clue as to what's the perfect high."

    So out and off goes Gimme-Some-Roy, to the land that knows no time,
    Up a trail no man could conquer, to a cliff no man could climb.
    For fourteen years he climbed that cliff ... back down again he'd slide . . .
    He'd sit and cry, then climb some more, pursuing the perfect high.

    Grinding his teeth, coughing blood, aching and shaking and weak,
    Starving and sore, bleeding and tore, he reaches the mountain peak.
    And his eyes blink red like a snow-blind wolf, and he snarls the snarl of rats,
    As there in repose, and wearing no clothes, sits the god-like Baba Fats.

    "What's happenin', Fats?" says Roy with joy, "I've come to state my biz . . .
    I hear you're hip to the perfect trip ... Please tell me what it is.
    "For you can see," says Roy to he, "I'm about to die,
    So for my last ride, tell me, how can I achieve the perfect high?"

    "Well, dog my cats!" says Baba Fats. "Another burned out soul,
    Who's lookin' for an alchemist to turn his trip to gold.
    It isn't in a dealer's stash, or on a druggist's shelf ...
    Son, if you would find the perfect high, find it in yourself."

    "Why, you jive mother-fucker!" says Roy, "I climbed through rain and sleet,
    I froze three fingers off my hands, and four toes off my feet!
    I braved the lair of the polar bear, I've tasted the maggot's kiss.
    Now, you tell me the high is in myself? What kinda shit is this?

    My ears, before they froze off," says Roy, "had heard all kinda crap,
    But I didn't climb for fourteen years to hear your sophomore rap.
    And I didn't climb up here to hear that the high is on the natch,
    So you tell me where the real stuff is, or I'll kill your guru ass!"

    "Okay...okay," says Baba Fats, "You're forcin' it outta me ...
    There is a land beyond the sun that's known as Zabolee.
    A wretched land of stone and sand, where snakes and buzzards scream,
    And in this devil's garden blooms the mystic Tzutzu tree.

    Now, once every ten years it blooms one flower, as white as the Key West sky,
    And he who eats of the Tzutzu flower shall know the perfect high.
    For the rush comes on like a tidal wave ... hits like the blazin' sun.
    And the high? It lasts forever, and the down don't never come.

    But, Zabolee Land is ruled by a giant, who stands twelve cubits high,
    And with eyes of red in his hundred heads, he awaits the passer-by.
    And you must slay the red-eyed giant, and swim the river of slime,
    Where the mucous beasts await to feast on those who journey by.
    And if you slay the giant and beasts, and swim the slimy sea,
    There's a blood-drinking witch who sharpens her teeth as she guards the Tzutzu tree."

    "Well, to hell with your witches and giants," says Roy, "To hell with the beasts of the sea
    Why, as long as the Tzutzu flower still blooms, hope still blooms for me."
    And with tears of joy in his sun-blind eyes, he slips the guru a five,
    And crawls back down the mountainside, pursuing the perfect high.

    "Well, that is that," says Baba Fats, sitting back down on his stone,
    Facing another thousand years of talking to God, alone.
    "Yes, Lord, it's always the same ... old men or bright-eyed youth ...
    It's always easier to sell 'em some shit than it is to give them freely the truth."

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  • by graysey on September 14th, 2009

    graysey

    Still I Rise by Maya Angelou

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  • by CHeeZie MC on September 8th, 2009

    CHeeZie MC

    yup. cant remember the name though. but second to that is mine :)

    i dont have a name for this poem yet


    Money is tight,
    with so many things wrong,
    its hard to see the light.

    Divorced parents miles apart,
    I act natural,
    but I have a torn heart.

    Mom works to stay poor,
    trying to get a house, a car, a life.
    but "they" want more.

    Drowning in bills up to our necks,
    giving every cent to the f*king government,
    check by check.

    Living off of food stamps and borrowed cash.
    I ain't ashamed.
    Its a lot better than eating from the trash.

    Buyin' used goods and provisions,
    never much to eat.

    No choices, no .discission


    Can't afford to rent the house anymore.

    I know the drill, pack up.

    Were movin' again that's for sure.


    Its just me and my rhymes.

    I feel there is no hope.

    Just leave us to remember the good times.


    RUINED RENE

  • by Fiddle Playing Creole Bastard on September 14th, 2009

    Fiddle Playing Creole Bastard

    De Profundis Clamavi
    by Charles Baudelaire.

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