Read Poetry: Time Passing So Quickly, by Kayla Krilove

Genre: Inspirational, Society

 
Youth was there with baby teeth
the teeth then left and left me be
I walked into this smaller place
I was so small so little much grace
And there they were
blue, red, and brightly colored walls
they want us all to feel as tall.
We shared in circles and sang in groups
Dressed in our costumes we walked in loops
The wooden playground that once stood strong
Now a distant memory
We must move on

Yet then I grew and matched the goal
I reached the top
I jumped, I rolled
All the way past Margos bench
Until there was no where left
I really wanted to go.

I left the small rooms with fake happy trees
for there were no more lies that I could not see
I was smarter, louder, and bigger now
The trees that once clouded me were shaken down.
We were the oldest ones now leading the pack
Yet embarking on a journey in which courage we could not lack.
The song we once sang when five years of age
Now helping us turn a completely new page.

For here I stand, youth tinted but clear
and seeing the things I once had feared
Exploring the art I never knew was there
witnessing the life that hadn’t been shared.
Admiring the kids I’d one day be
A day so distant back then
A day I never thought I’d see.

For here I stand, youth growing but still
Now bigger than I have ever been
yet smaller than I will ever be.
Surrounded by love and growing compassion
I begin to grow up in a fast pace fashion.
For once again we lead the pack
Still searching for courage we know not to lack.
It took thirteen years to truly know to say
The impact these walls have had on our days.

For there I stand, youth clear through memories
I walk into this bigger place
I am so big, so tall, still so much grace
and there they are
white, black, grey dull colored walls,
that I won’t let– make me feel small.
For what I know and will stay with me forever
Is that truly we are all in this together.

 

 

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Poem: Innerpeace by Anthony Yandell

Genre: Self, Society

 
Once waiting. No longer.

Her heart had grown stronger.

Her mind was confused from those who had wronged her.

As time passed on, she felt the warm fire.

An itching and burning. Intense with desire.

Her purpose was clear. Their actions mattered little.

A sweet peaceful feeling she felt in her middle.

She dropped to her knees to accept what she’d found.

Flowers and butterflies fluttered around.

When all’s said and done, she found her new lease.

A life full of joy and true Innerpeace.
 

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Disease S.U. , Poetry by Darrell Herbert

 Genre: Life, Society

 

When I was thirteen I was diagnosed with a stomach ulcer disease
It would make me lose a substantial amount of weight
And bleed
And bleed
And bleed

From my mouth
I vomited on my doubts

I lost my ability to feel anger, sadness, or nervous
If I did, the pain would attack
It would start from my chest, it would sometimes travel all the way to my back
It felt like a heart attack
An attack I was unable to counteract

I lost my ability to make friends
They would see me twitch my body over, and over, and over again
The pain caused them to leave
No cure for such a deadly disease
Yet, my heart and my weight loss never turned a new leaf

Hate feeling like someone is stabbing me from the inside out
Pissing me off, piss in your mouth
While you give blow jobs to call girls on the couch
Cash me outside, how bout that?
You put me on blast
Committing suicide with thumbtacks
Graduated at my funeral, no caps
I, I am frail
Color-blind, yet, so pail
And your cleavage is like the Holy Grail
Lord knows you fucking failed
Oh, is it lit?
All you want to do is be a boss ass bitch, bitch, bitch, bitch, bitch, bitch, bitch
But, your vagina stretches out like pogo sticks
Initials, A.K., reload the clip
Let it rip while he cums across your clit
Acid, having sex using no plastic in Phryne’s casket
Love, I need some
If two wrongs don’t make a right, what’s a threesome?

Stall a bitch before she calls it quits
Stall a bitch before she calls it quits
Stall a bitch before she calls it quits
And if she calls it quits, call the bitch
The number you have dialed is a bleeding wrist
Netflix or blockbusters
Cockblocker or cocksuckers
So what?
One nut
I’m an Einstein to these dumb-fucks
That’s nonsense
Two cents in deposits
Top bitch, topless
But, my insecurities sky rocketed like rockets
The impossible just became possible
But, her pussy is like pop tarts, popping off popsicles

 

 

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I AM FROM THE 20 CENTURY, Poetry by Miriam Beza

Genre: Society

 I am from the wars and destruction
I am from learning and creation
I am from reading and writing,
research and application
I am from neon white light,
from telephone, television and cinema delight
I am from the thick brush of Impressionists
the dreamy fine brush of Expressionists
I am from Cubists and Post War realists
The conceptual art and contraceptive pill
from rock & roll and punk in the mix
From tower blocks that look like a prison
from airy glass towers and steel
that pierce the sky, lit by neon
I am from laser, the beam that cures or kills
I am from uranium that kills or cures
I am from gluttonous self indulgence
I am from famine and war
I am from all of those and more

Miriam Beza

 

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The Song of the Sword, Poetry by B R Peabody

Genre: Society, Life

In the pain of the furnace my body was forged,
Longer than life have I been;
The fury of battle is where I have gorged,
On kidney and liver and spleen;
You think me a trinket so prettily shown,
Yet many’s the life I have claimed;
Parting the sinew and hewing the bone,
My mercy is leaving you maimed;
In hope I was wrought and in anger unsheathed,
Blood flows like wine where I’ve played;
I’m promised to Death and to Chaos bequeathed,
For I am the Devil’s own blade.

******

Oh thou fool if only you could see the sights I’ve seen,
If only you’d experienced the places I have been;
I rode the Steppes of Russia on the horse of Genghis Khan,
And hacked and slew the peasants on the roads to Kazakhstan.
I’ve taken life of woman and I’ve taken life of child,
And watched them rape survivors ere their temples were defiled;
Then in the hands of Subotai I sang the reaper’s song,
To cross the frozen Volga drinking blood all winter long.

I swam the Sajo river to a feast of rended flesh,
And slashed the fleeing Magyars as they ran into our mesh;
I faced the hordes of China as the Kerulen they crossed,
To share the bitter anguish of my Mongols who were lost.
I passed in trade for silver to a Christian warrior’s child,
Who carried me across the sea of waves so fierce and wild;
The long years of his childhood I was idle save for show,
But lo – he grew to manhood so it’s off to war we go!

We crossed the heaving waters in a hundred years of war,
To visit our destruction on a place called Agincourt;
And when the French attacked our camp in vain malicious hope,
I slew three score of prisoners securely bound in rope.
I’ve hacked and stabbed the Scottish and the Welsh on mountains blue,
And paid in chinking golden coins I’ve killed some English too;
I’ve disembowelled the Irish at Drogheda and The Boyne,
And seen them staked and screaming as the knife cuts out the groin.

Across the Himalayas I’ve killed tribesmen by the score,
And marched them all upon my point to yield their winter store;
In lofty mountain passes countless thousands have I slain,
But still the fools come on that I may taste them yet again.
I’ve backed them into holes and caves and slaughtered every one,

And where I cleave no man may breathe that I have touched upon;
They’ve carried me in hatred and in dying laid me down,
Then placed me gleaming on his chest whilst bearing him through town.

I’ve razed the shining city and I’ve laid the temple low,
For none may see what I have seen or know what I may know;
My cutting edge has bitten deep in smashed and bloodied breasts,
And burst upon the banquet as the host has slain his guests.
I’ve cut the Sikh to ribbons in the pass at Kandahar,
And watched the rebels boiled in oil and dipped in molten tar;
I’ve fought and slain the Moguls and the Afghan in his turn,
And slew the Turk so often I believe he’ll never learn.

I’ve sacked and pillaged cities where the children called us names,
How often have I left their bodies burning in the flames;
I’ve been the pain of mothers and the hate of grieving wives,
And witnessed strong men beg for death beneath the red-hot knives.
I served the Lord Protector in his strong and steady hand,
How proudly did he raise me as his tool to tame the land;
Often I have revelled in the blood of countless foes,
Just to spite the mother’s pride I’ve hewed the daughter’s nose.
I’ve been the bane of bandits and at times the bane of law,
At times I’ve taken rich men and at times I took the poor;

I’ve spilled warm blood in virgin snow and drained it into sand,
I smashed Marsin at Blenheim and Sanjar at Samarkand.
Behind me there is weal and woe in front just naked dread,
On either side for mile on mile are piles of butchered dead;
To beat me into farmyard tools is often heard the threat,
But I’ve been here forever and I’m not a ploughshare yet!

Wherever there was ringing steel it’s there I’ve tasted blood,
For on the raging ramparts of Granada have I stood;
I’ve watched the blazing campfires of my enemies at night,
But come the morn when I am drawn I’m sharp and gleaming bright.
They’ve polished me with sharkskin and they’ve burnished me with care,
And cleaned the blood from cutting edge with locks of corpses hair;
I held the bridge at Pedu and the gates at Chandrapur,
And finished off the wounded in the streets of Bangalore.

I’ve hacked my way through living flesh and gloried in the stench,
Or watched on from my scabbard as my master raped a wench;
I charged the guns at Waterloo and smashed in many a head,
Upon the morning after I watched peasants loot the dead.
My path is strewn with corpses for my tally’s long and deep,
I’ve known the weak man lose his mind and seen the strong man weep;
I’ve watched the blue ranks break and run and rushed to hunt them down,
And seen their lifeblood cloak them in a sodden scarlet gown.

I’ve heard the keening grapeshot as it thunders through the air,
And when they charged the Russian guns my gleaming blade was there.
I’ve taken life in anger and I’ve taken life in fun,

And watched the bloodied grass glow red in many a morning sun;
From Omdurman to Crecy – from Kabul to Chandrapur,
I’ve seen them run like women or come on to take some more.
But always there is carnage on the sullied fields of death,
And often there is knowledge as they draw that final breath.

You dare to wear me casually for you are but a boy,
And show me off when on parade as though I were a toy.
You thrill the pretty ladies with the stories from your lips,
And little do you contemplate the killer at your hips.
Resplendent in your uniform you swagger to the mess,
To talk of fights and battles at which you can only guess.
You think to boast of slaying with your tales of blood and gore?
How little do you know, oh fool, speak not to me of war!
-oo0O0oo-

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Fiddler’s Neck, Poetry by Stacey Lynn Patterson

Genre: Life, Society
—-
Took the boat out
Rowed all the way to Fiddler’s Neck Island
What draws me there is
The overwhelming need to purge my soul

Nothingness drags behind me
Like waited down corpse
Weighing down the seedlings of hope
It never tires and clings to me
As if it were the skin I wear
Despair wraps around me like a cloak

As the shore comes into view
The wind whispers through my hair
A polyphonic tune glides
Over every one of my nerve endings
Chilling my core to subzero
Something here at Fiddler’s Neck knows
The heart of this troubled visitor

Isolated in a veil of quite
Feelers probe my subconscious
Causing tears and goosebumps
To speed to the surface
Falling to my knee I begin to sob
And with every spasm of tears
A tiny piece of my soul is pardoned
From the prison of despair

I feel the soothing embrace
Of that thing that lives here
On Fiddler’s Neck
Unseen but always felt

It tears away the clinging nothingness
That is burdening me
With every tear, I feel renewed

By nightfall, I have wondered
Through acres of Fiddler’s Neck
And find myself back at my boat
I am healed
Time to live again

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Broken, Poetry by Austin Thomas

Genre: Society

 What does it mean to be broken? Damaged beyond repair maybe? When I speak of being broken I am referring to the emotional state of a single human being. That human being I am making reference to is I. I like so many young boys and girls fell into the false reality of someday meeting my Juliet and living happily ever after. So, that would mean I had to have thought of myself as Romeo. Well, this story doesn’t have a happy ending. I don’t wind up getting the girl nor do we fall romantically in love. What I earlier on mistakened for love turned out to be a ways off. Jordan was her name. Alike the shoe, she was well sought after and not easily obtained. Before, I knew it I was in head over heels for her. With time, we grew apart from one another. It just so happens that we share the same zodiac sign and birth month. Every February I can’t help but think of her.

 

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Sometimes, Poetry by Micheal Ace

Genre: Society, Rhyme

Sometimes I know the sky is not happy
But I besiege them to hold back tears
Sometimes I buy myself some fancy wears
For how you appear tags you a price
Sometimes I know the universe is boring
But the sun has no choice but to smile
.
Sometimes I say my thoughts so loud
Because someone might hold them dear
Sometimes I learn new and stylish steps
For we don’t define beauty on one spot
Sometimes I know how far I am from love
But I cloth some poems in charming words
.
Sometimes I hold on to my mother’s eyes
Even though they won’t stay there forever
Sometimes I give father some clear shots
So I may hold his grin till the end of time
Sometimes I let my mind do the cries
Because none of these memories will last
.
Sometimes I wish these times never end
Even though I see better days coming
Sometimes I hope I can change the past
For I have seldom made mama smile
Sometimes I do not find meaning to these words
But I write them so I may have my peace
.
.
Micheal Ace
#magicalpoe

 

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 all a-twitter, Poetry by Persis Karim

Genre: Rhyme, Society

what’s all the twitter

from the tweeter

who can’t take the chitter-

chatter about the possibility

that he might be the cheater?

persis karim ©2016

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Poetry by Patrick Hill

 Genre: Society

I am tough like Huey,
I dream like Martin,
I see like Malcolm,
I stand like Rosa,
I am educated like Booker,
I am the stature of Fredrick,
I am the embodiment of a civil right movement,
But I am the reflection of history,
I am the rebellion of Nate,
I am a leader like Tubman,
I am the community of Black Wall Street,
But I am the audacity of hope like Obama,
I am the most hated man like Colin,
But I am the most beloved person like Nelson,
I am the ascendant child of Africa,
But I am a citizen of a nation that is United States,
My oppression is of a third world,
But I have an opportunity,
I am from poverty,
But that won’t stop me,
Where I go,
My people will follow,
I am the example of greatness,
But endure failures,
I am victory like the revolutionary war,
But I still have a long way to go to be free.

 

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