~wolf
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (11:37)
seed
enough said.
~Charlotte
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (13:37)
#1
Ah. Home at last. :) Thanks, Nick!
Here is my personal favorite:
~terry
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (17:01)
#2
And he used upper and lower case!
~Charlotte
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (17:02)
#3
Yes, but not in a conventional manner. Thank god. :)
~paula
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (18:19)
#4
(for you, and i and us)
(july 9th 1998)
i carry your heart with me(i carry it in
my heart)i am never without it(anywhere
i go you go, my dear;and whatever is done
by only me is your doing,my darling)
i fear
no fate(for you are fate, my sweet)i want
no world(for beautiful you are my world, my true)
and it's you are whatever a moon has always meant
and whatever a sun will always sing is you
here is the deepest secret nobody knows
(here is the root of the root and the bud of the bud
and the sky of the sky of a tree called life;which grows
higher than soul can hope or mind can hide)
and this is the wonder thats keeping the stars apart
i carry your heart(i carry it in my heart)
- e.e cummings
~pmnh
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (18:36)
#5
damn paula jane...
(damn)
it is beautiful
(that's not one of the hundred is it?)
it is perfect...
okay...
give me a couple of minutes...
~pmnh
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (18:44)
#6
ummm... the same-
(je, tu, nous)
(july 9th 1998)
stand with your lover on the ending earth-
and while a(huge which by which huger than
huge)whoing sea leaps to greenly hurl snow
suppose we could not love,dear;imagine
ourselves like living neither nor dead these
(or many thousand hearts which don't and dream
or many million minds which sleep and move)
blind sands,at pitiless the mercy of
time time time time time
-how fortunate are you and i,whose home
is timelessness:we who have wandered down
from fragrant mountains of eternal now
to frolic in such mysteries as birth
and death a day(or maybe even less)
- e. e. cummings
~stacey
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (18:56)
#7
(for the both of you)
(days being immaterial and all)
Thy fingers make early flowers of
all things.
thy hair mostly the hours love:
a smoothness which
sings,saying
(though love be a day)
do not fear,we will go amaying.
thy whitest feet are crisply straying.
Always
thy moist eyes are at kisses playing,
whose strangness much
says;singing
(though love be a day)
for which girl art thou flowers bringing?
To be thy lips is a sweet thing
and small.
Death,Thee i call rich beyond wishing
if this thou catch,
else missing.
(though love be a day
and life be nothing,it shall not stop kissing).
~pmnh
Thu, Jul 9, 1998 (23:24)
#8
stacey, thank you... that was
beautiful, indeed...
~paula
Fri, Jul 10, 1998 (00:01)
#9
ooh, i like that one. beautiful poem. thank you, stacey, for posting it.
~paula
Fri, Jul 10, 1998 (00:08)
#10
oh, nearly forgot to mention, the poem you posted, charlotte. i really like it. i havent read it before, its -and i say this so often, but know i mean it each time- beautiful. ive only just recently discovered cummings for myself and i really love him. thanks for posting it.
~pmnh
Fri, Jul 10, 1998 (00:16)
#11
here's the bit on keats i was telling you about earlier
(thought i'd POSTED it earlier... must've screwed it up
somehow... that may've been about the time i was reading
your poem (YOUR poem) and spilling iced tea all over my frigging
keyboard... anyway, it is excellent, and true... and chilling
sort of (esp. considering how... well, you know... how special
each of them is...to us... and to everyone that loves poetry,
i guess)...
god, how i do love them both...
yeah
anyway
(stand forth, indeed, john keats)...
FAME SPEAKS
Stand forth,John Keats! On earth thou knew'st me not;
Steadfast through all the storms of passion,thou,
True to thy muse,and virgin to thy vow;
Resigned,if name with ashes were forgot,
So thou one arrow in the gold had'st shot!
I never placed my laurel on thy brow,
But on thy name I come to lay it now,
When thy bones wither in the earthly plot.
Fame is my name. I dwell among the clouds,
Being immortal,and the wreath I bring
Itself is Immortality. The sweets
Of earth I know not,more the pains,but wing
In mine own ether,with the crown�d crowds
Born of the centuries.-Stand forth,John Keats!
- e. e. cummings
~pmnh
Mon, Jul 13, 1998 (03:58)
#12
(for you, mystery girl)
(seemed strangely appropriate)
supposing i dreamed this)
only imagine,when day has thrilled
you are a house around which
i am a wind-
your walls will not reckon how
strangely my life is curved
since the best he can do
is to peer through windows,unobserved
-listen,for(out of all
things)dream is noone's fool;
if this wind who i am prowls
carefully around this house of you
love being such,or such,
the normal corners of your heart
will never guess how much
my wonderful jealousy is dark
if light should flower:
or laughing sparkle from
the shut house(around and around
which a poor wind will roam
- e. e. cummings
~paula
Mon, Jul 13, 1998 (04:14)
#13
(the poem above does sound... right. ive read it once before, but i just got it- you know, like really 'got it'- now. i really like it.)
(um... the poem below... for you. to us)
the great advantage of being alive
(intead of undying)is not so much
that mind no more can disprove than prove
what heart may feel and soul may touch
-the great(my darling)happens to be
that love are in we, that love are in we
and here is a secret they never will share
for whom create is less than have
or one times one than when times where-
that we are in love,that we are in love:
with us they've nothing times nothing to do
(for love are in we am in i are in you)
this world(as timorous itsters all
to call their cowardice quiet agree)
shall never discover our touch and feel
-for love are in we are in love are in we;
for you are and i am and we are(above
and under all possible worlds)in love
a billion brains may coax undeath
from fancied fact and spaceful time-
no heart can leap,no soul can breath
but by the sizeless truth of a dream
whose sleep is the sky and the earth and the sea
For love are in you am in i are in we
- e. e. cummings
(...that we are in love,that we are in love)
~pmnh
Mon, Jul 13, 1998 (04:18)
#14
damn
i really really love that
damn
~paula
Tue, Jul 14, 1998 (05:10)
#15
(um... more cummings... i love this one too)
voices to voices,lip to lip
i swear(to noone everyone)constitutes
undying;or whatever this and that petal confutes...
to exist being a peculiar form of sleep
what's beyond logic happens beneath will;
nor can these moments be translated:i say
that even after April
by God there is no excuse for May
-bring forth your flowers and machinery:sculpture and prose
flowers guess and miss
machinery is the more accurate, yes
it delivers the goods,Heaven knows
(yet are we mindful,though not as yet awake,
of ourselves which shout and cling,being
for a little while and which easily break
in spite of the best overseeing)
i mean that the blond abscence of any program
except last and always and first to live
makes unimportant what i and you believe;
not for philosophy does this rose give a damn...
bring on your fireworks,which are a mixed
splendor of piston and of pistil;very well
provided an instant may be fixed
so that it will not rub,like any other pastel.
(While you and i have lips and voices which
are for kissing and to sing with
who cares if some oneyed son for a bitch
invents an instrument to measure Spring with?
each dream nascitur,is not made...)
why then to Hell with that:the other;this,
since the thing perhaps is
to eat flower and not to be afraid.
- e. e. cummings
~paula
Tue, Jul 14, 1998 (05:30)
#16
OF NICOLETTE
dreaming in marble all the castle lay
like some gigantic ghost-flower born of night
blossoming in white towers to the moon,
soft sighed the passionate darkness to the tune
of tiny troubadours, and (phantom white)
dumb-blooming boughs let fall their glorious snows,
and the unearthly sweetness of a rose
swam upward from the troubled heart of May;
a Winged Passion woke and one by one
there fell upon the night, like angel's tears,
the syllables of that mysterious prayer,
and as an opening lily drowsy-fair
(when from her couch of poppy petals peers
the sleepy morning) gently draws apart
her curtains, and lays bare her trembling heart,
with beads of dew made jewels by the sun,
so one high shining tower (which as a glass
turned light to flame and blazed with snowy fire)
unfolding, gave the moon a nymphlike face,
a form whose snowy symmetry of grace
haunted the limbs as the music haunts the lyre,
a creature of white hands, who letting fall
a thread of lustre from the castle wall
glided, a drop of radiance, to the grass-
shunning the sudden moonbeam's treacherous snare
she sought the harbouring dark, and (catching up
her delicate silk) all white, with shining feet,
went forth into the dew: right wildly beat
her heart at every kiss of daisy-cup
and from her cheek the beauteous colour went
with every bough that reverently bent
to touch the yellow wonder of her hair.
- e. e. cummings
~pmnh
Sat, Jul 25, 1998 (16:09)
#17
is that last one from your Big Book?
(never read it... it's beautiful)
~paula
Sat, Aug 1, 1998 (05:08)
#18
uh huh, it is... and it is beautiful...
its a shame this topics so... quiet...
~pmnh
Sat, Aug 1, 1998 (17:44)
#19
yup
(indeed)
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (20:45)
#20
in spite of everything
which breathes and moves, since Doom
(with white longest hands
neatening each crease)
will smooth entirely our minds
-before leaving my room
i turn, and (stooping
through the morning) kiss
this pillow, dear
where our heads lived and were.
e. e. cummings
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (21:01)
#21
I'm so happy there's a page here for cummings....he has been, is, and most likely will always be my favorite poet....I love to see others enjoying his every uncapitalized word and perfectly placed space as much as I do
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (21:02)
#22
in spite of everything
which breathes and moves, since Doom
(with white longest hands
neatening each crease)
will smooth entirely our minds
-before leaving my room
i turn, and (stooping
through the morning) kiss
this pillow, dear
where our heads lived and were.
e. e. cummings
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (21:07)
#23
hey!!!
(what's up?)
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (21:28)
#24
(you're not mad at me too or you?)
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (21:56)
#25
oops...didn't mean to post that twice
hey!!!!
so much I'm not even going to begin
mad?...me?....no....what makes you think so?
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:15)
#26
dunno...
(natural sense of paranoia i suppose)
you have my hotmail address? not even sure what
my address is here... don't do much net stuff
anymore...hold on... umm, it's ...
i think... or ...
either way, write me, okay?
(um maybe you should use the hotmail address because
i'm not even sure how to retrieve my mail here and
i'll probably only be here another few weeks or
something)
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:18)
#27
aye aye cap'n
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:20)
#28
shit
put the address in brackets...
didn't print...
some kind of commie-computer-language thing...
anyway, my hotmail address is pmnh@hotmail.com
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:21)
#29
unfortunately I'm having technical difficulties with my e-mail at the moment
so...when I'm able to, I'll e-mail
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:23)
#30
I remembered
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:25)
#31
did you indeed?
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:27)
#32
I remembered
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:28)
#33
hmm....once again...oops
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:29)
#34
I did indeed
no short term memory, but plenty of long term
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:30)
#35
for fear of secreted daggers (etc.), i shall
refrain from comment...
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:31)
#36
I did indeed
no short term memory, but plenty of long term
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:32)
#37
what's going on?
echo
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:33)
#38
it didn't happen that time
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:35)
#39
refrain from comment?
you?
are you feeling ok?
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:35)
#40
still kickin'
(et tu? tae kwon do-ing, i mean?)
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:37)
#41
(and that was just a little unkind... and you
type too damn fast for me)
~pmnh
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:43)
#42
hey, gotta go for a bit...
you wanta talk, be back in half hour or so...
(i'll call, if you want)
~Flidais
Wed, Oct 21, 1998 (22:58)
#43
no longer kicking....I broke my collar bone pretty badly this summer sparring with a black belt...the bones aren't going back together..I'm out of business for about eight months..I've got to run too...but I'll be back sometime in the next week...and no, I don't want you to call
~pmnh
Thu, Oct 22, 1998 (02:27)
#44
damn melanie...
really sorry to hear that...
damn i mean damn that's awful... hope
you're being a good patient (for once)
(and i DO know how stubborn you can be
when you've a mind to)...
anyway, please do write, snail mail if
nothing else (i'll send you my new
address, my new texas address anyway...
be living in vancouver (b.c.) fulltime,
though, in a couple of weeks...
~KitchenManager
Fri, May 21, 1999 (15:04)
#45
rarely to return it seems, too...
~paula
Sun, Aug 22, 1999 (22:58)
#46
a tribute to mr. cummings.....
-SIR-
sir
i am indebt to you, humbled
and i thank that you are
and have that only
and truly your own
awe. would, if ever
that you had been
roused like lazarus
and doubt you and grow
stupid dumb tongue
knotted to struck
i fashion a verse
to and only accidentally
because it has
been so easy to
write as freely
as you
sir
that your impeccable manners
and you've been brought
upright, as any man stands
and can i stand, beside you
poet, maybe
i write
stale the words breed
sometimes parasitic
to suck blood and blood
less gray from day
would say, to anyone
who'd ever
stop
to listen
that i crowned myself poet
in a boldness learned
only through
the words i've so
much fell in love and took
to bed, dreaming in
syrup. took to
sheets beneath
a lyric and sing
it in sleep
i am in love
with words
you know, sir, one day
i dubbed myself night
so dark, and selflessly outright
selfish. self, self- my, mine
and i
i painted me a deep deep red
like the red of rose, like the red
of sky- when my cookie sun
is bit by sky, i
and now, a rush
and it is (my own)
sir
your own. construct the line
i, and i to over, brIck, brIck
brIck... and wall
I am the CasIle of my I
sir
orbIt, my
and i see vermillion
i see indigo, i see
colours in swirls of oil
glistentrickling as the bells
of brooks when they
peal over rocks
and fingertip pebbles
sir,
and thank you
sincerely.
-Paula Jane A'Hannay-
~mrchips
Sun, Aug 22, 1999 (23:23)
#47
wow
the only response
i can give is to whistle
far
and
wee...
~Charlotte
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (10:16)
#48
Ditto that whistle!
Paula, that is simply magnificent. Stand beside hime...tall and proud.
~Charlotte
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (10:17)
#49
duh. see how flabbergasted you made me?
of course I meant "stand beside HIM".
sigh.
~stacey
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (10:48)
#50
again Paula...
you've left us all stunned with impressions beyond words...
or at least have seen to it that those words are beyond our grasp.
thank you for posting.
(and stick around awhile
or make those 'in-betweens' with less in between)
~wolf
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (14:01)
#51
and now paula's back! thanks for sharing *smile*
~mrchips
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (20:36)
#52
I'm surprised and shocked that no one has posted my cummings fave, so here goes:
somewhere i have never travelled,gladly beyond
any experience,your eyes have their silence:
in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me,
or which i cannot touch because they are too near
your slightest look easily will unclose me
though i have closed myself as fingers,
you open always petal by petal myself as Spring opens
(touching skilfully,mysteriously)her first rose
or if your wish be to close me,i and
my life will shut very beautifully,suddenly,
as when the heart of this flower imagines
the snow carefully everywhere descending;
nothing which we are to perceive in this world equals
the power of your intense fragility:whose texture
compels me with the colour of its countries,
rendering death and forever with each breathing
(i do not know what it is about you that closes
and opens;only something in me understands
the voice of your eyes is deeper than all roses)
nobody,not even the rain,has such small hands
--e. e. cummings
~wolf
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (21:46)
#53
moving piece, john...
~MarciaH
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (21:51)
#54
I can see why it is a favorite, but it is so beautiful and intimate, it is almost painful to read.
~wolf
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (21:56)
#55
it is very intimate. love the way he figured out a way to describe this in a way that is so eloquent. john, do you know who inspired this piece for him?
~mrchips
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (22:40)
#56
Wolf, I wish I knew the answer to that. Cummings was a very private man who did not like to discuss the less political, more intimate aspects of his poetry (I also love his antiwar poetry such as "i sing of olaf..."). Nor have I read his letters, if they exist. Must've been SOME muse! Funny you should mention painful, as well as intimate, Marcia. Tennessee Williams used the poem as his inspiration for Laura in "The Glass Menagerie."
~MarciaH
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (23:08)
#57
Perhaps it spoke to me on a level more vulnerable than usual...
~mrchips
Mon, Aug 23, 1999 (23:18)
#58
Marcia, you can deal with the world. Poor Laura. If anyone exists like her in real life, they have my complete pity.
~paula
Thu, Aug 26, 1999 (02:57)
#59
ooh... i love that poem.
so- delicate. like crystal. just...
beautiful. and that word, intimate? is perfect.
thank you very much for posting it, john.
and i didnt know... about laura. ive just recently re-read
the glass menagerie and its so cool to see how one poet has inspired
the other (and yes, i consider tennesse williams as much a poet as
playwright )
~mrchips
Thu, Aug 26, 1999 (05:10)
#60
So do I...and you have a delightful way with words, yourself, Paula!
~Irishprincess
Mon, Nov 8, 1999 (20:24)
#61
I'm surprised that no one has posted my favorite e.e. cummings poem:
"[ch�rie]"
ch�rie
the very, picturesque, last Day
(when all the clocks have lost their jobs and god
sits up quickly to judge the Big Sinners)
he will have something large and fluffy to say
to me. All the pale grumbling wings
of his greater angels will cease: as that curse
bounds neat-ly from the angry wad
of his forehead (then fiends with pitchforkthings
will catch and toss me lovingly to
and fro.) Last, should you look, you
'll find me prone upon a greatest flame,
which seethes in a beautiful way
upward; with someone by the name
of Paolo passing the time of day.
~moonbeam
Tue, Nov 9, 1999 (02:19)
#62
I love this one too, Amy...
may i feel said he
may i feel said he
(i'll squeal said she
just once said he)
it's fun said she
(may i touch said he
how much said she
a lot said he)
why not said she
(let's go said he
not too far said she
what's too far said he
where you are said she)
may i stay said he
(which way said she
like this said he
if you kiss said she
may i move said he
is it love said she)
if you're willing said he
(but you're killing said she
but it's life said he
but your wife said she
now said he)
ow said she
(tiptop said he
don't stop said she
oh no said he)
go slow said she
(cccome?said he
ummm said she)
you're divine!said he
(you are Mine said she)
~Irishprincess
Tue, Nov 9, 1999 (14:10)
#63
Oh my! I'm not even going to say a word...
~MarciaH
Thu, Nov 11, 1999 (00:58)
#64
Well, I shall...(fools rushing in and all that...!) I found that and circulated it via email...too bad I did not have the courage to post it. I like it!!!
~sprin5
Sat, Jan 20, 2001 (12:53)
#65
somewhere i have neve travelled,gladly beyond
any experience,your eyes have their silence:
in your most frail gesture are things which enclose me,
or which i cannot touch because they are too near
your slightest look easily will unclose me
though i have closed myself as fingers,
you open always petal by petal myself as Spring opens
(touching skillfully,mysteriously)her first rose
or if your wish be to close me,i and
my life will shut very beautifully,suddenly,
as when the heart of this flower imagines
the snow everwhere carefully descending;
nothing which we are to perceive in this world equals
the power of your intense fragility:whose texture
compels me with the colour of its countries,
rendering death and forever with each breathing
(i do not know what it is about you that closes
and opens;only something in me understands
the voice of your eyes is deeper than all roses)
nobody,not even the rain,has such small hands
e.e.cummings
~terry
Wed, Oct 3, 2001 (21:58)
#66
plato told
him:he couldn't
believe it(jesus
told him;he
wouldn't believe
it)lao
tsze
certainly told
him,and general
(yes
mam)
sherman;
and even
(believe it
or
not)you
told him:i told
him;we told him
(he didn't believe it,no
sir)it took
a nipponized bit of
the old sixth
avenue
el;in the top of his head:to tell
him
-- e. e. cummings
~pmnh
Sun, Oct 7, 2001 (04:28)
#67
hmmm... never read this one before...
must look it up. i wonder what he was talking about?
(must also look up nipponized- there's a curious word)
~Centaur
Sun, Feb 17, 2002 (19:54)
#68
I forgot my Flidais password, so I switched names, but it's the same Bat Person...Nick please e-mail me so we can catch up...it's been so long
~paula
Mon, May 20, 2002 (13:48)
#69
'eh-
this is paula- am at a schlotsky's at a temp internet booth.
currently not online, but will be soon.
i just ran over to the table and told him you wrote.
i'm not sure his hotmail address is still working. (just tried to get into mine and the thing crashed). anyway- he's here... well, there really, reading the paper, but yeah....
anyway, i saw a business building named after him- nippon, something nippon. so, um. i guess i came on here to answer myself...
sure he wants to talk. and will... someones waiting behind me... can't write straight... aaggh.
~terry
Tue, May 21, 2002 (06:54)
#70
Welcome Paula.