Read Poem: The Artist, by Latonia Sears

The whisper of sweet nothings in your ear projecting love in the background feeling something familiar inside

The vibrations you feel with every beat followed by the distant and vague strokes you hear from the amplification of it all

Turning poetry into perfection and a memorable moment in your mind it feels so sublime to hum or whistle with a certain idea in mind

Clapping hands and snapping fingers initiate your bodily emotions in sync and perfect rhythmic chime whether you are voguing or doing the waltz

Popping, ticking, stomping to something so soothing to my senses within my human state of being nothing to hide only something to give

Wont stop cant mute my world of endless relaxation and vibration the excitement it compels in the soulful part of my mind

The skatting of soulful rhythmic verses magnified to spread the word around to those seeking refuge from the mondane

Cords, lyrics, speeding up but at times slowing down to form the most beautiful serinades with stanzas and rhyme and plenty of reason

Something so precious that it will continue to stand the test of time changing more and more through every generation a new way of thinking most times

Making space for new images that can sometimes share a nostalgic inovation coupled with a new found refrain

Read Poem: Mortal Love, by Jayanta Biswas

#love #relationship #friendship #pain #philosophy #spirituality

I could never think
In my remotest thoughts
That we would turn up like this.
The sweetness of friendship
And the fragrance it promised
All the smooth rides
Would be interspersed with
Hiccups in the endeavour
To be kept tied up to the other
Once thought indispensable.
Even with defenceless doubts
And dogged disbelief
And shades of mistrust
We would just hang on to comply
With sporadic force and waning vigour
And the demand of decided routine.

If dream is everything
And thoughts are its recognition
What this waking state means!
Or this special awakening?
It is certainly not a wait
That you will still want breath
To catch hold of you
In its dubious present!
It is by no means
An impossibility
That you will remain helpless
And alone in the night.
This is within your very capacity
To keep the communication going.
To bring your cosmic rhythm
Onto the other eagerly waiting.

You very much know
Who keeps watch at the distant horizon;
Who waits by your side
Always holding out his hands
Warm and glowing in love
Transcendental and blissful.
Yet, if you feel you cannot move
You cannot walk side by side
Holding hands clasping the fingers tight–
It’s an inability, and a crippling excuse
Maiming the soul–living but paralysed.
If the vow is pure
And the friendship is strong
It’s the actions which should speak–
The dreams and imaginations
Being the roots and basis.

That we are bound by common coordinates
Time, space and proximity
And not acting Avatars in helpless virtuals
That all these heavenly feelings
Are sourced from everything earthly
That we act as mortals searching eternity
Why don’t we do all that’s within our limit!
Care for all the timeless instants.
The power of divine
Comes from the power from within
That’s strictly linked with the present.
And there should be no regrets
That it is just this world
This is the limit of our bourne:
And we are the children of this real
Wherein should flourish all our feelings–
We mere mortals–the flesh and blood
Strive hard to feel the life and its pulse
And thus we embrace love and fate
And conquer death– the facade of a new world.

Jayanta
(C) All rights reserved

Poet’s social media links:

https://www.tumblr.com/blog/jayanta7177

https://www.linkedin.com/in/jayanta-biswas-9625233a/

Read Poem: BUTTERFLY EVENT, by MARK-ALAN

THE BUTTERFLY EVENT!

The Official Poem for the Butterfly Life Cycle Lesson Plan!

Excerpt

The Butterfly event is nature’s intent for you to know
sent from heaven rain for seven so you can grow,
and learn how to gather your wings to fly anywhere you
want to go,

THE BUTTERFLY EVENT

The Butterfly event is nature’s intent for you to know,
sent from heaven rain for seven so you can grow,
and learn how to gather your wings to fly anywhere you want to go,
The Butterfly event has four stages,
The egg, larva, pupa, and adult are the changes,
The Butterfly event starts with an egg that grows,
The egg hatches and transfers into a larva and it moves slow,
A larva is a caterpillar an insect with six legs,
And these insects eat a lot after it hatches from their eggs,
As the caterpillar becomes large and fat not thin,
Then the caterpillar begins to shed its skin,
The Butterfly event is nature’s intent for you to know,
sent from heaven rain for seven so you can grow,
and learn how to gather your wings to fly anywhere you want to go,
Stage three is called the pupa known as the cocoon,
Where the caterpillar occupies and lives under the moon,
The cocoon hangs upside down on a tree,
Where caterpillar’s rest peacefully,
The season of Spring sings,
In the cocoon is when the caterpillar grows its wings,
The Butterfly event is nature’s intent for you to know,
sent from heaven rain for seven so you can grow,
and learn how to gather your wings to fly anywhere you want to go,
Stage four is called an adult an extraordinary event,
When the caterpillar transforms into a Butterfly as nature intent,
The caterpillar shreds from the cocoon hanging high,
A beautiful Butterfly appears with wings to fly,
The Butterfly event is nature’s intent for you to know,
sent from heaven rain for seven so you can grow,
and learn how to gather your wings to fly anywhere you want to go,

Read Poem: CALCUTTA 1964…, by Urmila Mahajan

When heavy trams whirred and purred
on noisy rails, like giant beetles
congregating in dry shade
during the rain—
when rickshaws were drawn by men
whose muscles rippled, strained
rained large drops of sweat and
seated ladies modishly dressed
or other burdens disproportionate—
when buses roared dire protest
stuffed with human cargo
stacked, pressed,
leaning dangerously low

A child of five years, not more
a girl with leaping, shiny hair
and protuberant teeth
I must admit—
was driven down
a pothole spotted street
where ancient houses met
Crooked, ancient houses
dilapidated, crooked, ancient houses
crowding, merging, surging uneven
like teeth in an old man’s jaw
chipped and stained with betel juice

This is what I saw

She drifted up the stairs
trailed by her family—
the youngest breath of air
in an old, old house
to uphold the weekly ritual
of meeting grandparents

A soft light was cast by mellow brass
while ebony and teak massive-sized
lurked in unlit corners
she dared not approach
for fear of cockroaches—
a mortal fear of cockroaches outsized
that scurried, scavenged, gloated and flew
and worse things besides—
the ghouls and corpses of a mind
tender five years old

So much contained in a gourmet brain
Grandmother’s recipes were ingrained
in practised hands and shrewd eyes
and a purse, I must admit—
with few constraints.
Succulent prawns, sizzling fish
melon ice-cream cold and nice
interspersed with points of ice—
a room enriched with aroma
while a koel tightly caged
hooted cramped outrage
and Grandfather rinsed his dentures
in a silver glass

Grandmother’s hands flashed busy—
a tiny frame wound around
by yards of sari bordered red
a tiny frame surrounded
by household smells
Grandmother’s arms were browned with life
long hours of wear and tear
I remember, I was there—
Grandmother’s arms were imprisoned
in gold bangles

Soft metal gleamed dull
in a feeble house
till fraught with age and friction
the gold ripened on her arms
a glint that brightened old arms
even lit the unlit corners
of a more mature mind—
then outshone the mellow brass
with strength renewed—
old wine in a new glass

Better still the sounds engendered
bangles tinkled, jangled
clashed, clinked
industry twisted metal
into ageless refrain
Insistent strains still
ring in her ears today
as authentic and true

I know, I hear it too

© Urmila Mahajan

Read Poem: Generation, by A. Brown

To have Strength to persevere
in a time filled with:
peer pressure,
envy and hate,
is a modern-day miracle.
I’ve come to realise,
that the greater the blessing,
the greater the obstacle.
There was a glass ceiling,
until it was broken by
my,
desire not to be,
compared.
There are many opportunities,
but only one chance.
Father, help me,
I pray thee.
When disappointments come,
Please help me
to respond with integrity.
I don’t want to be,
another statistic,
whose life ends in tragedy.
You have never left our side.
Your promises are true.
Lord, I need you,
and our generation does too.

 
-A. Brown
Copyright © 2019 A. Brown. All rights reserved.

words of wisdom from inside !

pavithravenkatesan's avatarinsights from an individual !

A poem that i wrote long back, posting it as my first blog.

“Like the darkest sky gets a ray of sunshine,

one day you’ll foresee a beacon of hope that enlightens you amidst the thunderstorms,

that mends you towards the path you need to take,

in fulfilling your life’s journey!

your pursuits towards passion might be accompanied with grief,

your necessity to success might dwell you in failures,

your battle scars might be unanswered today,

your respect be at a stake,

your loneliness might haunt,

your love might be unrequited,

your decisions might be bound by perplexity than precision,

but don’t you dare, to give up on one thing ;

the respect and belief in self.

for the one who foresees has a broader vision.

the one who slipped knows the care in steps,

you, the one shaken up knows the way to showcase bravery !

Remember, you’re worth…

View original post 7 more words

Read Poetry: A Letter, by божидар ПАНГЕЛОВ

 
I’m writing a letter to you.
It’s in a maze. Like me.
Surely you’ve seen the Perseids.
Above the sea.
It’s the same with the words,
which I’m writing or have written.
I don’t remember.
And they are always another.
Not those ones which I’d like to say.
Or I’ve said?
I don’t remember.
I’ve abandoned the thought
like a traveler who is walking
to a harbor.
The ships depart there.
Further and further.
Further …
May I see you,
how you’re walking along the little cobble
street,
which I haven’t passed in,
to meet you and to tell you
the love is one.
I don’t remember if I said this to you.
In fact, I don’t know if it’s where
one should pass through to somewhere.
I don’t know if you’ve seen
The Perseids and the sea.
I don’t remember.
If I write anything else
but one –
one.
I don’t remember.

Read Poem: The old man and the tree, by Andrew Smith

He sat in the shade of an old oak tree,
Rembering day’s gone by,
Those adolescent, vibrant years,
When he had felt alive,
But the sands of time have fallen,
The winds of age have left their mark,
Now his skin is brown and wrinkled,
Like the trunk of this old oaks bark.

Across the field are families,
Children running here and there,
Shrieks of laughter as they play,
Games of Tag or maybe dare,
Images of his childhood,
Suddenly spring to mind,
His mum and dad and siblings,
Who now dwell in the annals of time.

The world has changed around him,
Piece by tiny piece,
And no one saw it coming,
So softly does progress creep,
And as he gazes upon the young ones,
A question invades his head,
What sort of world will they live in,
When he, himself, is dead.

He grew up in the days of innocence,
A generation lost in the race,
Of inventing, building, destroying,
To advance the human race,
His generation had achieved so much,
But they never did understand,
That the consequences of what they did,
Could see the end of the reign of man.

Now he sits beneath this old oak tree,
That’s stood for eight hundred years,
And wonders just how long it’ll be there,
Before that too, disappears,
Cut down to make a table,
Or into toys with which children will play,
Or more than likely just destroyed,
Because it’s simply in the way.

His gaze returns to the families,
How happy they all seem,
Enjoying each others company,
With a picnic on the green,
He smiles but can’t help feeling sorry,
For these children may not grow old,
Because their world is rapidly changing,
And the winds of change blow cold.

The families now are packing up,
For It’s time they headed home,
The park, deserted and silent,
Except for one old man on his own,
As the sun deserts the heavens,
He sees the mess the families leave,
And he sighs for nothing changes,
For the parents are too blind to see.

There’s plastic cups and drink cans,
Scattered across the grass,
There’s paper and bread from sandwiches,
There’s even a broken glass,
The children learn from their parents,
So what hope is for mankind,
And the children will grow in their shadow,
Not giving a damn in their mind.

The moonbeams filter through the leaves,
For darkness now has come,
And the lonely old man by the old oak tree,
Walks off but he wants to run,
Run away so fast from the human race,
Which he will when it’s his time,
And the old oak tree that sheltered him,
Could be the last of its kind.

What am I trying to tell you,
In the words that you’ve just read,
Is I guess that change is coming,
And we need to get our heads,
Out of the sand that we’ve put them in,
Try and halt this sad decline,
Because like the old man and the old oak tree,
We’re running out of time.

Andrew Smith

Read Poem: The Dark Web, by Vijetha Shenoy

She was young, naive and innocent! He was in his adolescence…
He was fond of her and she was fond of his presence…
She aged less than a decade but he was older to her by more than a decade…
She played with the dolls but he played with her, unafraid…
She was swayed by his candy treats unaware of his intention…
He had the little kid’s attention as he had created admirable impression..
He weaved his web in a pleasing way with a strong blockade…
Andthere she was, his fun prey to his worthless beak, dismayed…
The Child in her thought it was a fun game of tickles…
It was too late when she realized that it wasn’t just about laugh and giggles…
His sleazy trap was desperate for a toy to try-on…And she was a fresh and free coupon to tread on…He was like a camouflaged snake in the beautiful green grass…
As he tried but not succeeded to crush her courage like a broken glass…
She wished she was a bit older to act upon then…To break his nib and put a stop to his playpen…
She may try to forget as she grows older and stronger by the day…
Yetthis haunting memory make her nerves fray every single day…
Her heart says to forgive that deficient boy who is now a middle aged sad man…
But there is a desire deep inside of her to unfold this sad story to his clan…
For, he may have young daughters and she really hopes and prays…
That they don’t get caught into this desolately woven dark web of dirty play…
Educational Institutions are always there to make the young boys and girls clever…
It is up to us to make them accountable for their own good/bad behavior…
It is our Social responsibility to educate the children at the right time be it at home or at leisure…
For values inculcated in the young minds are carved forever…
As Aesop once quoted “It is not only Fine Feathers that make fine Birds”…
But the responsible and graceful flight make them wonderful Birds!

©Vijetha Shenoy
~ VJ