Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label poetry. Show all posts

Monday, July 2, 2012

The Planets: Venus

Next up: the morning and evening star or the planet where women come from... Here is a tribute to this poisonous beauty
Venus

Trapped in the foam, underneath the clouds,
I breathe the sweet poison of your kiss.
Lungs wheeze, overcome by this asphyxial experience
Wrapped between the legs of the pale, lovely goddess,
I dissolve and slip away... defeated by her infectious touch
An object floating, innocence vanquished by treacherous beauty.
Love is fatal to the naïve enfants.
But love remains the last hope of the cosmos.

Saturday, June 30, 2012

The Planets: Mercury

As a mid/late summer project, I've decided to write a series of nine line poems about each planets and their "qualities". Even Pluto made the cut. I hope you return my return to blog poetry:)


Mercury
Gazing upon the frozen plain,
I pray to the fickle Deity for winter rain.
Winged feet occupied elsewhere, in comings and goings
Over stark, bare craters and mole hill mountains.
I drink from barren fountains
That don't satisfy my wandering winged feet
They tread endlessly, aimlessly
Over the broken landscape of garish Walmarts and petrol stained                                                                            service stations. 
The god only sheds one tear.

Monday, June 25, 2012

Capsule Book Reviews (William Blake, Fray, All Quiet on the Western Front)

Goodreads.com is a website that should be on every bibliophile's bookmarks. You can keep track of what books you're reading, have read, and want to read. Other features including seeing what your friends (or favorite authors) are reading, trivia, and forums. But my favorite feature is the review function where you can give a book a star rating (1-5) and write a little blurb about it. These capsule reviews come from my Goodreads page.

Blake: Poems by William Blake (Everyman's Library, 1994)

William Blake was a mystic poet who was not afraid to challenge the religious and political views of his day. Like the other Romantic poets, he creates beautiful images of nature especially in Songs of Innocence); but he is not naive and understands the natural and moral evil that haunts the universe and provides haunting imagery of evil and demonic power. Blake also brings up some interesting philosophical questions in his longer poems The Everlasting Gospel and Marriage of Heaven and Hell where he ponders if there is really a dichotomy between reason and desire and attempts to solve the ancient Dionysian/Apollonian problem. Blake's prophetic poems are slightly denser than his other works and derivative of other sources like the Bible and Paradise Lost, but they are a valiant attempt at world-building. 4/5 Stars


Fray by Joss Whedon and Karl Moline (Dark Horse Comics, 2003)


Not Whedon's best work, but it is interesting seeing a concept to see a "Slayer" who is even more amoral than Faith. The plot was a bit of a rehash of season 1 of Buffy and the art was shaky in spots. However, this cyberpunk world was extremely interesting and may have even influenced Firefly... The latter issues especially shine along with the relationship between Melaka and her siblings Harth and Erin. 3/5 Stars


All Quiet on the Western Front by Erich Maria Remarque (Vintage Books, 2009)


I read this book in 11th grade, and it has had a great impact on my thinking as a pacifist. Through reading this book, I realized that soldiers are pawns of their government and neither hurt nor hindered by the outcome. The humorous conversation among the soldiers about the war leaders fighting in a ring for each other's country especially proved this point. All Quiet also contains uncanny juxtapositions between peaceful nature images and brutal, grotesque battle scenes. It also reveals the vulnerable nature of humans because no character is spared from fickle death, not even the protagonist. In conclusion, All Quiet on the Western Front is an excellent, balanced look at the mind and actions of the "lost generation" of 1918. You will not look at war or good and evil the same way after reading this novel.


So what do you think of these books? Any books you would like me to review? Please comment below.





Friday, March 23, 2012

Reborn: Child of Light, Child of Dark

Golden rings around my head
Angel of light on a golden thread
Brooding like Boreanaz in the corner
Alone, a stranger, a foreigner,
Isolation spreads its wings.
A solitary rook sings.

I have lost my freedom,
Captivity stifles my lost soul.
On a quest for redemption,
I tread these shadowlands.
My path is desolate and darksome.
Drawing near to the void of days

Body bruised on the rocks of malice
They shattered my crystal palace.
But I can see the Northern Lights.
Cast away the barrow wights
I am the child of light and dark
Reborn, like a flying spark;




Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Soul and the Cage

I lose faith every hour.
As I sap my willpower
Dandelions float in the East Wind.
Aimlessly looking for his friend;
Soul, light as a feather
It can't live in this red, stormy weather
Southern gale washes over me.
Ripping me apart like a dying palm tree

Dying and Lying
Trying and Crying

Naked, I trudge to a cavern dark.
Skin scarred with unseemly marks
What's my line? What's my line?
What's my line, oh, God divine?
Unable to speak, unable to hurt
Atrophied heart throbs in the dirt.
Trapped in a guarded cage
I lament my age...

Monday, March 5, 2012

American Vampire

American Vampire
They drain blood from the faint-hearted.
Predators who devour the innocent
Teeth glinting like the watch of a rich man,
Feasting on the fat of the land,
Bloated with bodies, bodies, and bodies
"From beneath it devours".

And this beast never breeds.
Only attending to flesh needs
Every day, it lives to feed.
Stomach churns with boundless greed.
It tramples beauty, squashes truth.
Destroying the hopes of youth
Its defeat will come anonymously.
We must Occupy the beast.

Leaderless, we remain.
Who will bring a new day?

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Justice and Revenge: A Vicious Cycle

     Justice and revenge are two of the strongest ideals that any human being could aspire to. This is why works of literature and film with these ideas in them can be compelling and speak to the human psyche. For example, in the Greek tragedy Eumenides, the Furies practice chaotic justice that demands blood for blood. This is balanced by Athena's democratic justice, which is also in the punishments in Dante's Inferno. However, in the film V for Vendetta, chaotic justice is espoused by the protagonist.

The main theme of Eumenides, the third play in Aeschylus' Oresteia trilogy, is justice. The premise of the play is that Orestes has killed his mother (who killed his father Agamemnon) and flees from the Furies to Athens where Athena's court will decide his fate. But the Furies and Athena have vastly different ideas of justice. The Furies are ancient Earth spirits, who believe in the law of equal retaliation (lex taliones) requiring death in exchange for death. This form of justice was practiced by the pre-classical Greeks and allowed each individual to take the law into his own hands and kill a murderer without a fair trial. In contrast, Athena is a younger Olympian deity who believes in the system of democratic justice, which is when a group of people administer justice as a community, not as individuals. The conflict between the two forms of justice is shown during the trial where Apollo, god of rationality, defends Orestes, and the Furies defend themselves with their principle of blood for blood. The new form justice triumphs when Athena herself breaks the tie vote of the court and acquits Orestes. Because individual revenge has no place in this new democratic society, the Furies become the Eumenides (Kindly Ones) and act as guardians of Athens' future prosperity as the principles of orderly, communal justice triumph over the older form.
The idea of orderly justice continued long after the fall of the Greek city-states through the Roman Republic and Empire and into the Middle Ages. One such work that illustrates this principle of justice is Dante's Inferno. In the poem, Dante is a struggling pilgrim who travels through the nine circles of Hell in order to get on the road to salvation. He sees souls punished in a variety of ways (E.g. Gluttons eat each other, the lustful are blown away) but with the same underlying principle: symbolic retribution. Symbolic retribution means that sinners receive a punishment that corresponds to their sin. For example, because the lustful were “blown away” and consumed by their desires in life; they are blown around by the wind in Hell. This may seem like the Furies' “blood for blood” justice, but there are two big differences: Hell is orderly and has a form of due process. Dante's Hell is organized into nine circles that descend in order from lesser greater sin beginning with the virtuous pagans in Limbo and concluding with the betrayers in Cocytus (ninth circle). Therefore, unlike the Furies' endless revenge killings, the punishments in Hell are uniform, infallible, and only apply to the actual guilty party. Finally, Hell was created by God as a prison for Satan and the fallen angels and even has a sub-judge Minos “who stands, hideous and growling/Examining the sins of each newcomer:/With coiling tail he judges and dispatches” (Dante V.3-5). In obedience to God's authority, Minos uses his tail to direct sinners to the circle of Hell that corresponds to their sin in an orderly manner. But this trend of orderly justice does not last long in the arts.


In the latter half of the 21st century, films containing forms of individual revenge espoused by the Furies in Eumenides became popular. One such film was 2005's V for Vendetta based on the legendary graphic novel by Alan Moore and David Lloyd. Beneath its lofty premise of premise of one man (V) leading a one man revolution versus the future tyrannical government of Britain, there is a basic revenge story at its core. As a youth, V had been experimented on by the government which gave him “super abilities” but destroyed his appearance and life. Therefore, he wants to take revenge on the people (government) that made him this way and eventually sacrifices his life to blow up the Houses of Parliament and Big Ben in order to motivate the people to overthrow the government. Like the Furies, who demanded a life for every life taken, V kills many leaders and foot soldiers and eventually takes his own life to satiate his need for vengeance. Instead of attempting to set up any kind of new government, V decides to take manners in his own hands by killing many government officials including Peter Creedy, the head of the Finger (secret police) and Lewis Prothero, the “Voice of London” who spreads pro-government propaganda to the people. V displays his relish for anarchy and equal retaliation when he tells his lover Evey that “there is no court in this country for men like Prothero” (V for Vendetta).

It is very interesting to find the chaotic, revenge based justice of the Furies in antiquity in the dangerous, anarchic actions of V. Why do you think that revenge stories remain popular in the past 20 years? (The Crow, Kill Bill, Taken, even Magneto in X-Men: First Class) Do you watch revenge films to live vicariously and escape our “boring” justice system, or do you think that these violent avengers might have a point? Does the idea of blood for blood vengeance attract you? Why or why not?


Monday, December 26, 2011

Rise

Stalking his prey in the shady jungle
This hunter is skilled and cunning.
As he sits alone in a cloak of shadow,
His mind burns with rage and sadness.

But he continues to fight daily,
Evil cannot hide from his dark wrath.
Once dead and broken,
Now reborn and wearing a token
Of justice grim and powerful
He rises

Monday, November 21, 2011

New Poem: Room 105

I got the inspiration for this poem by watching  Angel Season 3 Episode 6 "Billy". The first part of the poem is from Fred's perspective, the second is from Wesley's.

Room 105
Raised voices, shrieking sounds
A faint figure hits the ground.
Bloodied axe glistens grim.
She flees from the ever-present him.
Without conscience, without remorse
Racing through the hotel concourse;
Hiding, scampering, whimpering,
Poor Winifred hides.

My soul is an abode
Where hellspawn breeds.
Heart beats, but my pulse slows
As I feel my new form grow.
Alas, my icy heart shatters:
Billy ripped it to tatters.
But lo! a primal urge lingers.
As terror streaks down my fingers


Friday, June 3, 2011

Dawn and Dusk (Original Poem)

A stream of silvery light
Trails in the gloomy night.
I fought for truth, fought for right,
But struggle has sapped all my might.
Morning star burning in the sky like coal,
Burrow through the heavens like a mole
My celestial journey has just begun.
Until I'm consumed by the sun...
Burned by heat, doused in flame
Apollo's rays sting my brain.
I long for rocky mountains,
Snowcapped peaks, bubbling fountains.
I bask in the light of the virgin moon.
Her glow fades in the dark tomb.
Specters of night haunt my soul,
Apparitionsof silver and gold
My dreaming mind is lost in love.
Then sleep came over me like a drug.

Friday, April 22, 2011

The Cave (and a short rant with a happy Easter ending)

Darkness fills the room,
Like death in the tomb.
Ignorance and despair
Laying my soul bare
A prison for mind,
 Truth is a crime,
A dungeon for my reason,
Enlightenment is treason.

Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins was right when he said, "Despite all my rage, I'm still just a rat in a cage." People around me tell me what to do and think about so many things without asking why I do these things. Questions are more powerful than imperative statements. Just a thought, if I'm allowed...

Instead of working together to formulate opinions about the world around us, websites and news outlets that claim to be "fair and balanced" really just pick a side and stick to that part of a story. One must have some kind of foundation of  truth, but that should not stop them from reading about the "other side." I'm a Christian, but I also read books, watch films, and listen to music by Jews, agnostics, Marxists, and even worshipers of the Roman snake god Glycon.

Many Christians disparage postmodernism. True, postmodernism rejects objective truth and with it all religious dogma. However, postmodernism widened the rigid narrow canon that used to only consist of books written by dead white Anglo-Saxon Protestants. But with the advent of postmodernism and the "hermeneutics of suspicion", books by women, minorities, and persons who went against the grain of their culture can be included in the ranks of great writers. Also, postmodernism isn't snobbish and doesn't try to find an objective idea of a "great book", which a centuries old debate. It gets half the story right: the human race is desperately flawed and cannot be "cured" by cured by modern science and technology.

But it's missing one thing: a Savior.

"And as the women were terrified and bowed their faces to the ground, the men said to them, "Why do you seek the living One among the dead? He is not here, but he has risen. Remember how he spoke to you while he was still in Galilee, saying that the Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, and be crucified, and the third day rise again." Luke 24:5-7 (NASB)