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Shitao

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Tim is a 56 year old guy from Bococmo, Missouri, USA

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  • Summer in the City - New York’s Big Backyard -...

    Rated 10:51am 1 review photography, poetry nytimes.com

    Photobucket
    Not since the heyday of Robert Moses has the city been host to so many and so new a collection of playgrounds. Supersoft rubber safety surfaces and geodesic domes for climbing, the latest in recreational design, are cropping up all over town. Just last spring the playground on 110th Street and Central Park West reopened after a $600,000 face-lift, its first in more than 70 years. The sprawling Heckscher Playground at the south end of the park was recently redesigned as well, with a moat and a desertlike sand pit, and is so impressive it attracts not only the toddler and grade-school set, but also hordes of teenagers wishing they were little again. The Ancient Playground near the Metropolitan Museum of Art, which used to be one of our favorites, has just been leveled and by next year is scheduled to reopen.

    Summer in the City - New York’s Big Backyard -  Playgrounds for the People - NYTimes.com
  •    Save a great London poetry landmark |    Books |    guardian.co.uk
  • * is temporary.
  • ULLABENULLA

    Rated Nov 05 2 reviews poetry, blogs, illustration typepad.com




    A process in the weather of the heart
    Turns damp to dry; the golden shot
    Storms in the freezing tomb.
    A weather in the quarter of the veins
    Turns night to day; blood in their suns
    Lights up the living worm.

    A process in the eye forwarns
    The bones of blindness; and the womb
    Drives in a death as life leaks out.

    A darkness in the weather of the eye
    Is half its light; the fathomed sea
    Breaks on unangled land.
    The seed that makes a forest of the loin
    Forks half its fruit; and half drops down,
    Slow in a sleeping wind.

    A weather in the flesh and bone
    Is damp and dry; the quick and dead
    Move like two ghosts before the eye.

    A process in the weather of the world
    Turns ghost to ghost; each mothered child
    Sits in their double shade.
    A process blows the moon into the sun,
    Pulls down the shabby curtains of the skin;
    And the heart gives up its dead.

    Dylan Thomas

    ULLABENULLA
  • Retrospace: On Vacation

    Rated Nov 05 1 review photography, poetry blogspot.com


    The Daughter Goes To Camp

    In the taxi alone, home from the airport,
    I could not believe you were gone. My palm kept
    creeping over the smooth plastic
    to find your strong meaty little hand and
    squeeze it, find your narrow thigh in the
    noble ribbing of the corduroy,
    straight and regular as anything in nature, to
    find the slack cool cheek of a
    child in the heat of a summer morning--
    nothing, nothing, waves of bawling
    hitting me in hot flashes like some
    change of life, some boiling wave
    rising in me toward your body, toward
    where it should have been on the seat, your
    brow curved like a cereal bowl, your
    eyes dark with massed crystals like the
    magnified scales of a butterfly's wing, the
    delicate feelers of your limp hair,
    floods of blood rising in my face as I
    tried to reassemble the hot
    gritty molecules in the car, to
    make you appear like a holograph
    on the back seat, pull you out of nothing
    as I once did--but you were really gone,
    the cab glossy as a slit caul out of
    which you had slipped, the air glittering
    electric with escape as it does in the room at a birth.


    Sharon Olds

    Retrospace: On Vacation
  • If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger,Thered Be a Whole Lot...

    Rated Nov 04 1 review folk music, poetry blogspot.com



    Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing

    The world is full of women
    who'd tell me I should be ashamed of myself
    if they had the chance. Quit dancing.
    Get some self-respect
    and a day job.
    Right. And minimum wage,
    and varicose veins, just standing
    in one place for eight hours
    behind a glass counter
    bundled up to the neck, instead of
    naked as a meat sandwich.
    Selling gloves, or something.
    Instead of what I do sell.
    You have to have talent
    to peddle a thing so nebulous
    and without material form.
    Exploited, they'd say. Yes, any way
    you cut it, but I've a choice
    of how, and I'll take the money.

    I do give value.
    Like preachers, I sell vision,
    like perfume ads, desire
    or its facsimile. Like jokes
    or war, it's all in the timing.
    I sell men back their worse suspicions:
    that everything's for sale,
    and piecemeal. They gaze at me and see
    a chain-saw murder just before it happens,
    when thigh, ass, inkblot, crevice, tit, and nipple
    are still connected.
    Such hatred leaps in them,
    my beery worshippers! That, or a bleary
    hopeless love. Seeing the rows of heads
    and upturned eyes, imploring
    but ready to snap at my ankles,
    I understand floods and earthquakes, and the urge
    to step on ants. I keep the beat,
    and dance for them because
    they can't. The music smells like foxes,
    crisp as heated metal
    searing the nostrils
    or humid as August, hazy and languorous
    as a looted city the day after,
    when all the rape's been done
    already, and the killing,
    and the survivors wander around
    looking for garbage
    to eat, and there's only a bleak exhaustion.
    Speaking of which, it's the smiling
    tires me out the most.
    This, and the pretence
    that I can't hear them.
    And I can't, because I'm after all
    a foreigner to them.
    The speech here is all warty gutturals,
    obvious as a slab of ham,
    but I come from the province of the gods
    where meanings are lilting and oblique.
    I don't let on to everyone,
    but lean close, and I'll whisper:
    My mother was raped by a holy swan.
    You believe that? You can take me out to dinner.
    That's what we tell all the husbands.
    There sure are a lot of dangerous birds around.

    Not that anyone here
    but you would understand.
    The rest of them would like to watch me
    and feel nothing. Reduce me to components
    as in a clock factory or abattoir.
    Crush out the mystery.
    Wall me up alive
    in my own body.
    They'd like to see through me,
    but nothing is more opaque
    than absolute transparency.
    Look--my feet don't hit the marble!
    Like breath or a balloon, I'm rising,
    I hover six inches in the air
    in my blazing swan-egg of light.
    You think I'm not a goddess?
    Try me.
    This is a torch song.
    Touch me and you'll burn.

    Margaret Atwood

    If Charlie Parker Was a Gunslinger,Thered Be a Whole Lot of Dead Copycats: Orpheus in Action #12
  • A poem about death and the life hereafter

    Rated Nov 04 58 reviews poetry btinternet.co.uk


    Death is nothing at all.
    I have only slipped away into the next room.
    I am I, and you are you.
    Whatever we were to each other, that we still are.
    Call me by my old familiar name,
    speak to me in the easy way which you always used.
    Put no difference in your tone,
    wear no forced air of solemnity or sorrow.
    Laugh as we always laughed at the little jokes we enjoyed together.
    Play, smile, think of me, pray for me.
    Let my name be ever the household word that it always was,
    let it be spoken without effect,
    without the trace of a shadow on it.
    Life means all that it ever meant.
    It is the same that it ever was;
    there is unbroken continuity.
    Why should I be out of mind because I am out of sight?
    I am waiting for you, for an interval,
    somewhere very near, just round the corner.

    And all is well.

    Henry Scott Holland ~ 1847-1918
    Canon of St. Paul's Cathedral ~ London. UK

    A poem about death and the life hereafter
  • The Poetry Foundation : Find Poems and Poets. Discover Poetry.
  • http://www.australianedge.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/...

    Rated Nov 02 1 review photography, poetry australianedge.net



    Before I Knocked

    Before I knocked and flesh let enter,
    With liquid hands tapped on the womb,
    I who was as shapeless as the water
    That shaped the Jordan near my home
    Was brother to Mnetha's daughter
    And sister to the fathering worm.

    I who was deaf to spring and summer,
    Who knew not sun nor moon by name,
    Felt thud beneath my flesh's armour,
    As yet was in a molten form
    The leaden stars, the rainy hammer
    Swung by my father from his dome.

    I knew the message of the winter,
    The darted hail, the childish snow,
    And the wind was my sister suitor;
    Wind in me leaped, the hellborn dew;
    My veins flowed with the Eastern weather;
    Ungotten I knew night and day.

    As yet ungotten, I did suffer;
    The rack of dreams my lily bones
    Did twist into a living cipher,
    And flesh was snipped to cross the lines
    Of gallow crosses on the liver
    And brambles in the wringing brains.

    My throat knew thirst before the structure
    Of skin and vein around the well
    Where words and water make a mixture
    Unfailing till the blood runs foul;
    My heart knew love, my belly hunger;
    I smelt the maggot in my stool.

    And time cast forth my mortal creature
    To drift or drown upon the seas
    Acquainted with the salt adventure
    Of tides that never touch the shores.
    I who was rich was made the richer
    By sipping at the vine of days.

    I, born of flesh and ghost, was neither
    A ghost nor man, but mortal ghost.
    And I was struck down by death's feather.
    I was a mortal to the last
    Long breath that carried to my father
    The message of his dying christ.

    You who bow down at cross and altar,
    Remember me and pity Him
    Who took my flesh and bone for armour
    And doublecrossed my mother's womb.

    Dylan Thomas

    http://www.australianedge.net/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/samjinks_4.jpg
  • The Gashlycrumb Tinies