Poetry from Mark Murphy
Disaffection
Who is the estranged brother, you or I?
Who seeks who out?
Who lives a life of asceticism?
Who is outcast in this society of denialism?
Which brother carries the chip on his shoulder,
as if it could never be lifted?
One time friends, comrades, confidents –
whatever happened to our united fight to the death?
You have struggled to care for your family.
I have no family to speak of.
Will we ever see eye to eye, in this life,
or does hopelessness fill your heart as much as mine?
Waiting for the One
for E.F.T
I am waiting for Epicurus.
She is also waiting for the one who will free her
from her nights alone –
her existential time bombs.
Wish that I had gone some little way to help
with my bag of extant tools,
though, I expect, she will find her own way
without me.
For ten years, I’ve struggled under her spell,
the tongue upon the lips, licking
ever so provocatively at me with my beard and sandaled feet
like some kind of ‘new age beatnik’.
I guess a lot changes in a decade between two people
trying to live (pleasurably) best they can,
avoiding pain
in favour of some golden rule.
She spies the world in a grain of sand
and my many contradictions
as only she can
without any air of gentle condemnation.
I do believe we could live without any other love
of man or woman,
except for our own blind spots,
after all, these are the only divinities we live by.
Unrequited Love
If I asked for your hand over night,
you would not grant me asylum
on your floor
from my own thoughts,
no more than you would kiss me,
or ask me to hold you.
Even though, I find myself at a crossroads,
unable to navigate the next stretch
of the race towards oblivion.
If I should die now, it would be like
nothing was ever achieved
as man or poet.
Since there is no one to champion
my work, I should die
without recognition or prayer.
Not a single solitary murmur is enough
to denote an ending,
yet end it must
like applause in the auditorium,
bravery,
and the all-too-familiar foolish loving.
Window On Top of the World
From this window in the sky, there’s no telling
what we might learn – as we hear
the bell in St Mary’s clock tower strike 9 times over.
Above the turrets and runways, ladders and mazes
of Victorian roof top architecture,
we watch the clouds turning from red to grey
as if a great déjà-vu had taken control of our minds,
reminiscent of prophecy
written two decades ago, looking forward to death.
Do not worry, dear readers, we do not mean to die
just yet, though our death be necessary
as the passage of birds on the wing, or endless time.
Below us the thick hum of traffic tries our patience,
as if to say, ‘help your self only,
because helping others is the scourge of society.’
Now a moth has flown in through an open window,
bringing us back to a reality
where we shew the creature back into the night air.
Now only one creed speaks, despite all our efforts
at living kindly, and that is
you are not obliged to make sense, only to make love.
Being and Doing
What a to do over ‘to be,’ or, ‘to do.’
‘To be is to do,’ says Kant.
‘To do is to be,’ says Nietzsche.
To be sure, ‘We can not not be,’
any more than ‘We can not not do,’ –
both truths being told simultaneously.
You might find, then, there is nothing
much to do but ‘do-be-do-be-do.’
To be continued…
Poetry from Laurie Byro
A Fox as Fey Totem
For DH Lawrence
Why does the fox that divides the grass tempt me so?
Hasn’t the black whip of the snake hardened my heart?
Left behind, I seem to have a knack for abandonment.
A coven of vixen skulks from its den, stealthy and mad
as dreams. They are a brown crust of sleep that fades
into red-ribbon sunrise. These feral children summon
me; my soul is a dark forest. Like any forsaken creature,
I lap up my philosophy of blood. I have no conscience:
I seek out these scarlet whores as I name my unborn children.
And you, Fox about to disappear into mist, a red gash
of autumn still asleep on my chin. You have charmed me into
embracing my savage self. They call me the disciple of Rasputin,
the Godson of Caliban. Is love such a fiendish discipline: my beard,
pelt red, my dog’s head throbbing scandal, my heart drenched
in Holy wine? I am beguiled by sly brides. I have been reluctantly
corrupted.
Oh, to be surrounded by vixen in the seductive tapestry of trees.
I have not confessed my intent, nor left my warm bed
of dreams to meet them among a sentinel of fir. If you examine
my crooked heart, you shall see I am both beast and master,
gamekeeper and vixen, a rifle and a thieving fox.
Poetry from J.J. Campbell
the glorious sound
Poetry from Mahbub
Blows On Me For Stealing Some Money
Once I stole some money from my father’s pocket
It was long since I had done that
At one point my father came to know the matter
He caught me seriously to be a thief
I became nervous but I denied
When I denied he became more furious and dangerous to me
Suddenly at the time of speaking with him
He started to beat me
Again I told him I didn’t
But he couldn’t believe me
And nothing could make him believe
His blows on me over body and head
Took me to the world of death
He beat with sandals and sticks
With what he got beside him
At one time I was going to die
Suddenly I confessed I took the money
He stopped beating and with his burning eye
He warned me if I would do such kind of work
In the next time he would teach me more
That I’ll never forget
How can I forget the torment, my father, you rained on me?
It was not because I took the money for any serious purpose
Only to buy any toys according to my choice
But my father took it to be otherwise
And taught me a lesson to be remembered from time to time
In life.
The World To Me
This is the world
The world to me strictly as it is
Where we are played as a ball
Dance on the legs
Kicked to the goal posts
Directly enters into
Sometimes it is caught by the goal keepers
Sometimes the kick is missing
We are all played by the players of the world
Everybody wants to supersede on others
We perform our duty as subservient wearing the mask over
Trodden on and suppression
suffocating as well as severe humiliation
By our upper ranks and positions
It’s an uneven area
Where we fall down to walk
It’s not dark but more than dark condition
I’d not like to stay here any longer
I am a ball, not to be played
I’d like to shift the place
and want to live
Where love and beauty play
With the objects of nature.
Poetry from Michael Robinson
Saturday Night 2004
Slowly the camera follows me across the room,
Each movement that I make is watched.
If only I could have avoided those moments of insanity,
Those moments when it was the darkest in my life.
The nurses wear those white uniforms and smile,
Only if their smiles were real then I could smile back.
One Kiss 2004
She kisses his forehead and holds his cold hands,
Tears fall down his caramel colored cheek.

