Performed by Elizabeth Rose Morriss
Category: Uncategorized
Poetry Reading: The Painter, by Theresa Pio
Performed by Elizabeth Rose Morriss
Get to know the poet:
What is the theme of your poem?
My themes are Inspirational but also dark
What motivated you to write this poem?
I was watching a Christmas movie while cooking lunch last year in December and this movie had rhyming poems in it. I’m not a poetry fan believe it or not it’s not my writing style but for some reason I managed to pull together this poem that same night in one sitting.
How long have you been writing poetry?
This is my first attempt at Poetry really I call it poetry fluke.
If you could have dinner with one person (dead or alive), who would that be?
Paulo Coehlo
What influenced you to submit to have your poetry performed by a professional actor?
What influenced me to have it read was that the poem has been sitting in my laptop really for nearly a year. I felt the need to do something with it other than it gathering cyber cobwebs lol
Do you write other works? scripts? Short Stories? Etc..?
I’m more of a scriptwriter. I have written a musical and had produced it along with my sister. Since writing this piece I found myself liking poetry more and writing pieces more for children.
What is your passion in life?
Writing, and spending time with my son : )
Read Poetry: A pot of boiling water, by Matt Bloom
A pot of boiling water
By Matt Bloom
@matthew_bloom
When you turn up the heat
To that of dynamite and a bee sting
Pouring it over the skin in anger
It cracks and flakes, sears like a stake
Is that hate?
Is it the water?
It’s the calculation
The tick tick of the clock
And the racing thoughts in the minutes
as the pan births bubbles
and beads of sweat drip drip
down your nose
Salty, evil drops of sweat
Born from whiskey losers
Do you turn off the flame once it bubbles?
Or leave it burning as you
Tiptoe up the stairs
As he sleeps with his lover
Where does the steam go?
It runs into the moldy ceiling tiles,
And through the roof and into the sky
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Read Poetry: Battle Cry, by Karlyle Tomms
I found an old brass button in my back yard.
It once adorned a Union soldier’s uniform,
And lay among the blades of grass almost a hundred and fifty years.
It waited patiently, finally to be discovered.
How many times had I stepped over it, or mowed past it, never to notice?
I had lived on the property for ten years, and there it lay the whole time,
But there it lay for all the previous years combined.
I picked it up to see the eagle still proudly spreading wings beneath the clustered bits of dirt,
And realized, I may have been the first to touch it
Since the soldier whose uniform it once embellished last pushed it into the button hole.
Likely, he had camped on this ground.
My house, over a hundred years old, was not standing then.
This hillside was likely pasture rolling up above the county courthouse.
They had burned this tiny town to the ground, left it in ruins,
And left anguished survivors to rebuild, and try again.
My mind envisioned the battle, gray and blue uniforms soaked in dark red blood,
Fierce screaming rage, gunshots echoing among the oaks, and bayonets stabbing.
America’s bloodiest war left almost seven hundred thousand dead,
And those who died were brothers and friends, family and neighbors.
Many sacrificed that others might have freedom previously deprived.
Could this one have lived to face another day, or did he die on the ground where I was standing?
Did his blood saturate this sod, and marry the red clay deep beneath my feet?
Was this button ripped off his jacket as his corpse was dragged away,
Or, did it merely fall unnoticed from thread worn thin?
If he survived, what wounds did he carry from this place,
Wounds that others could not see?
Did fitful nightmares of battle cries make him sweat through cotton sheets?
Did he startle, half from his skin, at the snap of a twig?
Did he sit alone and weep with guilt and remorse for those he loved who fell beside him,
Or did he grieve for those, once his countrymen, whom he had killed?
Did someone weep for him while watching his silent torment,
Or weep because he had never come home?
Only a guess is possible now.
As I held the button in my hand, I could not help but wonder, who last touched it,
And what was he like?
Where did he come from,
And where did he go?
Whoever he was, he swayed my heart, and made me think.
Without knowing I would ever live, much less come to stand in this place,
He touched me.
Whoever he was, he honored me that I could hold this small button in my hand,
And wipe the years of bitter dirt away
So it could shine again.
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Read Poetry: Refrain, by James Gaynor
Read Poetry: Work of a Writer, by Kinjal Jain
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Blog Address – www.address2mythoughts.wordpress.com/blog
Every piece you come across,
every word and line formed,
taken right from the core part of their hearts,
drawn from the deepest emotions,
each sentence carved with brilliant artistry,
hours worth thinking, re-writing & editing,
reaching the zenith of their soul,
inked the paper with calligraphic blood & sweat,
like a personal diary meant to be read.
A diary not to keep to oneself, but
to transcend the people from natural to the supernatural
to fill the world with the magic lying in their hands
to just make the earth a beautiful place.
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Read Poetry: FRUSTRATION, by Patricia Marvin
Our souls and Spirits long for the justice that is due
So long we’ve wanted to believe that Injustice would not prevail
Why does looking at my skin cause YOU such distress; the urge to kill
Then it hit me like rocks from an avalanche
It’s not the color of my skin but what’s beneath that makes you unhinged
Brilliant minds shaped from a long line of kings and queens
Original creators of creating all of what you see, not all credited to our ancestors as it should be
We were beaten, whipped, hung, set on fire and drowned just to name a few of your injustices that tried to keep us down
With resilient spirits and determination we fought back through sit-ins, picket lines, water hoses and baton beatings
Your continued injustices we survived but like ashes we rise
Like pesticides used to kill weeds you use drugs and put them in our communities killing our men, women and children like a killing field
This enemy we have yet to beat but we will
You tried to convince us that OUR pride does not matter and our loyalties are misplaced
YOU ARE WRONG!
we will band together like links in a chain
Together we stand together we will be free
It’s true, we may not all stand, but the majority outweigh the few
Your new weapon of choice which truly isn’t new at all
executing us in broad daylight and many in the dark
we see you hiding behind the law
ENOUGH IS ENOUGH!!
We will not back down or shut up until Justice is satisfied by your law
Heaven forbid if justice is not done, because we will rise and this time you will fall!
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Read Poetry: Big Buts, by David Creighton
Big ButsI love you, but wipe your feet I love you, but you’re gaining weight I love you, but milk does not belong on the fridge door I love you, but even socks should be folded I love you, but that comb over isn’t fooling anyone I love you, but you sometimes smell of peppers I love you, but not ABBA at 7 a.m. on a Sunday I love you, but don’t feed raccoons I love you, but leave your damn wife already GENRES: Funny, Love Author David Creighton BIO: David Creighton is a Canadian author with Bipolar Disorder. By being open about it he fights the stigma of mental illness. |
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Read Poetry: 737, by Mpumie Masemola
Attached artwork is called JupiterSaturn by yours truly @ringsroundthe on twitter 🐦
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Read Poetry: The Ox and The Plow, by Matthew Richard Barnes
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Once upon a time
In a land called….
NOW
There’s a story
About the ox
and the plow
Where the ox just trots on top of the rocks
And doesn’t stop to watch the clock
Or to monitor the crop
And how the plow
Keeps digging down, underground
Wandering around, wondering how we allowed a bully and coward
To tweet from the top of a golden tower
And how a pow wow of cowboys can allow bomb showers to rain on the world’s most beautiful flowers by the hour
I will never scowl about a crowd that shouts aloud about the misuse of power
But I do frown down upon clowns only making sounds and not helping out
Think
Outside
The box
The ox
Is just an ox
And the plow…
Is the power
We all despise the crimes and lies that have defined our lives
But despite the plight
This is not the demise of our times
Open your eyes
Recognize the disguise that we’ve been hypnotized by
Don’t just cry and watch time fly
Let’s realize the signs that describe the size of the almighty prize
And let’s rise
Above the rest
We won’t be left just to protest like pests
Even as unwelcome guests
And amid the sting of our bruising flesh
We feel blessed to control our own lives and deaths
I know it’s hard to digest
But let it infect
Because the less we expect
The more we progress
So get up get dressed
And step up to the test
Help clean up this mess
We won’t just mingle
And speak the lingo
We’ll tie a string around our fingers
And let this single jingle’s ring linger…
Peace.
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Peace, Unity, Freedom, United States of America, USA, Our Country, World Peace, Equality, Acceptance, Growth, Non violent protest, Protest, RiseUp, We The People, This land is our land
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