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Curious Foreigner
Curious Foreigner
Posts: 210

11/10/2013
A man clad in garments of obviously polythremian origin steps in front of the crowd.

"Friends, fellow writers and poets, spectators and of course Mister Pages, who provided this location we use for this gathering, welcome to Poetry Night!
Here we can read our newest works to impress the public and upstage our rivals. Here we shall exchange ART!"

His eyes get a mad look when he says the last word and his clothing begins to rustle excitedly, but soon he and his wardrobe have calmed down, and he continues.

"Before we begin, I would like to remind you that a warning is needed before reciting works including Correspondence sigils. I doubt anyone here would want to see them, let alone hear their spoken form. Everything else is fair game, though. I shall begin."


With this, the man pulls a scroll out of his pocket, unrolls it and begins to declaim.



"The Duel


On rooftops high, in streets below
A pair of duelists fights,
With blackest ribbons in their tow
They find truest delights.
Exchange their blows, are caught within
A martial, deadly dance,
One yearns for death, one for the win,
Both strive for dominance.

She hails from east, her eyes are slant,
Her hair of darkest black.
It’s unknown why she left her land
Or why she won’t go back.
He is not native to the Neath
But came from surface bright.
He died, so he shall never leave
To once more see the light.

Their blades, they cross, their wills, they clash,
Their speed increases fast.
They run and strike, evade and dash,
But this can never last.
For while he’s quick and strong and smart
He’s more than even matched.
So deep inside his cunning heart
A desperate plan is hatched.

While her next strike his earlobe clips
His swipe goes far amiss.
Instead he plants upon her lips
A long, passionate kiss.
But while he planned to kill her dead
While she’s distracted still
He realizes with rising dread
He won’t go for the kill.

And for a moment, all is well.
They do not move an inch
And when she stabs him in the heart
He does not even flinch.
He dies, he falls, she waits, then flees
Later he wakes, still sore
But what the true conundrum is
Who does regret it more?"


He takes a deep breath while the audience applauds.
"Well", he says, "Who's next?"

edited by Curious Foreigner on 11/10/2013

--
Cochimetl went North, and beyond. No poems, only candlelight now. (Well, maybe one poem.)
The Gun-Toting Gallivanter, after an extended absence, is back in London again.
+10 link
Sherman Jones
Sherman Jones
Posts: 151

11/26/2013
Sherman clapped with the crowd, and then stepped forward. "I have no illusions that I can upstage that, but I shall provide a short poem of my own."

"Clickity-clickity clack
Sorrow-spiders up the back
Feel the bite, chest gets tight
Chess with the Boatman for the rest of the night."
edited by Sherman Jones on 11/26/2013

--
My mantelpiece is an open book.
http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/Sherman~Jones
+9 link
Curious Foreigner
Curious Foreigner
Posts: 210

12/30/2013
After the applause has set, the opening speaker steps forward again. He carries another scroll, which is slightly dripping.

"Thank you for the delightful poem. It puts a situation in words that we all know all too well, I think. Let me add to that with a poem inspired by my time in Flute Street."



"Sonnet on the mentality of Flukes

The Flukes regard mankind / and its technology
Our language and our art, / the way we think and dream
(but more so the machine / propelled by heat and steam)
With admiration and / a sense of childlike glee.

They wish to emulate, / to copy our success
To build and to improve / their kingdom deep and damp
To let their amber be / civilisation’s lamp.
So envoys they create, / and up above they press.

But visionary Flukes / still lack important things
Like voices, hands and thoughts / they cannot hope to grasp,
Concepts like hate and pain / and stones upon a face.

Yet patient they just take / what rubbery-kind brings.
And when the cities fall / with one great, final gasp,
Their time will come, and they / will inherit our place."


After the last verse ends, he bows to the spectators, and makes room for the next artist.

--
Cochimetl went North, and beyond. No poems, only candlelight now. (Well, maybe one poem.)
The Gun-Toting Gallivanter, after an extended absence, is back in London again.
+4 link
Riley37
Riley37
Posts: 125

12/30/2013
Poetry Masters
Five cities, seven total
London: just one beat?

  • edited by Riley37 on 12/30/2013

  • edited by Riley37 on 12/30/2013
  • +5 link
    narcissus_echo
    narcissus_echo
    Posts: 65

    1/8/2014
    Narciso steps up with a grin and a flourish. "Oh, I've just the thing. A verse for every walk of London life -- it's better sung, of course, over a pint or six of mushroom ale, but I can manage a recital --

    "She was only a Rat-Catcher’s daughter
    And I met her on Watchmaker’s Hill
    When I saw her I squeaked and I scurried
    She went straight in for the kill
    She tackled me by the toadstools
    Where the moonish light was pale
    She was only a Rat-Catcher’s daughter
    But soon she had me by the tail


    "She was only a Conjurer’s daughter
    And we met at Mahogany Hall
    We kissed behind the curtains
    Sharing secrets that would appall
    She brought out the scarves, then the handcuffs
    And employed them without one mistake
    She was only a Conjurer’s daughter
    But she sure could charm a man’s snake


    "She was only a Correspondent’s daughter
    I found her in the Quarter forgot
    She showed me the sigil for willing flesh
    And the price of a city long bought
    When she spoke of orbiting bodies
    Her meaning was plain to discern
    She was only a Correspondent’s daughter
    But she knew how to make a lad burn."

    --
    a Shiny Pleasant Person who's not often covered in blood
    and the Second-Most Hedonistic Individual in London.
    DeepDarkMarvellous.
    +8 link
    The Black-Shirted Radical
    The Black-Shirted Radical
    Posts: 188

    9/1/2015
    A poem compiled by the poet, playwright and all-around demagogue known, loved and despised as The Black-Shirted Radical in the aftermath of a riot he started at the Wolfstack Docks.

    "When first I cam down to London
    In the year of eighteen ninety three
    The city was quite wonderful
    And the enterprise quite free
    But the Neddies got suspicious
    And they soon gave me the knock
    I was beaten for talking to a fellow
    Down at the Wolfstack Docks


    Well next day by the Spider Pits
    I raised up quite a stir
    My Populists got busy
    And called Mr Fires a cur
    Well he purred "Why have you come here
    to throw a spanner in my machine?"
    I replied"Your worker should be getting
    A lot more of the green!"


    The Master murmurs to myself
    "I shall not acquiesce!
    To undermine your movement
    I will spurn every break and rest!
    Eighty hours a week is the new law
    And they better well comply
    Or the moss between the cobblestones
    Will have blood as its dye"


    I would not accept this insult
    To the people of the land
    And for the Master's part
    He rejected me out of hand
    And so an impasse soon developed
    My Populists grew rather bored
    And so implied a Neddie's mother
    Was a woman who often whored.


    Then a fistfight soon developed
    And the talks came to a close
    What my followers accomplished
    Is ill-suited to my prose
    I shall instead note quite politely
    We gave the Neddies an awful shock
    And we flung them into the water
    Of the greasy Wolfstack docks!

    --
    Poet of once distinguished acclaim.Apprentice alcoholic. Somewhere to the right of Attila the Hun. Radical politician, playwright, duelist, archaeologist,Correspondence professor,criminal mastermind, Commander of the Auxiliary Constabulary, Leader of the League of National Populists, former Governor of Port Carnelion . Rude, crude and scandalous to know.

    Plot his lynching at http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/The~Black-Shirted~Radical
    +2 link
    Sestina Valdis
    Sestina Valdis
    Posts: 210

    10/5/2015
    "My dears, if you would be so kind, may I please go next? I have a villanelle to share: one that has not been published yet. I wrote it just last night, after having a small bit of honey. When I made it back to my bedroom, I felt peculiarly guilty... Well, in any case..."

    "They claim that London's darkness does oppress
    Those shade-burnt souls who crave the light of day.
    Yet still, the people find their happiness

    Among the bustling, hustling, human mess
    That churns like blood upon the Elder Bay.
    They claim that London's darkness does oppress

    That lady of the night. Undress her dress
    That screams as seams and fingers tear and fray!
    Yet still, the people find their happiness.

    A Rubbery Man, who squelches for redress,
    Whose voice costs much. Still, amber's cheap today!
    They claim that London's darkness does oppress

    The servant-- Clay. He watches them play chess.
    Their "Thank You"s are more orders flung his way,
    Yet, still, his people find their happiness

    Because of how a friend's distress can bless
    Those people who ignore the price they pay.
    They claim that London's darkness does oppress,
    Yet, still, her people find, there, happiness..."

    "Thank you."

    She looks down at the floorboards, uncharacteristically quiet, and descends from the stage gingerly without waiting to see the audience's reaction. Peculiar...
    edited by Sestina Valdis on 10/5/2015; adjusted punctuation and line breaks
    edited by Sestina Valdis on 10/5/2015; adjusted word choice (I edit too much. I am fussy...)
    edited by Sestina Valdis on 10/5/2015

    --
    Sestina Valdis, the Saccharine Satirist.
    Appearance and Misc. Accoutrements
    A Past Scattered Across Discarded Stockings

    Fei Xue, the Artful Assassin.
    Self

    Edward de Riere, the Barebones Baron.

    Avatar by Daniel Ilinca.
    +3 link
    malthaussen
    malthaussen
    Posts: 1060

    10/7/2015
    I'd considered starting a haiku thread, but perhaps a small addition to this one would serve the same purpose, although I dread to intrude in the presence of such scribes as ye be.

    Lantern wrapped in mist
    A dog howls in the gaslight
    London autumn night

    -- Mal

    --
    "Of two choices, I always take the third."
    Will do all socials except Loitering or Private Evenings (all my Free Evenings are accounted for), and Affluent Photographer Betrayals only, please. I am not currently accepting calling cards.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/malthaussen
    +3 link
    Saravina Vorcast
    Saravina Vorcast
    Posts: 30

    10/7/2015
    Vera cleared her throat with a wide grin. "Excellent poems darlings! But now for mine to debut, and keep in mind this is a song!"

    "Tonight it's a full moon,
    tomorrow will be waning.
    Watch as the moon pearl change.

    Tonight it's a half moon,
    tomorrow will be a crescent.
    Watch all of the moon pearls change.

    We wish to see the true moon, and the stars as well,
    but down here in the deep dark Neath, we will just have to make do."

    --
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/profile/doctor~rosanburg
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/profile/vira~mandrake
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/profile/devious~dolorosa

    My little ladies, feel free to send calling cards!
    +1 link
    Aurel Faine
    Aurel Faine
    Posts: 29

    10/7/2015
    A woman walks up to the stage, her posture stiff and her skin pale. She bows grandly and starts her poem.

    "When I was just a little child,
    I heard that wishes do come true.
    That love means just as much,
    as who you are and what you do.
    I heard that money doesn't matter,
    It's the person that we are
    and goodness is the only thing,
    that makes a shooting star.
    Yes, now I am much older
    but I am very young still.
    I cannot sit around at home,
    I have no time to mill.
    I learned, now that I'm older,
    that stars aren't made of purest light.
    I've learnt that passion true
    is not what guides most people's sight.

    My mother, she died early,
    that's when I realized that stars
    are not made from goodness,
    but from space rock just like Mars.
    I came down to the Neath
    because I was scared of my old life,
    I wanted to be 2 again,
    when my mother was a wife.
    I want to be a child again,
    to see the world from different eyes,
    from one who doesn't realize
    that most grow, and live, and die.
    From one who never fears
    what lurks beneath, what lurks below.
    from one whom which goodness
    was all they knew, is what they know."

    --
    Across the street you can barely make out a woman, she flashes a strange grin at you, her goggles alive in the night.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/Concede
    0 link
    malthaussen
    malthaussen
    Posts: 1060

    10/10/2015
    Inspired by my new-found friend in Fallen London, the perfect revenge:

    "On the Sestina"


    It need not rhyme, I'm told
    Which takes a load off my mind!
    Though I can scribe a cunning verse
    When need calls. Still, I favor freedom
    The chains of structure are troublous to me
    No doubt because I strive to be too clever.

    But I shall put that from my mind
    Though it may seem to wit I am averse;
    And think, instead, how I may find freedom
    Within constraints that challenge me.
    Although a "moon" or "June" would be more clever
    I'll struggle on until the tale of Six is told.

    I'll cheat as needed, for no universe
    Is quite complete without the sweets of freedom.
    As another, greater poet said, no chains can bind me
    Although in durance hurled for being too clever.
    And though this form is daunting, as is told
    I'll seek to give a glimpse into my mind.

    This I may do with freedom,
    For indeed, I care not what you make of me.
    Although the crowd may think me dim or clever
    I pay no heed to what I have been told:
    Laugh as you list, I surely will not mind.
    Although a plaint about the form must seem perverse.

    One might observe it ill-becomes me
    And is in fact the opposite of clever
    To criticize the form in which is told
    The struggle carried on within the mind
    In search of what should be a pretty verse.
    'Tis arrogance which I confuse with freedom.

    Who says this proves himself too clever
    For my retort, for truth be told
    My wit lies solely in my mind.
    And though I may indite a little verse
    Because the art of Poesy is of freedom
    A drunken Clayman in a test would best me.


    So, I would crave you pay no mind to me
    Or celebrate the freedom of this verse.
    It may be clever, it may be bold, but whatever it is, it has been told.

    -- Mal

    --
    "Of two choices, I always take the third."
    Will do all socials except Loitering or Private Evenings (all my Free Evenings are accounted for), and Affluent Photographer Betrayals only, please. I am not currently accepting calling cards.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/malthaussen
    +2 link
    Lady Sapho Byron
    Lady Sapho Byron
    Posts: 770

    10/10/2015
    Drownie Song

    Depths are dark, but not so cold--
    Winter ice bites more.
    (do you remember it?)

    It hurts at first, the lacking air--
    Failing life is bitter.
    (lungs remember breathing)

    Water rushes in, a final breath
    Unbreathing
    (all loves undone are remembered)

    Until pain on pain compounding
    Burns any remembering

    Then

    Death, but not dying
    Life, but not living
    (I cannot remember smiling)

    Numbness, always a dull ache,
    Enfolds me
    (I cannot remember laughing)

    Unshed tears are not unfelt--
    Existence is not worthwhile

    Because I can remember loving

    --
    http://fallenlondon.com/Profile/Lady%20Sapho%20L%20Byron
    Fighting the Menace of Corsetry Since 1892.
    +3 link
    malthaussen
    malthaussen
    Posts: 1060

    10/13/2015
    A gazetteer of London's starting areas, in haiku:

    On Watchmaker's Hill
    Claymen labour, fly men hunt
    The Cheery Man waits.

    The rooftops of Spite
    Fisher-Kings toss out their lines
    "'Ere, Mate, where's your 'at?"

    Actors and authors
    Honey and debauchery
    Veils in the Garden.

    Copper walks his beat
    Curate scribes sermon at night
    Ladybones tattoo.


    -- Mal
    edited by malthaussen on 10/13/2015

    --
    "Of two choices, I always take the third."
    Will do all socials except Loitering or Private Evenings (all my Free Evenings are accounted for), and Affluent Photographer Betrayals only, please. I am not currently accepting calling cards.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/malthaussen
    0 link
    malthaussen
    malthaussen
    Posts: 1060

    10/14/2015
    "Intimations of Mortality"

    "I'm different," you say, and Somebody laughs.
    Are we not all different to ourselves?
    We are fleshy dice to be rolled in the cup
    Of a whimsical god.

    No power over others can possibly match
    The power Fate holds over us.
    It will take all that we value
    And shatter it into dust.

    In the blink of an eye, oh "different" one,
    It will cripple, or maim, or kill.
    It will laugh at your love,
    Sneer at your tears,
    And make a mockery of your will.

    Want to see "fear in a handful of dust?"
    Then look in a mirror, my child.
    For we are all a handful of dust
    And fear is our birthright.

    Titter inside your Darkness, children:
    You'll find real darkness soon enough.


    --
    Mal

    --
    "Of two choices, I always take the third."
    Will do all socials except Loitering or Private Evenings (all my Free Evenings are accounted for), and Affluent Photographer Betrayals only, please. I am not currently accepting calling cards.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/malthaussen
    +1 link
    malthaussen
    malthaussen
    Posts: 1060

    10/26/2015
    At the risk of hijacking this thread to be my own personal chapbook, I offer another haiku, inspired as I was taking a muddy splash through the Row:

    I laugh when it rains
    And my grey mare takes the reins.
    Mother Nature reigns.

    -- Mal

    --
    "Of two choices, I always take the third."
    Will do all socials except Loitering or Private Evenings (all my Free Evenings are accounted for), and Affluent Photographer Betrayals only, please. I am not currently accepting calling cards.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/malthaussen
    +2 link
    Erhannis
    Erhannis
    Posts: 2

    10/29/2015
    As the final words of the haiku die, the procession of poetry is disturbed by the approach of an oblivious cluster of Hallowmas carolers. Many in the crowd send blistering glares at the intruders for interrupting their artistry, but they are quite absorbed in their show of Hallowmas spirit, and continue their clamorous walk.

    Thrice for the eldest one,
    thrice for the rats -
    thrice for the Masters' share,
    whispered to the bats;
    thrice for the Rubb'ry Man,
    knocking at your door,
    thrice for the dead and gone,
    at their work once more.

    (https://soundcloud.com/erhannis/thrice-for-the-dead)

    As the procession weaves into the silent distance, the disgruntled poetry enthusiasts make a show of clearing their throats and checking their pocket-watches, before resuming as though nothing had happened.
    +4 link
    Michile
    Michile
    Posts: 44

    10/29/2015
    A petite young lady with long black hair steps up to the podium. She clears her throat nervously, and recites:

    "A Thought for Mr Khayyam"

    The poet Omar wanted only
    Wine, a loaf, and thou
    To satisfy his hungers
    Amidst the endless Now.

    But he's a guy, and
    Maybe love is not enough for him.
    Perhaps he needs distractions
    Before he can begin.

    But I will lay me down with you
    Wherever we may be.
    And drink intoxication from
    The everlasting We.

    She smiles pertly at the audience and steps aside to make way for the next poet.

    --
    "Be the change you want to see in the world."
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/Michile
    +2 link
    Sestina Valdis
    Sestina Valdis
    Posts: 210

    10/30/2015
    Michile wrote:

    And drink intoxication from
    The everlasting We.



    The poem is good, but I think these closing lines in particular are fantastic. Bravo!

    --
    Sestina Valdis, the Saccharine Satirist.
    Appearance and Misc. Accoutrements
    A Past Scattered Across Discarded Stockings

    Fei Xue, the Artful Assassin.
    Self

    Edward de Riere, the Barebones Baron.

    Avatar by Daniel Ilinca.
    0 link
    malthaussen
    malthaussen
    Posts: 1060

    11/11/2015
    My own feeble offering for 11/11

    "Over the Top"

    On snowy fields my comrades lie
    Sodden scarlet where they fall.
    So proud to heed their country's call!
    And prouder still to die.

    Through shot and shell with hearty cry
    My brothers pressed their breasts.
    To die beneath machine-gun nests
    As drumfire lit the Winter sky.

    Their debt is paid, those brave young men
    Who came so far to die.
    To serve some politician's lie
    To charge, and fall, and charge again.

    They fought and died, and cared not why:
    To them, we owe a debt.
    We cannot pay, at least not yet
    But someday we may try.

    -- Mal
    edited by malthaussen on 11/11/2015

    --
    "Of two choices, I always take the third."
    Will do all socials except Loitering or Private Evenings (all my Free Evenings are accounted for), and Affluent Photographer Betrayals only, please. I am not currently accepting calling cards.
    http://fallenlondon.storynexus.com/Profile/malthaussen
    +1 link
    Sestina Valdis
    Sestina Valdis
    Posts: 210

    11/11/2015
    Bravo, Mal! That was riveting, raw and, for once, not raucous! Powerful war poetry suits you, I think. Bravo!

    I wrote this one recently... I do not usually favour free verse, as a rule, but the lines almost seem as if they came to me in a dream... ((That was me speaking in-character, of course... Uh, it's difficult to rationalise this in FL's universe, since a lot of the concepts don't exist yet...))

    Poetry Makes Nothing Happen
    Poetry makes nothing
    Happen.
    It simply happens
    That there are no
    Words that flow in clear rivers of metaphor.
    Verse will not cloud our children’s
    Minds, figuratively, with sediment.
    In-verse-ly, words are simply on the line.
    Yes, words are on the line.

    There is no 3D imagery to be had on paper.
    Words are just
    Two-dimensional, with
    Length and breadth but no literal depth.
    These words are not trains of thought
    Chugging along the margins of society.
    Words are not vessels to be filled
    With the riches of meaning.
    They are just empty chests
    With air winding in and out.
    But, no! They do not travel.
    That’s just de-meaning:
    Unto word, violence.

    Words are markings on the page,
    But not, I mean, of the territorial sort.
    They are not scent in an envelope,
    Nor an aftertaste that lingers in the air
    Like a gray, cloudy haze.
    Let me try again.
    I see words as black and white
    Scratchings on the page; no.
    Words are not…
    Let me try again.
    The words are words. Yes.
    Words are just
    When they just are.

    Poetry does not move.
    So, I hope that you will take a hike—
    I mean, literally.
    This is not figurative:
    I hope that you will not get lost
    In metaphor, but literally
    Get lost in a disorienting death sentence
    That you have written into
    The lines on your own palm,
    And while you are writing this wrong,
    Pumping out an inkling of meaning,
    (Your pen is
    Leaking) come hither,
    Don’t wither
    Or look blank like the page.
    Tell me, simply,
    That your words are just
    Words.

    ((The title is a line from W.H. Auden's "In Memory of W.B. Yeats." Auden hasn't been born yet in FL's universe, but oh well. Uh. Retcon? Heh.))
    edited by Sestina Valdis on 11/11/2015
    edited by Sestina Valdis on 11/11/2015

    --
    Sestina Valdis, the Saccharine Satirist.
    Appearance and Misc. Accoutrements
    A Past Scattered Across Discarded Stockings

    Fei Xue, the Artful Assassin.
    Self

    Edward de Riere, the Barebones Baron.

    Avatar by Daniel Ilinca.
    +2 link
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