arin's attic ...step into my parlor


Tagged as: poetry

poetry sunday: the lovers of the poor, gwendolyn brooks


The Lovers of the Poor

    arrive. The Ladies from the Ladies’ Betterment
      League
Arrive in the afternoon, the late light slanting
In diluted gold bars across the boulevard brag
Of proud, seamed faces with mercy and murder hinting
Here, there, interrupting, all deep and debonair,
The pink paint on the innocence of fear;
Walk in a gingerly manner up the hall.
Cutting with knives served by their softest care,
Served by their love, so barbarously fair.
Whose mothers taught: You’d better not be cruel!
You had better not throw stones upon the wrens!
Herein they kiss and coddle and assault
Anew and dearly in the innocence
With which they baffle nature. Who are full,
Sleek, tender-clad, fit, fiftyish, a-glow, all
Sweetly abortive, hinting at fat fruit,
Judge it high time that fiftyish fingers felt
Beneath the lovelier planes of enterprise.
To resurrect. To moisten with milky chill.
To be a random hitching post or plush.
To be, for wet eyes, random and handy hem.
      Their guild is giving money to the poor.
The worthy poor. The very very worthy
And beautiful poor. Perhaps just not too swarthy?
Perhaps just not too dirty nor too dim
Nor—passionate. In truth, what they could wish
Is—something less than derelict or dull.
Not staunch enough to stab, though, gaze for gaze!
God shield them sharply from the beggar-bold!
The noxious needy ones whose battle’s bald
Nonetheless for being voiceless, hits one down.

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Tagged as: writing,poetry July 05, 2009 @ 05:30 am

if, by rudyard kipling


one of my favorite poems, in honor of national poetry month

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Tagged as: quotes,writing,poetry April 17, 2009 @ 12:45 pm

webdesign as poetry


css tshirt

from “Does anyone else who doesn’t work with CSS on a regular basis feel like a champ whenever they get it to work?”:

No, I just feel disappointment and dissatisfaction with the compromises in design and elegance I had to make in order to get it to work. Then I feel annoyed at the misguided people who designed it, and move on to feeling powerless because being annoyed at the CSS working group is mostly futile.

After a moment I return to my work. I scroll down the page, and see some background images in my beautiful CSS design get corrupted by a graphics driver bug. While pointlessly complaining about it on a social networking site, a poorly designed browser interface causes me to accidentally lose my comment and have to type it again. I become unhappy with the fact that one of the world’s major application platforms is a messy hack based on a hypertext publishing system which is doing something it was never designed for.

By the end of the day I’ve hated Firefox, GTK, X11, OpenGL, my graphics driver, Linux, open source software in general, proprietary software in general, Intel, IBM, my motherboard, Toshiba, Microsoft, some anonymous Chinese hardware manufacturers, ACPI, PCI, x86, and basically everything else down to the smallest detail of silicon.

Then I stop and observe with some satisfaction that, somewhere deep inside my excessively complex CPU, there exists an electron. Its wavefunction spreads out, evolves over time, and interacts with others in a mathematically well-defined way. No matter how much humans screw things up on top of it, that electron I’m contemplating is perfect and incorruptible.

Sometimes I think we should just start again and fix all our mistakes. Then I realise we’d probably screw things up at least as badly the second time. I give up on humanity, leave my computer, and lie on my bed getting nothing done.

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Tagged as: writing,webdesign,poetry April 09, 2009 @ 02:27 pm

Poetry Bailout Will Restore Confidence of Readers


from charles bernstein:

Chairman Lehman, Secretary Polito, distinguished poets and readers—I regret having to interrupt the celebrations tonight with an important announcement. As you know, the glut of illiquid, insolvent, and troubled poems is clogging the literary arteries of the West. These debt-ridden poems threaten to infect other areas of the literary sector and ultimately to topple our culture industry.

Cultural leaders have come together to announce a massive poetry buyout: leveraged and unsecured poems, poetry derivatives, delinquent poems, and subprime poems will be removed from circulation in the biggest poetry bailout since the Victorian era. We believe the plan is a comprehensive approach to relieving the stresses on our literary institutions and markets.

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Tagged as: humor,news,poetry,economy October 09, 2008 @ 07:14 pm

Something For The Touts, The Nuns, The Grocery Clerks, And You…


bukowski at bellevue

we have everything and we have nothing
and some men do it in churches
and some men do it by tearing butterflies
in half
and some men do it in Palm Springs
laying it into butterblondes
with Cadillac souls
Cadillacs and butterflies
nothing and everything,
the face melting down to the last puff
in a cellar in Corpus Christi.
there’s something for the touts, the nuns,
the grocery clerks and you . . .
something at 8 a.m., something in the library
something in the river,
everything and nothing.
in the slaughterhouse it comes running along
the ceiling on a hook, and you swing it—
one
two
three
and then you’ve got it, $200 worth of dead
meat, its bones against your bones
something and nothing.
it’s always early enough to die and
it’s always too late,
and the drill of blood in the basin white
it tells you nothing at all
and the gravediggers playing poker over
5 a.m. coffee, waiting for the grass
to dismiss the frost . . .
they tell you nothing at all.

we have everything and we have nothing—
days with glass edges and the impossible stink
of river moss—worse than shit;
checkerboard days of moves and countermoves,
fagged interest, with as much sense in defeat as
in victory; slow days like mules
humping it slagged and sullen and sun-glazed
up a road where a madman sits waiting among
bluejays and wrens netted in and sucked a flakey
grey.
good days too of wine and shouting, fights
in alleys, fat legs of women striving around
your bowels buried in moans,
the signs in bullrings like diamonds hollering
Mother Capri, violets coming out of the ground
telling you to forget the dead armies and the loves
that robbed you.
days when children say funny and brilliant things
like savages trying to send you a message through
their bodies while their bodies are still
alive enough to transmit and feel and run up
and down without locks and paychecks and
ideals and possessions and beetle-like
opinions.
days when you can cry all day long in
a green room with the door locked, days
when you can laugh at the breadman
because his legs are too long, days
of looking at hedges . . .

and nothing, and nothing, the days of
the bosses, yellow men
with bad breath and big feet, men
who look like frogs, hyenas, men who walk
as if melody had never been invented, men
who think it is intelligent to hire and fire and
profit, men with expensive wives they possess
like 60 acres of ground to be drilled
or shown-off or to be walled away from
the incompetent, men who’d kill you
because they’re crazy and justify it because
it’s the law, men who stand in front of
windows 30 feet wide and see nothing,
men with luxury yachts who can sail around
the world and yet never get out of their vest
pockets, men like snails, men like eels, men
like slugs, and not as good . . .
and nothing, getting your last paycheck
at a harbor, at a factory, at a hospital, at an
aircraft plant, at a penny arcade, at a
barbershop, at a job you didn’t want
anyway.
income tax, sickness, servility, broken
arms, broken heads—all the stuffing
come out like an old pillow.

we have everything and we have nothing.
some do it well enough for a while and
then give way. fame gets them or disgust
or age or lack of proper diet or ink
across the eyes or children in college
or new cars or broken backs while skiing
in Switzerland or new politics or new wives
or just natural change and decay—
the man you knew yesterday hooking
for ten rounds or drinking for three days and
three nights by the Sawtooth mountains now
just something under a sheet or a cross
or a stone or under an easy delusion,
or packing a bible or a golf bag or a
briefcase: how they go, how they go!—all
the ones you thought would never go.

days like this. like your day today.
maybe the rain on the window trying to
get through to you. what do you see today?
what is it? where are you? the best
days are sometimes the first, sometimes
the middle and even sometimes the last.
the vacant lots are not bad, churches in
Europe on postcards are not bad. people in
wax museums frozen into their best sterility
are not bad, horrible but not bad. the
cannon, think of the cannon, and toast for
breakfast the coffee hot enough you
know your tongue is still there, three
geraniums outside a window, trying to be
red and trying to be pink and trying to be
geraniums, no wonder sometimes the women
cry, no wonder the mules don’t want
to go up the hill. are you in a hotel room
in Detroit looking for a cigarette? one more
good day. a little bit of it. and as
the nurses come out of the building after
their shift, having had enough, eight nurses
with different names and different places
to go—walking across the lawn, some of them
want cocoa and a paper, some of them want a
hot bath, some of them want a man, some
of them are hardly thinking at all. enough
and not enough. arcs and pilgrims, oranges
gutters, ferns, antibodies, boxes of
tissue paper.

in the most decent sometimes sun
there is the softsmoke feeling from urns
and the canned sound of old battleplanes
and if you go inside and run your finger
along the window ledge you’ll find
dirt, maybe even earth.
and if you look out the window
there will be the day, and as you
get older you’ll keep looking
keep looking
sucking your tongue in a little
ah ah no no maybe

some do it naturally
some obscenely
everywhere.

—charles bukowski

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Tagged as: movies,poetry August 13, 2008 @ 06:26 am

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random arinness:
i’m a moral absolutist. a pragmatic idealist. a cynic.


arin721 on clearing my bookshelf, one page at a time...: heh.  s’why i read stephen king.  i want to read a book that makes me stay awake all night to finish&hellip

Carol on clearing my bookshelf, one page at a time...: I haven’t read a Stephen King since The Shining.  Scared the sheeeeet out of me. I have Veronika Decides to Die&hellip

Carol on bp's oil spill response plan = one giant LOL: I was looking @ some photographs of the consequences of this awful spill yesterday, absolutely breaks my heart to see the&hellip

arin721 on celebrate the beauty that is YOU!: i cannot *wait* to buy your book.  up to me, everyone would own it, know it, and celebrate it - it’s&hellip

Karen from Chookooloonks on celebrate the beauty that is YOU!: Thank you so much for this kind shout-out!  Judging from your “about me” page, it seems you get the entire concept&hellip

Quotes I like

"i wish that I didn't hate you, least not as much as I do, and squander all my contempt for a little nothing like you..." - needle time, elvis costello




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