Read Poem: A Nature of London by Andrew G. Ogleby

Violent splashes of survival,
Thriving, through cracks in walls
And drab, pavement slabs
The City’s lungs, losing their bark,
As they choke down, its gargling soup

Pigeons, dining out on spew
Left behind, by someone who,
Had one too many, over their few
Whilst the parakeets’, sudden, startling screech,
Almost knocks small ones, off-a their feet

The Capital Fox, on the prowl,
After the wanton sun, goes down
With rats, on their runs
And bats, that swoon,
Underneath a full,
And gloriously, mesmerising,
Metropolitan moon

Then humans, who pass by,
Without a care, or blink of eye
Detached, from the very thing,
That provides, with everything
On their driven, blinkered course,
Until finally forced, to stop and flag,
Their timely, fateful hearse

Read Poem: Mending Hearts by Grace Divina

(Theme: Inner peace & Happiness)

Release is my freedom
I stopped holding on
Jet Memories
Turn in shades of grey
Negatives in replay
In my mind
I cast on the light on
Vampiric thoughts of mine
Turn them into white

Iron hand in a velvet glove
You can’t imprison love
Hold it tight like a teddy bear
Let it be, let it free, let it go

Be patient and delicate
Honest & Compassionate
With yourself

Let rays of light
Shine upon
Your mending hearts
Filter and purify
Like clear quartz

I throw away the pain,
The sadness, the guilt
The pride
The anger
& I keep forever
the love, the affection
friendship and comprehension
Wrapped in colorful sheets music
And laced with love notes

I opened the door of inner peace, love and positivity, summit hope, miracles, grace and greatness to come into my life as I let go of control, pain, hurt and the past. From this day, I will move, with a lighter heart every day.

© Grace Divina

Read the Best POETRY from October 2018

Read the best poems for October 2018:

TO FREELY SHARE by Gary Bertnick
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/12/read-poem-to-freely-share-by-gary-bertnick/

Ruby by Nagma H. Ahmed
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/12/read-poem-ruby-by-nagma-h-ahmed/

TOGETHERNESS by RAVINDRA KUMAR KARNANI
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/12/read-poem-togetherness-by-ravindra-kumar-karnani/

ORDINARY TIME by Robert Drusetta
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/14/poetry-movie-ordinary-time-by-robert-drusetta/

DREAM by Mary Freericks
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/14/poetry-movie-dream-by-mary-freericks/

Hopeless Wonder by Bradford Lee Mace
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/14/read-poem-hopeless-wonder-by-bradford-lee-mace/

Oh Summer! Don’t Leave Me by Lateefah16
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/14/read-poem-oh-summer-dont-leave-me-bylateefah16/

CHOICES by Eve Hall
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/16/read-poem-choices-by-eve-hall/

MIRROR IMAGE by Kat Lehmkuhl
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/16/read-poem-mirror-image-by-kat-lehmkuhl/

LOVE by Via Suzette Salao
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/16/read-poem-love-by-via-suzette-salao/

Supershero by Syd Stewart
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/16/read-poem-supershero-by-syd-stewart/

Winter Afternoon by Carlo Danese
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/17/read-poem-winter-afternoon-by-carlo-danese/

Land of my Heart by Lynne Zotalis
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/17/read-poem-land-of-my-heart-by-lynne-zotalis/

Lessons Learned by Leah Reeve
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/18/read-poetry-lessons-learned-by-leah-reeve/

In Time by Alex Clay
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/18/read-poem-in-time-by-alex-clay/

Grandma and Alzheimer’s by Missy Sue Singhaus
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/19/read-poem-grandma-and-alzheimers-by-missy-sue-singhaus/

CONFLICTED BY NIKI BELL
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/19/read-poem-conflicted-by-niki-bell/

Poem by Noel Hartem
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/19/read-poem-by-noel-hartem/

HOW SHE MOVES ME by Terry Smith
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/19/read-poem-how-she-moves-me-by-terry-smith/

A Stomach Filled With Poison by Matt Nagin
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/24/read-poem-a-stomach-filled-with-poison-by-matt-nagin/

Laughter on the Outside by John Collings
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/24/read-poem-laughter-on-the-outside-by-john-collings/

U’re pretty by Lamar Johnson
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/25/read-poem-ure-pretty-by-lamar-johnson/

FAT IS NOT WHO I AM by L. Gresty
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/25/read-poem-fat-is-not-who-i-am-by-l-gresty/

Egypt’s Shifting Sands by Helen Whitten
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/25/read-poem-egypts-shifting-sands-by-helen-whitten/

MINE, YOURS, A MOTHER’S HATE by Niki Bell
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/25/read-poem-mine-yours-a-mothers-hate-by-niki-bell/

Halfway up the Hill by Jeff Hartzer
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/25/read-poem-halfway-up-the-hill-by-jeff-hartzer/

Nature’s Creation By Lucy Caxton Brown
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/25/read-poem-natures-creation-by-lucy-caxton-brown/

THE PROMISE by Arloa L. Means
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/27/read-poem-the-promise-by-arloa-l-means/

A WOMAN LIKE ME by Kuli Kohli
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/29/read-poem-a-woman-like-me-by-kuli-kohli/

Life on Mars by Lea Galanter
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/29/read-poem-life-on-mars-by-lea-galanter/

Perseverance by The Aspergers Poet
https://festivalforpoetry.com/2018/09/30/read-poem-perseverance-by-the-aspergers-poet/

Read Poem: OZARK by Billy Reynard-Bowness

In the Boondocks of the Ozarks
Salty caramel smelt of August
Swathes stench of rotten trailer parks
Imprisons barren mid-west dust

Feral fevered kids a hunting
For to cool; shoot up, or drink
Arthritic railroad; tie and shunting
Ferrous old town wretched on the brink

Since the cease of mine and logging
Depletion of iron lead and zinc
Nag horse too dead for flogging
Folks futures draining down the sink

Some respite in the summer heat
RV’s; tourists and campers for trails
Like blackfly plague pick off the meat
Fly fast; escape as another harvest fails

Dark currents pepper darker mood
Intolerance grinds in the daily way
Resentment bread as only food
At Senate’s door the blame shall lay

In the graveyard of the Ozarks
Rednecks dance on industry tombs
Burn brown smoke spice. Moonshine sparks
Oblivion; no life. Back to mothers’ womb

©pofacedpoetry (Billy Reynard-Bowness 2018 – All rights reserved)

Read Poem: SWEET LITTLE BOY by Anamica Kumari

sweet little boy
sleeping soundlessly in my arms
a little drunk and a little clingy
he always reminds me
of how scared i’ve always been of loneliness
of how scared i’ve always been
of sleeping alone in a cold bed
when i’m seventy and sick
he always reminds me
of how i always believed myself
to be not loveable enough
especially when i first met him
for i wasn’t that feisty or insane
how i believed he must have liked his girls too
and he was everything that i wanted
i was a cry baby and i’d get down
on my knees too easily
you’d ask for anything and i would never say no
and so i believed he’d get bored of me too easily
for he was the kind who liked to be teased
with little games of tug-of-war
and liked having it crazy
oh honey sweet
when i look in your eyes
you always remind me
of why i’ve always loved the universe
for its mysteries so much
there’s a pleasure in loving something
that scares you just as much
and you scare me like life itself
i do not know what you see
when you look at me
i do not know why or how you say you love me
or for how long you can say you love me
for there’s only so long
you can be crazy for
for no matter how much you love the universe
you never get to stay
but oh sweet little thing
sleeping soundlessly in my arms
this, right now, will always be remembered
you taking off your guard onto the floor
pouring your sun in my hands next
like there’s no one you could trust more
and coming undone in my arms
like there’s no other home where you’d rather be
and promising me that you love me
this will always be remembered
and begged for
this will always stay
even when we let go.

-anamica

WordPress: https://atomsandvoid214945416.wordpress.com

Genre of the poem: romantic, sad, relationship, love

Read Poem: Your Eyes by Badradeen Mohammed

When the eyes look at the eyes
it is always a normal look

but when yours look at mine
it is definitely something else

I feel like there is no one in the room
except you, your eyes
and me looking at them

my blood pressure goes up
and suddenly down
with no signs of balance

I feel my body going outside the scope of gravity
and realize all what Franklin had said about similarities in physics
is true

and your eyes prove Newton wrong
as I fall up in front of them
not down as that poor apple did

and then, I forget about her and them
about me or him
about where and when

all I see is just you
with your adorable eyes

I see scattered messages all over the space of your eyes
I try to collect them
open them

read them or even translate them into love signs
but I seem to always draw blanks

I travel through your eyes
to the mazes of their charm

trying to manipulate the reality
but whenever I feel I almost got there

just something or someone interrupts our silence
and a pale smile will be drawn on my face

they are quite bossy, and like twisters
your eyes

I mean, I used to read girls eyes
but yours!
I’ve never seen as such as them

and I used to be a damn romantic
but time has played me roughly

so I can’t distinguish your romance
from your being nice

I admit the fact that I love them
and figured out my level of understanding

still hasn’t reached the level of your eyes speech so
I got high tonight

I thought might I, could I, be able to read messages
that your eyes had sent to mine from that point of highness
but I came from my journey with nothing but confusion

every time I try to run away from your eyes
I eventually bump into them

even tonight when I decided not to think of them
I accidentally wrote this poem

Read Poem: The Hot Air Artist by Roger Hayman

He’s a loudmouth and a scholar
With tales that shock and stun
A murder mystery solver
A raconteur bar none
He beats the bookies, taxman too
He knows just what to say
He lost his shirt in Monaco
And won it back next day

He’s not a half-glass-empty man
For him the glass is full
He’ll talk the hind leg off a donkey
And the nose-ring from a bull
Not knowing about a subject
He goes on undeterred
He’ll talk about a shaggy dog
And you’ll hang on every word

He sees off cryptic crosswords
And complex maths for fun
He swims ten thousand metres
And runs a marathon
He crushes most opponents
At tennis, squash or pool
And wont take any prisoners
Or suffer any fool

He doesn’t hire brokers
And won’t pay any fees
And no one sees him passing
They only feel the breeze
He never wears a life belt
Or clings to any raft
He’s never needed any loan
Or had an overdraft

He has no ambition,
Pinnacle or quest
And is no control freak
It’s just he knows what’s best
But like a raging torrent
That runs through open locks
He’s a garrulous, bombastic
Outrageous chatterbox!

Read Poem: THE DIRECT VELVET ROUTE by Elizabeth Marino

GENRE:
Social Engagement/Intersectional Feminism

THE DIRECT VELVET ROUTE

Troops know that the truest /
way to an enemy’s anguish /
is through the direct velvet route /
of vagina, mouth, or anus/
of his wife or young daughter,/
preferably in front of him./
It a time-tested war crime, that/
struggles to be named as such.//

Here at home, the common/
“I want some of that”/
muttered from a park bench,/
or as he gets off a public bus/
following a young girl./
Studies report a child-woman’s /
appeal peaks at age 13./
My mother once drove over/
a curb as a man leached after/
a neighbor’s 12-year-old daughter
/entering a grocery store./
Thick blackgirl thighs and woman hips./ She looks so grown, she /
must be grown. What child?/
“I want some of this.”//

As pirates cruise the West Coast of/ Africa, and desperate parents/
take small sums to ensure /
domestic traing, a possible life abroad. /Hope beyond hope,/
then really not want to know,/
as the dream ships sail away.//

On a nice night, it would be good/
to go out for a walk. I hear my own/
mother’s voice saying Don’t go./
There are bad men out there./
The small woman enwrapped in/
a simple green sari has been/
in the States for three weeks. A small,/ proud smile.Where is Chicago? she asks./
Security finds her apartment,/
and asks me to see her upstairs/
to her unlocked apartment.//

“Life doesn’t frighten me” wrote/
Maya Angelou. But it does./
Truly, it does. The detailed catalogues of/ violence to girls and
women shut us down./
There are no longer stages/
for girls to play at future sexual selves,/ to flirt in earnest without consequence./
Her gaze — direct, sure and unaffected -/
laughter in her eyes.//

There must be a way to slip/
our fingers deep into the earth/
all at once, and right its orbit.//

— Elizabeth Marino
Copyright 2018

Read Poem: Empty by BeNjamyn Upshaw-Ruffner

There isn’t any meaning

It floats here inside, the burning I’m feeling.

Paths into the shadows, my mind always takes,

Will emotion never truly appear?

A burning sensation is floating here.

Perched upon the razor’s edge,

I waltz towards this cold cliff’s ledge.

Before my Self, a warm canyon beckons,

I fall, and to reason I deafen.

In search of color, I find but darkness which conceals,

It always spells doom, for the one who feels!

This time is different, I tell my Self and you,

Sifting through darkness, I hope to find your hue.

If not, I may tell my Self there can’t be meaning,

To stop the horrors of what I am seeing,

To quash the rot, which erupts from my heart,

I select my purpose, and try to start.

Towards peace, future knowledge will push me,

Swimming through murky waters, into a beautiful sea.

Termites of truth, gnaw at my bones,

After I fall, I won’t be alone.

I created the meaning

Genre are: Anxiety, Dark, Emotion, Family, Fear, Friendship, Hope, Hurt, Inspirational, Life, Love, Motivational, Painful, Personality, Philosophical, Relationships, Rhyme, Sad, Willpower

Read Poetry by Alexius Brunson

Genre- Darkness, Sadness, Resentment

Dear unjust man
How cruel you could be
For 3 months
Oblivious to thee

The tears I cried
Because of you
The hard times experienced
Because of you
What am I to do
That pain
I don’t want to feel ever again

Dear unjust man
How cruel you could be
For 3 months
Oblivious to thee

The loss of possession
Resonates so deep
Will live forever
That shame
Can never be topped
Home, place of content
Will never be what it once was

Dear unjust man
How cruel you could be
For 3 months
Oblivious to thee