Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (2024)


I had a lover's quarrel with the world - Robert Frost

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I'm sorry you got caught in the middle. - me

This poet’s words collect, arrange on a kaleidoscope spectrum. The experience of discovery through writing is the truest reward that has allowed me to grow and learn who/what I am — what other people get naturally, immediately, while I stomp around in it.

Been blessed, but pushing it — envelope, world and all inhabitants away. Push buttons, find boundaries to trip traps. No clue why cat curiosity, living in your dark. (Bored, perhaps?)

Now and then, push dirt out of this hole; someone/thing/entity might envision me how I need to be viewed (if I knew what that was). Cryptic, yes. Try living in my dark, find comfort amid strange, virtual, wonderful walls that tower above, tempt me to scale.

Been more than I could imagine or expect here. But, achievements aren’t going on a LinkedIn wall Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (1). I dig deeper than I should, often without forethought. Aimless words, brave or veiled cowardice, flinchingly flung, inadvertently hit targets? Get a ‘back off’ shoulder shot when asking your motivations here. Not fair?

No prize to eye; not incentivized. Dealt the worst two cards before the flop, do best with what’s in hand.

My Pluggers:
You are an icon here.Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (2)
You suffer, but you suffer brilliantly. Wow, what a great writer.Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (3)

It’s like plugging myself, but using other people’s (reviewers) words…Review of "Poetic Referendum(s) On Life"
Your poetic muse is on fire! Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (4) Some great emotion, well-balance(d), lovely lyrical qualities -- even the ones that were written out of sadness or anger came through in a clever cadence…It's obvious you've put a lot of work into each entry and the totality of the blog has eye appeal. Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (5)

Published four times with one a literary journal, including…Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (6) "The Tender Core (Sedona)"Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (7)
I don’t submit because it’s too much work. Truly alone, know no one cares to show they believe/support me. Lip service feeds delusion. I’ve seen a lot of smoldering and snow. Try not be cynical, work hard at openness and consideration — work, sooo…gut thing.

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (8) Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (9) Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (10) Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (11) Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (12)


Love my process constructing and sharing visions in words collected (no small task considering personal and physical limitations, see below).


August 28, 2006 this blog opened
Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (13)Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (14)

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (15)

BOOK

SuperNova Afterglow: End Of DaysPoetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (16) (18+)
All that remains: here in my afterlife as a 'mainstream' blogger, with what little I know.
#1300042 by Brian K Compton Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (17)Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (18)

No specific aim going forward (2014)

What I used to say: 'Maybe, I just don't get it. Watch me fumble with my version of reality, expose ignorance as truth. You don't have to get me, either. But, wish someone would explain me to myself.' Now I say: Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (19) Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (20) Now: I was such a whor*.

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (21)This is old….
What? Oh, this? A rhetorical, self-motivational speech I'm working on.
Don't just read the parts to construct your theory, as if to confirm (construed out of context) your opinion, mentally-stunted Neanderthal. Therapist wants me to be less negative toward myself. I see it as attacking, rather than being defensive. Fear I will chomp too many bullets unintentionally sent toward the unsuspecting.
If you can be triggered for stupid reasons, then I?
…just looked like me rolling around on the floor with myself.Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (22)

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (23) Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (24)


What Was NEW


Who am I, you ask? My mirror knows that question, repeated daily.

Just trying to create a little buzz, not boost my ego.

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (30)Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (31)
#amwriting #poetry #blog #contest #freeverse #award #bestpoetry #freyaridings #lyrics #music #video #YouTube

Can you believe it took this long for someone to put a quarter in me and push the button GET ANGRY?

Mud 4 My Eye: Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (32) Is that you, Poo? 💩 Secret Back Door

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (33)

Show Recent Comments

June 5, 2024 at 12:25am

June 5, 2024 at 12:25am

#1072169

The Red Canyon

Heat rises on a dust plain, distorts
wilt-flowers, the dry fauna fading.
My bones warm when your blooms reveal,
soul-heal each limb lit by refracted, amber light.

You offer a lotion-smoothed hand, place
inside a weathered mitt. Exactly
the way I remember the first night,
when you walked upon your father’s stoop.

Your gate, still easy. I lack amble function.
We walk the length of a solid porch. Our haven,
shade where we rock, glide side by side
in silence, in knowing, all though these years.

A moment arrives so perfect, I kiss you.
Any flashback since the day I was born
couldn’t compare, witnessing your arriving joy,
feel like the cicadas, tremor from invigorated rest.

You stand to refill our lemonade.
My hand brushes the soft underside
of your boot-cut denim. I beg, “Please,
don’t be long,” grinning like the boy.

With sunsets as red as wood-glow fire,
in our cayenne canyon of soaring rock,
no time lost in a vortex eternal.
Sky washes starry-black on the bedroom porch.

No lust for dinner tonight, wrapped in
silk linen. The sandalwood aroma drift
encircles cooling limbs entwined, when
I hear tender beating beneath breathing.

You cradle a tender man, soothed.
Stolen glances absorb calm of irises, color
sunrise, renew these pale eyes. Fuel,
the warmth of that hand, heating a soul's canyon.

-----------

6.5.24
32 lines, prose-free-verse
6.10.24 some major, hopeful final, edits.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Imagining that many years from now in dry heat of Arizona, I’ll put boots up, she’ll drop capri-wrapped sticks on top, to idle in our solitude. After all our years, having spoken all that need be said, transmissions eternally send between two sated hearts via the quieted souls.

-------------------------------------------------------------For pozzy hearts

Prompt: “They might have aged 50 years, but when they held (hands), those hands felt exactly like they did the first time.”

A much different take on a previous poem, to bring it further forward and into a retired life.


© Copyright 2024 Brian K Compton (UN: ripglaedr3 at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
Brian K Compton has granted Writing.Com, its affiliates and its syndicates non-exclusive rights to display this work.

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Printed from https://www.Writing.Com/main/profile/blog/ripglaedr3/day/6-5-2024

Poetic Referendum(s) On Life (Book) (2024)

FAQs

Is Arnold poetry a criticism of life? ›

To Arnold poetry itself was the criticism of life: 'The criticism of life under the conditions fixed for such criticism by the laws of poetic truth and poetic beauty', and in his seminal essay The Study of Poetry' 1888) he says that poetry alone can be our sustenance and stay in an era where religious beliefs are fast ...

What are the main concepts in Matthew Arnold's The Study of poetry? ›

Arnold's essay thus concerns itself with articulating a “high standard” and “strict judgment” in order to avoid the fallacy of valuing certain poems (and poets) too highly, and lays out a method for discerning only the best and therefore “classic” poets (as distinct from the description of writers of the ancient world) ...

What are the three estimates of poetry by Matthew Arnold? ›

Arnold describes three types of estimates used to evaluate poetry: the Real Estimate, which judges a work based solely on its artistic merit; the Historic Estimate, which overvalues a work due to the poet's historical context; and the Personal Estimate, which is swayed by personal biases towards contemporary poets.

What is the impersonal theory of poetry by TS Eliot in tradition and the individual talent? ›

Eliot's theory of impersonal poetry, which rejects the Romantic notion that poetry is an expression of the poet's personality. Eliot believed that poetry requires an objective tradition and complexity, rather than simplicity, to properly express modern civilization.

What religion was Matthew Arnold? ›

He was raised in a very liberal Anglican household, yet was heavily influenced by John Henry Newman, who was a very important figure in the church at the time. Arnold highly respected Newman, a conservative Catholic, for his spirituality, Arnold became an agnostic later in life.

How does Arnold define life? ›

Arnold explains 'criticism of life as a noble and profound application of moral idea to life. The greatness of poet lies in the same fact. Arnold means application of these moral ideas under the condition fixed for such criticism by the laws of poetic truth and poetic beauty.

What is the famous quote of Matthew Arnold? ›

Resolve to be thyself; and know that he, Who finds himself, loses his misery!

What is the historical fallacy of Matthew Arnold? ›

Concept. The idea that a critic can make erroneous interpretations of past works because of knowledge of subsequent events was first articulated by Matthew Arnold.

What is the personal fallacy of Arnold? ›

For Arnold, Burns is the best example of personal fallacy leading to a misleading assessment of poetic worth. He considers Burns' poems insufficiently bacchanalian since they lack the sincerity of this type of poetry. He finds bravado reflected in Burns' poetry which makes them insincere and unsound to him.

What are the two fallacies of poetic judgement according to Arnold? ›

'Personal Estimate' and 'Historic Estimate' are fallacious evaluations of poetry according to Matthew Arnold's 'The Study of Poetry'. Matthew Arnold (24 Dec 1822-15 April 1888) was an English poet and cultural critic.

What is a 3 sentence poem called? ›

A tercet is composed of three lines of poetry, forming a stanza or a complete poem.

What is charlatanism according to Arnold Schwarzenegger? ›

Charlatanism is for confusing or obliterating the distinctions between excellent and inferior, sound and unsound or only half - sound, true and untrue or only half - true. It is charlatanism, conscious or unconscious, whenever we confuse or obliterate these.

What is the touchstone method? ›

Arnold's touchstone method is a comparative method of criticism. According to this method, in order to judge a poet's work properly, a critic should compare it to passages taken from works of great masters of poetry, and that these passages should be applied as touchstones to other poetry.

What is T. S. Eliot's poetic theory? ›

The central point of T.S. Eliot's impersonal theory of poetry is that the poet, the man, and the poet, the artist are two different entities'. The poet has no personality of his own. He submerges his own personality, his own feeling, and experience into the personality and feelings of the subject of his poetry.

What according to Aristotle is poetry an imitation of? ›

Aristotle defines Poetry, the art of duplicating or representing life as a medium of imitation. Through imitation poet represents life either through action or character or emotion or through objects.

What is Arnold theory of criticism? ›

Mathew Arnold defines criticism as “A disinterested endeavor to learn and propagate the best that is known and thought of in the world, and thus to establish a current of fresh and true ideas.” The term 'disinterested' in the view of Arnold refers to being an impartial and just reader.

Whose view about poetry is poetry is the criticism of life? ›

Matthew Arnold, famous English poet and critic, had a peculiar perception that only the art of poetry has the worthiness to sustain a culture or civilization through its beauty and truth as he asserts, 'Poetry is the criticism of life' or in simple words, poetry deals with life and reflects life.

What was Arnold criticism of Wordsworth? ›

Matthew Arnold, an important Victorian social and literary critic, wrote of Wordsworth 'I, for one, must always listen to him with the profoundest respect'. However, he thought that ultimately, Wordsworth could never be a truly great and permanent poet of the stature that Coleridge had suggested he might be.

What is Arnold's definition of poetry? ›

Arnold defines poetry" as a criticism of life under the. Conditions fixed for such a criticism by the laws of poetic truth and poetic. beauty."

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