Freedom Steak by B. K. Neifert Copyright © 2023 B. K. Neifert All rights reserved. DEDICATION This book is dedicated to every idiot out there, who thinks there are right and wrong answers. So a flower blooms in winter by a lack of summer rains, does a child bloom prematurely by a lack of parental love. Of Yu Chinese flood, the seed of man floats Upon the wooden beams and trash, Debris swept through global currents. Gun,---mortal god slain!---Yu's father Rages at The Supreme God's choice To destroy mankind. Yu, the Loong, Appears, to quell the Great Flood's wrath. A Global Flood myth, said to rage For over twenty years, and the Loong Is the one who saves mankind, in Rage at the Supreme Deity For causing the world to die. Understand our enemy. In Chinese mythology The Dragon saves man from Yah. Yet, in Chinese History The Child saves man from Yu. The dark parable of the Dragon and Lion Where the Lion wages war with the Gold Dragon To become the child; it says it is the Loong Of Thou Shalt, that is warred with by the Lion's fang. Yet, this myth clearly shows, it is not that Loong who The Lion wars with, but rather the Golden, Yu. And then, by warring with the rebel we become Like the child, guitless, merciful, unable To know Sin, which is another auld name of Yu. Pyramids The reason there are pyramids On different continents, Is the same reason there are sleds And feathered arrows On different continents. It is not a conspiracy Of an ancient, Aryan civilization Which academia is hiding. It is because what's possible Will always produce similar structures Of Logos. Bertrand Russell Good is independent of God. Yet, Good requires God's judgment to be understood. Just like God's judgment is necessary To judge the world and all of its cruelty. And also to reward all of those who are good. Jesus' teachings--including hell-- Are perfect and unerring. Without belief in Jesus, there is no knowledge of good. There is no knowledge period, if Christ's words are not taken. As, all things come into doubt without faith. Even the universe, even gender, even good and evil. All things must be sustained on a kernel of faith That it is so. God gave this world over to the devil To rule as a Monarch for a time. In the cosmological scheme, There are still Christians alive From the days of Christ--- Surely you know that. They can live one hundred years And still be alive to see Christ's return As time, Bertrand, Is not linear. We all experience this life at once As the earth and heavens shake, And the cursed figs that would not sprout--- Because it was not in season--- Does not Christ control the seas? Yet the tree would not obey him, Just like the people of Israel. Thus, they were cursed, for having Rejected Him, even though it was not in season. Christ calls Himself "Rabbi". Why is this? Because He is our teacher. He is, in a Postmodern sense, The lens which gives us twenty-twenty vision And lets us see clearly in the dark; And if color blind, he even gives us our color vision--- As science has corrected that through glasses. He is a perfect lens. I do believe some true part of you has survived; And what is famous of you is a folkstem; A liar. I believe some part of you survived And your soul, much like mine, is travelling In this infinite expanse of times and universes. Somewhere, maybe perhaps we will meet; But your arguments are all the same tired ones I've heard. I've prepared for all of them And this is a cursed time we live in. Which is why suffering is greater than peace. Throughout all time and space The entire worlds are quaking and thundering Under the war being fought by Michael and Lucifer. God's holy angels have cast the demons to the Earth--- It is our job to patiently bear this with endurance, And obtain our crown. Even if it means abandoning everything, Life, home, wife, child, father, mother, brother, sister, Husband, land, fame, fortune... Because there is evil and it must be destroyed permanently. If not, there will never be an end to the suffering Young Lion Satan wanders like a fanged, Young Lion Searching for his prey to rip asunder. A Lion, without his Pride of Consorts Will form a wandering band of brigands,--- Mangy, sodomizing one another Because they cannot provide for females. They wander in packs, ripping apart their Prey, devouring men in their bloody Paths; no dignity; unmariable; Broken; bloody jowled and so murderous; Stealing nourishment from other creatures. God is Love God is love. God is peace. God is faith. God is righteousness. God is joy. Only through the Holy Spirit Can we possess these things. The statement always made sense to me. That these things are the evidences for God. Wherever there is true love, There is God's force emollient within the heart and mind. It has grown so cold, as of late, Not many remember it, nor know what it is. But I do. The Atheist at Texas Hold Em' I sit across from a Christian. We're playing Texas Hold Em. My cards are dealt. I get dealt a Jack of Clubs and a Queen of Spades. My partner bets the big blind; I ante in. The flop gets played, A Jack, Ace and Ten of hearts. I see my jack pairs well. But he couldn't have the flush. Because he bets cautiously, Exposing he doesn't have the hand. I cautiously meet his bet; But I don't raise it. Next comes the fourth street And I see a queen of diamonds Is played. I'm one away from a full house, But have two pair. He doesn't bet--- So, I raise him with half my chips. He has a tell that he's lost... But, goes in. "The fool." Then, the queen of clubs is the river. He again, doesn't bet. I without hesitation go all in. "I'm all in on a loser, who probably has a flush." The pot is settled, We show our hands. He reveals the Queen and King of Hearts; A royal flush. "He had it from the beginning; "How didn't I see it?" American Stonehenge Someone took a pipe bomb And blew up those damn stones. Good riddance. I would have done it myself; In fact, I had plans to do it. Those same people censor me Why not blow their garbage philosophy to hell? I saw some jeeps driving down the road; About four of them in a row. Do you know what I saw? I saw peace. I saw the modern Horse and Buggy And since civilization is so spread out We need something gas powered to get us around. There was a sort of peace, As I rolled up the hill, and down it, Watching the Amazon Employee Drive to work in an old Corolla. I then realized they decided To decommission about a zillion vehicles In the "Cash for Clunkers" Program. Meaning... people won't have Old Corollas to drive to Amazon. They'll have new, fancy cars, If a car at all. And work, of course, will be for the privileged. Not for everyone... Instead of work, you'll be at home, Making your stipend, And living off the roach feces And ant colonies in the spring. I realized, they censor me. Why not blow their little plan to hell? I'd like to see them strung up by their big toes And whacked like pinatas. I hope Elon Musk makes a rocket ship And they all just, blast away, If they find our little blue sphere a bother. And on they go, like that Steve Miller Song, And the world will be rid of a couple of griping Old billionaire fools, who did nothing good anyway. Since they like Ayn Rand so much, John Galt can go to Mars for all I care. The rest of us will fare without them. Without their dumb laws and hindrance to our freedom. It wouldn't solve all the issues... There'd just be another set of bratty billionaires after them And they, too, could fuck off when the world got sick of them. We don't want their feudalism, communism, Or any of it. Just make our Stoves and Canned Soups... We don't need your plans for a "Better World." William Sidis His major theory, Simplified for you, Is that life reverses the Law of Thermodynamics. It seems to be true, As looking over his work It was dazzling to me How Non Compos Mentis it was. How unconnected; Also, how illogical. But, then I thought about Why one would say Life, in the universe, Reverses the Laws of Thermodynamics. I thought of Evolution... How, life is one of the only Things in existence Where we observe complexity and growth Over time, and not degradation. A white floret, with five petals and a honeysuckle scent Turns into the awesome folds and delicious perfume Of a magenta rose. I then thought of Greensaling, How Nigeria uses FMNR To make lush what was once deserts. I remember the Texan who Managed to replenish ground water Just by planting grass And removing Cedars. It became clear to me, That what Sidis was trying to say, Although going around in circles And hypothesizing on outlandish physics, Was the simple observation that Life Replenishes, and reverses the decay We'd normally associate with the Second Law of Thermodynamics. I realized it was a romantic thought Not based entirely on speculation... And the experimentation Is being done all over the world right now Where entire deserts are being reforested And entire barren landscapes are now becoming lush again. What I then realized, Was that if this were true, It would prove the existence of God. As, if life does indeed Transform what is dead, and make it alive, Then there must be a force Greater than science And our decaying universe. The Exodus One of the best ways to know the Exodus was real Is that it was almost unilaterally resisted By the people. Any man writing fiction Who wished to indoctrinate and make servile His audience, wouldn't have included a critical story About how people would wander for forty years In a desert, and at every turn resist the leader God appointed to them. They'd rather, be like Muhammad writing his book, And make everything glorious victories. Rather, you get a sense of the reality, that anyone lost In a wilderness for forty years would be bound to frustration and doubt. And at the last, seeing Moses held his position through it all, Is the greatest miracle, that only God could stop those people from deposing him. American Elegy By name America lives Only by name. Spies enter into the homes of innocent men, And take their books, And change them. They make Edna St. Vincent the author of "First Fig". Several months earlier, it was another author's name. I had read the poem... Is it the same for you? Are these tools of ignorance A weapon used against me only Or is it the altering of the very fabric of history? Is it a lie of narratives Which some day, my American Myth really will be a myth That nobody believes like Jesus Or the Global flood? President Bush, do you condone this behavior? You say, "That's not real?" Then why do they feed me with it? A host of actors playing a role And none of us know whether it's real or not. Or, is it only me? Am I the one being fed? I try to write America's Magnum Opus, The complete history, But am unable. I do not trust my sources As your spies have entered into my home And stole my books, And committed plagiarism by publishing False titles under Fall River's Press. Or, is Edna St. Vincent the actual author of First Fig? The Red Wheelbarrow used to be in my book, Now it's replaced by "Queen Ann's Lace." Did William Carlos Williams write this poem? I don't know. And for that, America, I write your elegy. Your freedom is gone, For this one man's freedom is gone. The freedom to have truth, And share a common story. For, I know not the truth, Only that I have been severely scorned. America, goodbye. You were a shining beacon on a hill. Now you're no better than China. My POV Here is what I tell Atheists: Good is a force which is inherent And immutable and not conditioned to a man's personal beliefs. Evil, as well, is inherent, and not conditioned to a man's personal beliefs. Life is vain, and isn't where the focus should be. I am a life, breathed into by God, And when that life is gone, I go. I have choice, but God already knows the intimate details of my choices, And has awarded me grace based on that omniscience. I believe in God because of science. I believe the Old Testament was God telling man to save himself, And now that man failed, God has promised to save us; This means we ignore the Old Testament's laws completely. I believe love is an inherent spiritual force, along with joy and peace, Which flows from divine Paraclete, and is the best evidence for God's existence. I think life's meaning is to fully devote oneself to understanding Love, So, therefore, learn to love God and their Neighbor. I cannot accept the atheist point of view. Atheist POV What every atheist I'd ever talked to said: "I understand good, "Though I don't actually believe good exists. "To me, good is just what benefits people. "And evil is just what harms people. "Life is meaningless, "All I am, is a chemical reaction of firing neurons, "Which produce all my decisions and beliefs "And also the environmental conditioning which made me. "I do not believe in God, "Because science disproves God's existence. "I believe the Bible is immoral because it condones Genocide and Slavery. "I believe love is different for every person, "And is just a euphoria created by our endocrine system. “Homosexuality doesn't hurt anyone, “And God saying it is wrong offends me. "Life's meaning is whatever we make it.” Does this sum up your position, Atheists? Iron Ore Can't fertilize the ocean with iron. Rust is poisonous to fish. A Fox There is nothing more despicable than a fox. A gnarly haired, weasely fox. It goes from place to place, wandering Until it finds a nice little grove Where all the meeker animals are at rest. There, the animals are at rest, And frolic on the knolls, will linger By the human legs which wander nigh. Then, the fox sees this, with belly growling And it decides to disturb the years of peace By picking off the little ones. Then the meek ones. Then the plump ones. Birds, rabbits, squirrels, chipmunks. All the nice little animals which before, Like the little chickadee which nearly perched on my sandal It eats them. And the animals, restless, stir from their holes And no longer linger by the travelers foot. Never having known danger, The meek little mild bunnies die With wounds in their sides, Half eaten. To be thrown into the garbage can. And one Fox does this, and when the habitat is disturbed, And restless, and scared, it is happy So it moves to the next pleasant forest, And there, does its murderous spree once again. The Freemasons He joined the masons to find the truth. He joined to find his selfish verity. Around, around, around he went, bloody bib And found a thousand fairy tales. Myths were told, and some old Ghost Stories, While they pondered on geometry. What ended was his self made religion A god of worlds, he created his mind... A thousand neural pathways linked, He filled his head with fairytales, And at the end, he died not knowing What a Mason even was. Alex Jones "Alex Jones is a madman," They painted him as a bad man, Yet I must confess that in his words Were some truth. He was wrong about the shooting, He was wrong about the spooking Of CIA planes hitting our twin towers. Yet, if he were not right I say, I'll eat a pile of rice and pray With my curry and my ginger And some salt. I'll eat and drink and be merry. But Alex Jones, a Canary Is pressed by Beatty that sleazy Court-Lawyer, fool and slime. Like Bradbury had spoken, That fool who hates talk is a broken Government with kerosene and fire. Ol Beatty will live unspoken, A dumb man who has broken, Ol Alex Jones' spirit can you say? For we are allowed to be wrong We can see and sing our dumb songs We can't be sued for what we truly believed. Alex, live unbroken, Get a fine lawyer And use that token To fully defend our free speech. Nonsense Poem From a Dream I beheld a man who claimed to be a Woman; lofty were her eyes, with my auld Grandmother there. "She is my grandma, too." In Jotunheim, thou did call me a "god"? And told me that you talked to me about Racial purity; how the Germans were Actually Jews. That day you hypnotized Me. You tried to kill me twice; you fooled them But not me. You stole my dog and my work. You spoke through Jacob, saying I copied Thou, but I did not; yet Jacob said I Am not bad, as I listened to sermons Where the LORD said to me, I, Israel, "I won't give my glory to another.." In my dreams a bunny and Scruffy would Cuddle with you, yet all my delusions Were sprung upon you in that instant. A Rabbit nestled with you; oh so gently. Scruffy was there, too, as the men in masks Came, with auld family who have since now passed. I awoke with peace this morning, knowing That you were but a nightmare, far away. You are imposters. Both of you. Selah. On Judgment In prosaic verse allayed, Southey talks of Perpetual motion--- I know not where, but at some time it existed--- As poet Laureate, he attacked free speech. He rails against men whose verse is sublime--- Don Juan, were you not seduced By many? My member is dry And my morsels stolen. Are you insane, Robert? I've read your poetry--- I've defended it, though I know not why. You call forth a vision and place a Tyrant in heaven? Meanwhile, Byron writes of St. Peter's rusty keys? You called forth that attack, Not I! For, I am a defender of free speech. I am speech's solemn knight, Saying this sacred right fends off the most fierce tyrants. Perhaps, my love, thou art Maddok--- Making love with many women, Fending off and aggravating freedom of speech, A slave to kings---I am a free man! Do I prescribe rules against free speech? Do I say Byron is not allowed to write? I love his verse, for it is prophecy. Yet do the prophets err? For many men have entered heaven. I now understand, as the Urn with Ashes and Homilies. I will defend Byron's freedom, and yours. I will fight for your work to be read, And mine, and Byron's And Martin's, and Blake's, and Green's, And King's, and Bradbury's, And Rowling's, and Smith's, And Marx's, and, so with it, also yours. I am in love with genius of all kind--- I love radicals of all kinds. Don Juan, I see you in my dreams. And I see you. Blood Red China, your skies are bloody red! What do the astrologers and soothers say? I say, it happened once before, the year of Boston's bloody massacre. And from that massacre, America was freed from the yoke of tyranny. Thunder, hail, storm, You shall be pestle And turned to the sea. Your odor shall waft abroad. Martian Doorway Open this doorway honey, I'm roving tonight Through the banded hollows We see, we feel, we take flight. Walk right through to the other room I see a couple brooms, I see a janitor's closet, I see some computers, too. Walk through this Martian Doorway, The Moon landing was real--- Buzz Aldrin and Harry Hapsburg Have walked there for some cheap thrills. In the sky above us, There it hangs a silver thread. A May Moon cannot lie As toilet paper gets stolen by the feds. Martian Doorway, The moon it is not a lie... Yet what lies beyond that doorway, Is it yet another artificial sky? Our generation is so hollow, Its achievements a rare feast. There is nowhere left to wallow, So out of the ocean came the beast. And there he walked through shadows, And there he walked through fame. Oh, Martian Doorway, Is the truth ever so lame? Martian Doorway, The moon, it is not a lie What lies beyond that doorway, Is it yet another artificial sky? Fact checkers, and ministries of truth--- They have you afraid of Cooties, For the common man ain't no sleuth. Then the feds change the almanac, Thinking they have power over I. They leave the time at 6:16 My God, It was seven once upon a time! O, the blind bats sing the door jams, Green Day skates on thin ice, Joe Satriani is questioned, Whether a keyboard warrior's information was right! Martian Doorway, The moon, it is not a lie What lies beyond that doorway Is it the discovery of foreign life? Then the hoodoos are falling, The blimps descend like Babylon, The peoples all do their crossings, As they see the alien in lights. Ooo, Martian Doorway, The moon, it is not a lie What lies beyond that doorway Is it the discovery of foreign life? Walk into that room and you'll see, No starship nor star command. You'll see a spook in overalls That he is but a man. There he steals the toilet paper, He tries to change the almanac, Yet, it is a complete failure, They are crazy like Animaniacs. Ooo, Martian Doorway, The moon, it is not a lie. What lies beyond that doorway? Is it but another white lie? My Philosophy In the simplest way, I believe all things are what they are. I believe we understand things based on that. And I go no further with my philosophy. Boethius Wisdom, Counsel him. Yet, all scholars remember Of his magnum opus Is the chaffe about omniscience. No, I am more interested in the wheat. God is joy, and through attaining Him We have joy. For the wicked hold no power And wickedness cannot have The higher pleasure. For, true joy is attained through Divine relationship with LORD God; It is also found in family, friends and those whom we love. Sufficient to say, My knowledge of future events Doesn't stop the free agency of men From making them, any more Than God's. A Meditation on Two Pears I understand it Perfectly; even the blue Bits. Yet, the pears are Not as this observer wills. Every mind constructs its archetypes. Sandy Beaches Papias, by your calculation, There will be twenty-five sextillion Souls saved, and each soul Shall save ten-thousand, Until the last ten-thousand ten-thousand Grapes bear their twenty five baths of blood. Interestingly, you're not out of the ballpark Of what scripture said would be saved--- That is one human being for every grain Of sand off of the coasts of all the world's beaches. That number, respectively, Is 7.5 sextillion--- Even to hypothesize sextillions At 90ad, is miraculous enough. Gateway 2000 In 1997, my computer had 16 Megabytes of ram. It had three point five gigabytes of hard drive space. And a 200 Mega Hertz Processor. The laptop I'm using today--- Windows 8, from 2013, In 2023; Mind you it was top of the line for its day--- Has a missing key that flung off When my dad threw a piece of paper in a tantrum. The keyboard also doesn't work--- I'm typing on my fourth keyboard And it's a wireless with a mouse and keyboard combo--- I use Bluetooth frequently to listen to Pandora On my bumpster speaker, And can wirelessly connect it to my TV to watch YouTube, My computer has 8 Gigabytes of Ram 2.4 Gigahertz of Processor speed And a modest Terabyte of Hard Drive Space. And it has a very convenient touch screen to boot. Calculus in Tanka A limit can be Calculated, true; but the Calculations can Never approach the limit--- It's where infinities touch. A sine function works On the logic of Pi. So, The sine function will Work off considerations Of circles' geometry. Zeno's Paradox Is calculus. The leaps are The calculations While the limit is the place Where man and reptile meet. One can measure the Sermon on the mount, and like Calculus, measure The Golden Rule to fully Calculate and find Jesus. Bittul It is what God is teaching me--- The emptying of my self for compassion's sake And to humble myself before others And not to make a show of knowledge. For, Christ's command was Bittul, To rebuke a Pharisee for straining a gnat While he swallowed a camel by forgetting his compassion. The Harsh Truths I can conceive of towers reaching twenty miles tall. I can conceive of technologies that bring us to Times and Universes all. I can conceive of travel to the outer edge of space. I can conceive of a Universe infinite and great. I can conceive of manmade structures, the size of Red Giant Stars I can conceive of settlements on Jupiter, Venus, Saturn and Mars. What I see is our species trying to hang a building from a stone, An asteroid in high orbit, how obliviously cold They are to bring a thing so nigh To our earth which could destroy cities; also how are we there to fly? I see us trying to make Fusion from sulfur, nitrate and charcoal I see us fearful to understand leverage, oh so how ominous the toll? I'm afraid in our current intelligence, travelling to any distant star Will be as impossible as it seems it is, to make a flying car. For if we decide to use aerodynamics and fossil fuels, To make a car fly with helicopter blades and pull The winds up, while a Maglev we cannot seem to find Time enough to improve our infrastructure, with a simple technology of that kind; I'd say that we must discover antigravity Before we could ever hope to sail the Hyperborean sea. If I were an average mind, say about 100 level IQ We'd possibly do the things I conceive, and have problems very few. Yet, our species is simplistic and absurd. I'm afraid we won't achieve our missions, but must live here upon the Earth. So, my friends, learn to live in unity, and learn to get along. For, this Earth and all its sorrows, shall be our only home. Helios The idol stood thirty cubits tall; He towered for fifty years. Then, the mountains groaned, Tired upon their course, They stretched at the command of the LORD. At his knees, the idol fell, And there lay he dead His corpse to be used a millennia later In Arab swords. O Sweet Child O sweet child I came to tell you a truth. Many will listen to the song That sounds much like the winds and reveries of us all. For men want to hear their hearts pipe to them from the other hearts. But, to draw into the deep darkness, To pour out truth is far more fruitful. For, when acceptable in the eyes of the LORD The strong winds of the crowd To whom we chaunt, Err like Echo, and it chaunts back; Understand it is not our reflection to choose In the poesy we pluck… Rather, it is the heart of another And their wisdom. Whom, though, yours grew dark, I ask you, “Was it I?” And if that answer is yes, I am sorry. The carnal mind is full of sweetness, But we try our furnace, And let the embers flow over our souls To melt its dross. Skim it with the instrument. Set it free. For your prior truths were far more precious to me. Academy The professor pompously speaks his formulae; Yet, he does not understand it. He, rather, performs by rote his routine A show, an ethos,—cries out foul on the students Who do not trust him to give them the answers. He fools millions, yet we understand it because a computer told us. The mystery of this invention, That what it says must be divine rite, The professor uses it as an example To teach, but he does not know what he teaches. The Academy men sought out wisdom. Our modern Academy, men remember what was wise But becomes as vacuous as an empty vessel. For, to have knowledge without understanding Is a kind of sin we have passed down through our generations. Doctor of Hearkening All night one thinks How he spoke Word;— To chew until the mind fell asleep. To inspire the same in others It would be too much the dream come true. To write a word, in strong verse That one man, or woman, or child Drank deep. How I wish I could be the Doctor of Listening. The grief that much wisdom was spoken But I could not find it all in this short life of mine. Grief, subtle sadness, that it exists… Awesome is the impasse of our fellowminds. To speak into the ether Where none were listening;— I realize the Earth didn’t need a great poet. It needed a hearkener. O Requiem of the Dead Poets O' requiem of the dead poets Alighted your vigor, Your ancient souls do rest in the grave. Your words course through me... The subtle, inauspicious meanings That the madman sees and says, "Aha, it says nothing." So little is said that is said Loud, bold and obnoxious. Inebriation of subtle inquiries Subtle thoughts and subtle shadows Of thoughts. I ask, "Why do you need "A meaning that is loud, and bold "When Rhetoric favors ignorance? "However, subtle souls have taught me subtlety "And with that the mingling of all knowledge." Yet, it was foreseen that the man of inquiry Did not want revealed the heart of another man But to only look into a reflective pool. He did not want to share, or understand. Merely to have his own ideas shouted back at him. Thus, blood ran in the streets. Thus, dead were wheeled through the thoroughfares For seven days of revolution. All for loud, droning war songs And not the quiet voice of reason Understanding its world, And gaining from it packets of wisdom Which does not gallivant through the street Nor does it make its words an enchantment. It, rather, seeks to understand what others are too busy to understand And pass by, leaving its little packet of pollen upon the pistil To germinate into the next budding spring. While pseudo-philosophers war over who is right And who's brand of ideology shall be superior... We, the poets---who are long dead, or shall die--- Leave behind the subtlety of more ancient wisdoms Which the world, as it fights its wars Would some day soon find again And see there upon the page what folly it was That right and wrong were not to be won by the muzzle of a gun But were simply to be found, and rediscovered A thousand times by Us, the poets who are dead, or shall be dead. All Wisdom Failed All wisdom failed. All prophecies never came true. A million contradicting voices And mine is one of them. I suppose I do not prophesy. I tell stories. Stories that curdle the imagination, And often feel like dreams. We often do disservice to our philosophers. We often do disservice to our novelists. Those are the true prophets. I hear a thousand and one prophecies, Yet none of them ever come true. They speak, they talk, they go over a million times. Yet, what is the prophecy that came true? They say, "Revival in the summer." There is no revival. They say, "A great harvest." There is no great harvest. One prophet said there would be a great harvest, And him I'll believe. For, he has the authority I look for Which is sobriety. Yet a million and one prophets All get it wrong. They predict the rapture, But it never comes. They predict the end, But it doesn't come. They desire it with all their little hearts But thankfully, God spares their foolish dreams And forgives them their errant prophecies. How many false prophecies have I spoken? Yet I don't pretend like I have never told A single lie. I understand that if my vision does not come true I am liable to the court and judgment and death. Yet, they break my faith with every one of their prophecies For it never comes to fruition. Save a few here and there who I find trustworthy. Milton was a prophet Who saw that astronomy would lead many astray. Nietzsche was a prophet Who understood that if God didn't exist, neither did morality. Tolstoy was a prophet Who understood that civilization moves its predestined course; there is no changing it. Dostoevsky was a prophet For though he doubted God, he believed wholeheartedly in His morality. There is an old proverb, "You are neither hot, nor cold. "Buy from me wisdom, and gold refined by fire." For our prophets are hidden because the peoples give them no honor. Instead, they listen to the pop-culture ideas And the chemical imbalances that make the world look upon us And say we're crazy. No, not you, who said that December will be a harvest. I know you are true. One in a million. Yet, the prophets all prophesy a lie. The lie is that I once, too, had a rapture dream. Several of course. It was not prophecy. It was merely the thoughts running through my mind. Though, I get caught up, Wanting there to be a rapture. I truly do. I want to fly up into the heavens And be met with Christ on the trumpet's sound. I do not want to suffer on the earth Anymore than anyone else. It's just the destiny of this writer To see the truth. For, I am a true interpreter. I see billions who know nothing of Christ. I see frantic Christians prophesying the end is near. And I see the religion dying Because no one is sober enough to understand. Yet, one prophet keenly said the religion will not die, For there will be a harvest. I await this harvest, with humble expectation. For, if it comes, it means I shall not be alone. And I say this soberly. There will be a great falling away. As is prophesied. For, God's wrath is true. But, do I believe that every profession of faith Will be a ticket to avoid suffering? No... for there are many that will say "LORD, LORD," And be told to depart. Those are the men who said, "Grace! Grace!" and yet they had no change of heart. I am the man who's had a change of heart. For the religion will not die in my heart. For I know my God is true. And when I read Yeats or Byron I understand them. For, they are prophets, too. They give me introspection Into the hearts of man; Like Balaam, I can understand Why a man wants loveless sex. I can understand why a man's lust Leads them astray. And with that understanding, I can benefit the doubting And say, "No, I do not doubt. "For I see the order of the universe "And I see the construction of the Word of God "Behind every act, large or small. "I see the strings of creation "The Twelve Universes "Layered one upon each other. "I understand all things "That are in my grasp to understand. "I see the invisible strings of faith "That prove God exists. "As the world doubts him "Harder and harder "I grow to understand "That indeed God does exist. "I understand that He is Jesus. "Even if none else do "I understand why God had to Come in the Flesh "Why God had to die. "I understand sin... "Deep and ill tempered within me. "I understand war, "Why it happens, "Why men kill each other... "How wicked men slaughter one another "For glory, while peaceful men shiver." And I say all of this Without a doubt that Jesus is the Christ. I see it. Like Euclid could find God in his Elements I can find God in the certainty of the universe. I can see God in the sin I've had in my heart. For I've seen very few good people in my life. And hell exists because there are few good upon the earth. And heaven exists because there are those of us Who are good, and our hearts get twisted In wrenching pain because the kindness we understand Doesn't seem to be known. Vision of Prosperity One day, alighted upon my fortune There came a weary traveler. She had found a wellspring of tales As seemingly old as time, Yet discovered they were new. "What have I found?" She wondered, as tales abounded Among the language of the Saxon. What were these? Rife with mystical creatures, Yet such was the fortune found That it suddenly appeared To this modern writer's Ancient poesy, That it was discovered And thus enjoyed For as long as time was kept. The Alchemist's Magic During the time of King Arthur, There arose a dispute between Merlin And an Alchemist. The dispute was over the interpretation of A story; namely the story of a princess Who fell in love with a prince Who rescued her, And upon their first kiss, the spell of sickness was released from her. The Alchemist spoke on the matter That the union between the prince and princess Was not about love, per say, But was rather about the soul finding its unity Like the unity between the Earth and the Seas. "I heard the Alchemist's reflections," Said Merlin, "On the meaning of the tale. "I thought of her ; "It was immensely strong, yet my knowledge of "Word was stronger. "Where she dove into herself... "Deep reflections, "Deeper than the rivers and the oceans--- "I read the Tale for what it actually meant, "And saw that it was not so deep. "Yet, in it I could see what she could not. "A glimmer of hope "Which her jaded soul stopped believing in long ago. "For some reason, she had wanted the story to be about the soul "Having knowledge of itself, "And was offended at the notion "That these two, upon a brief encounter, could be happily wed "And therefore, be unburdened by the misery of their loneliness. "What caused her to doubt the story's true meaning "Was that she had not found that meaning in her own life "Thus, she had created a meaning which suited herself. "I am a lonely old fool too, "But I have a rather different interpretation of the story "That what it meant sufficed enough to say "That true love of the kind does exist "And I am happy to know that it does." The Dream of Sorrow The grayness surrounds us As my love stares into me with eyes Filled with affection. Outside of her, is fright toward the gray world. I am happy; Joyous even. But she, toward me, is full of love As her other eye casts a doubtful glance Into the grey abyss As if it were filled with fright about something. I look as if I were my favorite author And she looks beautiful, In gray hair, Though that eye looking outward Frightens me severely. What is it that she is seeing? In toward me it is love But outward It is fright, Even the dull gray Of a world. Like one were looking into a lake Gray and colorless. Though I am happy. I do not know what the vision means. Only that I am in it. I would gladly take she who saw it Or I will take the woman in the dream. Make joyous sounds O Israel, For your time has yet to come. Yet, I am frightened by the eye Casting doubt on the grey world. Yet, toward me she is happy. True Friendship A friendship, when built upon honest first Impressions, sparks a sincere intercourse; Which, neither putting forth a facade's mirth Can be built with true knowledge's comfort. An Ode on Fate What keeps a man, when Abraham is preached, From imitating him,---in murdering His son?---to, another's life, be the thief? Much the same that allows one, whose reading Of a poet, understand the clever Metaphors, and gives one's knowledge a truth. 'tis what allows a man knowledge; whispers In his ears the meaning of sweetest fruit. There is the literal, which, willing kills, Without concept lays actions bare and bald. The literal reading atheists fill Christian minds, searching deeply for a fault. Yet, we somehow know what a passage means, For that is why faith remains; 'tis unseen. Should man without this ability be, Such man, hell's stone be his foreboding vault. The Snake-Ape Audiences love it. Is it an ape? Is it a snake? No one knows. Is it a metaphor about man? Or, is it simply a fiction without a metaphor? The flying snake-monkey becomes a god. It despises man--- Is it truly conscious of its own potential? Had I written the story, The snake-ape would be a metaphor About man's progression. How science made him into a "God". And subsequently the vanity of it; The pretension---as any thing which calls itself a god Is pretentious, and must be pretentious. The snake-ape would first start in the wilderness, And evolve into a creature which could fashion instruments That give it flight; power over fire. Instead, the snake-ape becomes wiser than man? It becomes a metaphor about ancient traditions Needing to be accepted by man So they are not consumed with science? I'm sorry, but I don't worship a snake-ape. Those who do, had eaten the hearts of mankind. So, one puts forth an utterly foul interpretation for god And preaches to me how we need it? Rather, I'd want men to be atheists So they could at least discover that there is good With the precise measurements of scientific instruments. Then, at least, we could better compare what we've discovered And see it matches up with one particular God Of a people so small, so minute, yet given the mysteries of the moral universe. For, men will ultimately discover there is need for law; They might even go so far as to purge all unlawfulness by pogrom. Yet, it's Christ and His mercy. That is what man need attain So he can be truly happy. Rashomon He doesn't prove witnesses are unreliable But that modern culture is filled with liars. Oh Eye, Thy Magic; Haiku Oh eye, thy magic Cast upon my busy back, Cause the hand to fail... The Hymn of the Citizens Fife and drum go Hum dee dum, The marching citizens draw their guns Their words, their airs, their country farms Did get sold by the county Bar… Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. We wage this revolution with our words Not a bullet we will incur We shall march in our battle lines With these words and verse so spry… Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. If a martyr we shall make To speak our words and masticate That violence spreads in silent wakes Hum dee dum Hum dee dumb. I shall not e’er throw a stone If I shall die all alone I shall not ever throw a stone For my words are mortar bombs Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. Wage a revolution wise That men in flames, they do die While I have sung my battle cries For the wasted men who die Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. We might have our first president A woman good with righteousness She might give us what we need A stitch, a bone and well hemmed sleeves Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. But the ghosts they testify That with the awful costs they cry, That they should give a man his rights When a woman ought to win the fight, Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. Trump, I say, is not the cost He is not the one who robbed us all It is not Warren nor congress’ cauc… It is all the specious laws we wrought, That by liberty’s woes they cause, Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. So I sing this verse or two Of revolution with words couth That if a woman should not be right But a man should win the fight, Hum dee dum, Hum dee dumb. The Valley of Decision There’s nothing more to write. There’s nothing more to say. Sailing off to the other-world At the end of life Is the only sweetness I can lend. How reason has proven false All that I loved. And with that, blood flows through the valleys Of the wine press. Lay burden to bear There were two things I desired. I will find them when the ship sets sail. For— You might call it pretentious But I like writing complex poems. It speaks what this mind conjures In full breadth of its image. Perhaps like music It is loved for the repetitions. That we can predict the next sequence of notes. In my eye, I see great things Landscapes and valleys. I wish to choose language that speaks what is in me. But, whatever I love, it is insufficient. What I hate, it is regarded as priceless. So, blood spills down the valleys Because we mistake what is stone With what is flesh. I would love to fly away like a bird Or hide away in the forests I love. But, rather, I see the whole world wishes itself to change. And if change it must, Then men are the artifacts they worship. For no knowledge can prove the foundations of love. Yet, there it is for me to see and touch. Rather, it takes much imagination to reason it away. When I set sail, I would have already known. History Flows in its Direction “History flows in its direction— Those who stand in its way Are artifacts.” — A Postmodernist How many men does history leave behind? A good and prosperous nation Which it did its best to break; Praises the Cur Kairos Who is allied with the serfs Who, after having been made free, Wish to place themselves back in shackles. In the Hell Built For the Rich In the hell built for the rich The idle rich, and the angry rich Do their dance in the river styx. How I can see it, But the translator cannot. In fact, nobody has ever found it before. Probably because a poet knows their poetry. And we know why it's written. While Plato lambasted us for not being credible I found poetry is not our catalog of factoids But rather the history of our moral knowledge. The Crown of Bacchus Tyrant, o thou Fear! Crippling art thou, Raging Pharaoh. Thy decree is swift Thy knife of angst stings all breasts And stops all hearts from beating. This phantom in the street Hooded like the Shadow Moves from door to door. Bacchus’ crown, o Pharaoh Is upon thy head To steal from the little yeomen Their ale and odes. Where is the song in the taverns? Where is the joy and mirth? O, Pharaoh, with Bacchus’ crown, You in your attire had silk and cashmere raiment But stole the cotton-wool from the merrymakers. Could you not spare them the miserable existence? Or, must you continue to thresh us into the wind? At the End of the Day At the end of the day There is not a shred of evidence. Either aye or nay, Either right or wrong. For, when all are fools And believe themselves wise That other men had not spoken That all ideas must be catchy and pithy quips… What knowledge there is was hidden By men in a state of egocentric predicament. Love Is Useless as a Passion Love is useless as a passion. It turns knitted hearts astray. Walking through the deserts The children one bore to that woman Stood, with their halved lives. They said, “Mother, do you love papa?” She, being a fool said, “No.” It was that uttered word that caused The children to suffer so much ill. Love was just a chemical— And once the salts were made From the Lemon and Soda There was no more love. The man, having fallen out of love with her long ago Was at work, turning the leather upon a spoke Dipping it in his tanning juice Heating it,—he was content to come home And see his wife, make love to only her, Provide for his children. But, when he got home the fool said to him, “I do not love you.” At that moment a passion erupted in the man Which revolted her, for she could feel no such passion. Though, it wasn’t the broken heart of lost endorphins. It was a happy life, and doing what man and woman had always done, That was taken from him. And so with his children. If I ever find a woman, I hope she understands this. Ant A tiny ant. It neither has the ears to hear Nor the eyes to see. Yet, it knows I'm in the room. What organ do I lack To perceive God? Like the ant cannot perceive me. It knows I'm there by my voice. It doesn't hear it. It doesn't see it. It simply knows there is a voice Calling to it. I must be that same tininess To God. The Eagle and the Dove In the Eagle's nest, the carrion was fed And the Eaglets ripped apart one another For their mother's pellet of vomit. In the dove's nest, the silver lined Creature flew, peacefully giving The milk from her throat. One day, eggs from the two nests were switched. The dove hatched in the Eagle's nest, And the Eagle hatched in the dove's nest. The Eagle, seeing it was weak, Would not feed the dove, So she starved to death, And was picked apart by her brothers and sisters. The dove, seeing her giant offspring, Fed what she could, but on account That the bird could not drink her milk, The Eaglet got hungry, and committed patricide. Such are wolves and sheep, too. Such are the evil and good among men. Captious Scholars It is "Delicious"; twice the word is used. It arouses my distaste, Mr. Emerson, Yet the moment I trusted your ability I felt the flow of your spirit into mine. I often wonder how many of our Scholars Will not see the efficacy of another's verse Because they, too, delight in this vice? Mad Spring In the deep winter, When the trees call forth their buds--- A mad time, a dizzying time, A frightening time, The newborn to nature's ennui When her tender leaves Bud in the deadness of winter's hoary breath; A warm week in January or February, There arrives the Mad Spring Where the careful naturalist Observes Mother Nature Peeping open her weary eyes For just a short peak, And then the Jack Frost comes And that Sandman puts the sleepies Back under her eyes. Yet, the newborn to nature's ennui Will be frightened by this madness, For it seems like spring is a month early. Do not fear. Friendship Mr. Emerson, I have read and quaffed deep Of the passion that you describe. What more is there to say? Exuberant, friendship is deep; The balance between amity and animosity Is what strikes me most in your essay. Who has said it better? I cannot. Surely... Friends are knitted to each others' souls, And if undone, the threads pull away And a hole is left in their garments. Yet, the knitter knows to do so In order to strengthen the fabric once more. If the seam was imperfect the first, second, or third time, The tailor knits it anew. For, friends leave, sometimes the distance of five years; For a bitter fight, for a bitter antagonism, For a harsh word, a harsh syllable, A slur, a comment or nasty degree. And like church discipline, This absence of the fellowship grows patience Within the heart of a man; To reflect and learn how not to injure. For, in the absence, the friends come together After years of repose, new men Yet the old men, and congregate To find the roots of their friendships In tact, and sewn back together Where the threads were pulled, The holed extremities seamed, And then the threads woven once anew To make a stronger garment, And to teach a true friend the lesson Of being a friend: Which is to listen. He Gets Us He Gets Us I have to tell my dad That it is true. Jesus was an alien in Egypt. Doctrinally, actively, He Gets Us does the right thing. AOC calls them fascist For supporting God's standard for Marriage And God's Standard for Sex. I'm amazed at the prudishness of Christians, And the zealotry of Nonbelievers. Like Pharisees and Sadducees; And only a score thousand subscribers With barely a thousand likes, though millions of views. That is a good portrait of Christ. And I think that's why so many reject it. Who's to judge based on apparel? Who's to judge based on race? Who's to oppress the stranger in the land? Who was the Man Made in God's Flesh? Who was this Jesus, who Wept Turned tables in rage, And told us to humble ourselves like children? A man jumping over a fence And a misunderstood metaphor Are all the "valid" complaints I've seen; Yet, whose to say those in the photographs are not Christians? God will save men and women in every tribe, Tongue and nation. Every race, every first creed, Every ethnicity. He will save Hindus And Buddhists, And Atheists, And Muslims, And Protestants, And Catholics, And Pagans, And Heathens, And Hoodoos, And Jehovah's Witnesses, And Rastafarians, And Uighurs, And Chinese, And Arabs, And Nigerians, And Argentineans, And Americans, And Jews, And Russians, And Germans, And Italians, And Vietnamese, And Westerners, And Easterners, And Southerners, And Northerners, And those from the tropics, And those from the arctics, And those in Antarctica, And those in Sweden, And Mormons, And Slavs, And Anglos, And Saxons, And Celtics, And Africans, And Asians, And Ethiopians, And Sentinelese, And Pakistanis, And Aztecs, And Mayans, And Romans, And Gauls, And Frenchmen, And Zarmas, And Alien, And Domestic, And Amalekite, And Amorite, And Moabite, And Ammonite, And Egyptian, And Babylonian, And Mede, And Persian, And Greek, And Tyrite, And Hittite, And Palestinian, And Philistine, And Ephraimite, And Mannasite, And Jebusite, And Canaanite, And Iroquois, And Cantonese, And Shinto, And Zoroaster, And Chileans, And Colombians, And Mongols, And Huns, And Ottomans, And Turks, And Sikhs, And Basques, And Hadzabes, And Pacific Islanders, And Amish, And Pygmies, And Jarawas, And Aborigines, And Lost Tribes in New Guineas, And Vanuatus, And Apaches, And Cherokees, And Pequots, And Native Americans, And Txapanawas, And Tlaxcalans, And Tuscanese, And Cempoalas, And Koreans, And Tibetans, And Bedouins, And Voodoos, And Numidians, And Fulanis, And from all Tribes and Tongues, And Visigoths, And Ostrogoths, And Goths, And Normans, And Thanes, And Danes, And Swedes, And Simbas, And Yanomamis, And Asmats, And LGBTQAI2+... And yet there are as many more nations, As there are pages in an Encyclopedia's volume; Past, Present, and Future. There is no man, Of any race, creed, ethnicity or gender, Who of a nation will not be saved. The elect, from every tribe, tongue and nation, Will they come, in repentance, At the foot of Jesus and the Cross. Without Christ If there were no Christ, There would be no churches. If there were no Christ, There would be no agape love. There would be no sacrificial bond Between man and his brethren, For men would only know to love themselves. If there were no Christ, The world would be worshiping Quetzalcoatl; Ripping human hearts in anarchy, And eating manflesh on every table. China would still have its philosophies, But, how could it win against such an advanced civilization As the Aztecs? It couldn't. If there were no Christ, There'd still be wars; for, most of Europe's wars Were due to territorial disputes, and religion only a pretext. If there were no Christ, There'd still be famines---probably more, As science was Christianity's invention Whom, trying to find order in the cosmos We set out to find the very face of God. If there were no Christ, There'd probably be Pagan Rome, somewhere, Its leaders looking like African Shaman, And bone jewelry infused into their skulls; It'd probably be the cult of Death, A merging of Roman hedonism With Aztec blood ritual; Gladiatorial games, rape, homicide, catamites Would probably be common, everyday hobbies. If there were no Christ, China and Rome would have probably went to war, In a major conflict, and the World Wars Would have been American Natives, In their advanced state, sailing across the Atlantic And Pacific, landing on those shores, And invading dilapidated Rome. Perhaps the Samurai in Japan Or the Legions in China could abade them. Perhaps they couldn't. But, mingled with the comforts Of potato charged lamps, and aqueducts, But also cannibalism, rape, orgiastic sex, Loveless romances, and undefined genders Morphing into a confused daze, and a drastic population reduction. If there were no Christ, nor any wars fought by Christians, The world would have a certain kind of peace, Which wouldn't actually be a peace, But would be every man set against his neighbor, In grotesque body modifications which make a man look like a devil, With human sacrifice, and murder as entertainment. Nor, without Christ, most of all, There could be no heaven or hell. And without either, men would cease to be judged, And thereby, no one could cite all of these evils As being such; it would be the state of humanity That in peace, there would only be bloodshed; A peace built on serial murder, rape and cannibalism. Don't Be Poets Don't be poets. I think the violet sky came from Hank Sr.; I pulled the plot of Hercules for a poem, And several hundred others I stole from the ether Of common myths. My greatest Trilogy, The main idea is Ecclesiastes'; Pulled from Star Wars Prequels, Star Ship Troopers, The Matrix, And Black Hawk Down. I did invent my technologies, But other poets have found them before. My Space Opera, I learned about the concepts of space travel on Mass Effect. My tall cities I found in The New Jerusalem. Logos, it comes from Montaigne, Lao Tsu, and Ralph Waldo Emerson. My concept of Love? I found it first, But Plato found it before even me. I craved Neoclassical while reading Wordsworth, Finding, after having written it, That Spencer and Milton had pioneered it before me; It turns out, Romanticism was a movement Which rejected Neoclassicalism. Context Clues, 6th Grade English Classes with Ms. K___ And Textbooks about Critical Thinking Inspired my out of the box--- Is it?---thinking. Tech-Ed fascinated me with Maglevs Western History and Econ and Gov Inspired me to write civilizations, Humanities and Western History Inspired me as a classicist Conversations with friends and family Were ripped from real life, And put verbatim into my novels and poems. A thousand paintings inspired my visualizations. A thousand movies and CGI inspired my imagism. Animes inspired my storytelling. Reveries about Nuclear Fusion and working security at a Logistics Company Inspired my Skiffs, Skilds and five kilometer long boats. Mythology, the bare bones of plot, archetype, I simply take them, and stitch them together Battling Arthur and Charlemagne With Thor and Athena. A thousand Edutainment videos Would create verisimilitude... Teach me... and a thousand books, too. Shaka's Horns, Loin and Chest, Jerusalem's Siege--- Oh, and the Bible! A thousand allusions Interpolations, A thousand neurons created From a thousand symbols Ancient and novel; From mythology, From history, From Theology. Every history I read was fuel; Every modern event; Every encyclopedia article. Euclid inspired my knowledge of objectivity--- And the circle's formula, πd=c. E=MC^2 inspired me So did musings on time travel--- From where did they come? Men in Black, Terminator, Back to the Future; The very equation Einstein created Was used to calculate my CNP. I created the future--- But it all came from the past. That is why you do not want to be a poet. Where was there even one, single, Original thought? The Day the Christians Learned The day the Christians learned... Their pastors do not believe. It was a violent day. They, in their scrums, Pressed the unbelieving Heretics against the wall. Gasping for air, being crushed against all the weight, You could hear the pastors drawing their final breath. I and my pa tried to stop them; I don't know if I saved them. I survived by crossing my arms into a crucifix. It was like a lemur, divergent, Being led into a room of her peers. And the lemurs pinned her against the ground And pressed, with their hand all over her body. They pressed. "It is the natural state of all the beasts "To do this," said the scholar in school. I thought Christ's message was to rise above this madness. John Donne Loveliest words, from a jaded don, Like a bottom dweller with fin rot; You infect your cohorts with vain hopes And your hopes are foul and sordid. "Love", have thou tasted of love; Have thou mined it deeply? The alchemy of love, the chemical nitre, Upon the soul, a lofty man There is, who in precious synapse Is enthralled by his wife's brain. Seeing her joy, her passion, Her dainty color light up her cheeks Drink deep of it... yet you married for money. What can you know of love? What could have you mined from it? A selfish man, in love with himself As if he were a god? In what way Do you know love? What way? When you are in perfect company Keeping with yourself? Let he who does not have it Tell you what alchemy it is, To not suffer loneliness in this world And to bear little fusings of flesh and flesh? So the person you love, is as much a part of you As you yourself? What do you know of love? That you have a poet's conceit, That since you make the prettiest of words You know what love is? Star Star bright, 10:30 on a winter's night, Goliath's arm twinkles at peak lumens. The lazy plane flies under you. You brightly twinkle over him. You will never realize until you do, That the star shines there, equal in its breadth. Malcolm X's Conversion There is good to be had in other faiths. Malcom X, when arriving at Mecca, Saw Islam was a religion for all. And he, from a Black Nationalism So foul, converted to Sunni Islam. Yet, the insidious effect of his Teachings, as a youth, infect our modern Age, causing brother to hate their brother. Wars are being fought, all because of him; Wars which turn his people into villains. How is any man to atone for it? If we look at Malcom X, as ourselves, We will see a similar conundrum. That's why we need Christ Jesus. God Was Not Wrong Charles, God was not wrong. Just because homosexuality appears in nature--- So does pedophilia, cannibalism, Patricide, fratricide, murder, war, Rape, incest, perpetual struggle and infanticide--- Does not mean it is to be emulated By man, or to be upheld that the behavior is good. We are men. Not beasts. Homosexuality is a sin Because it devolves us back into nature's hedonism; Back into nature's anarchy. As is clearly being seen, understood now. We are evolved; we have bitten from the fruit. We can judge these behaviors are wrong, and foul, And are among the beasts. Man must rise above The Sheep of the World, and be Sheep in Christ. Just Because it Works Just because it works, Doesn't mean it's right. You can lock us up in cages, Give us a little spinning wheel, And feed us twice daily; Sure, we can survive. But that's called prison. You can cause most of us to be happy By coercing us to be gay By effect of Super Ego, By convincing us to castrate and mastectomate Ourselves... I'd sense no one in this world could feel the deep things I have felt And have known to be good. You can allow rape, cannibalism, pedophilia And yet have all the pleasures of hot baths, Electricity, slave labor and concubines; Even the sport of entertainment Where men will murder one another in the arenas. I suppose in this world, no one would Know it is wrong, and be more bestial than human being. Sure, these things can work. Sure, you can make the people happy. It still doesn't make it right. I would think most of us, Living right now, Would have even seen a better world. Xochipilli You are a coruscated crown; The citizens do flock to the same stalls... In 1933 the poet sings a song to thee. Patron of the arts, patron of the flower, Patron of the games; god of Sodom... What can we do for thee? How can we break free from thy tyranny? You control the world, from Taining lands; You are a clown ruling a half the world. How does the poet know? Does he wear time on his wrists? I, the Urn, he sings of me, Banished and in purgatory. I sit, listlessly, listening to obdurate church bells... They have no faith, but worship the Anglican and Catholic God Xochipilli ; Am I an artefact? No. For a short breath of time, this Anarchy reigns, While David allies with the Avegins. And anarchy reigns across the land, While Xochipilli fiddles to the burning heaps Of his cities--- for he does not know. Who am I? I am the Urn with Ashes and Homilies. Childe Harold is on his pilgrimage; Oh, how he goes, with his fair haired bride. Purgatory shall turn to paradise One day... And I... I shall go where? When Sodomite has been made Writ And man's sinful nature has corrupted even the lambs? Where shall I go? This world was not made for me. So, I rest at peace. Prince of Persia O, thou Prince, thou king, With your black prayers, You summon forces. Your god is the forces. Your prayers hinder prosperity For the saints, and delay our answers from God. But, you shall not be victorious. There is you, thou Covering Cherub, Dragon, who accuses the flock. There is you, oh beastial intelligence; Who hates your Christian brother, and slays him. There is you, oh diviner, who divines evil For the LORD's people, when God has promised fortune. There is you. oh lord of Hades, who denies God And gainsays His majesty, and brings the ignorant into pits. Filmer The riches of the world cease Save for the kings who rule it. Adam, eternally recurring, His divine heritage as King, Ruler over all flesh... He drinks the draught Of rainbow liquor, And merries his meed Into the womb of his wife. Yet, for the world around him, Their sustenance goes to his belly: Their wagons, their cotton and wool, Their games, their arts, their labors And all their luxurious leisure. He smacks his lips, and upon them are spices Numerous: Fenugreek, cinnamon, Turmeric, Ginger, Onion, Chili, Clove Garlic and pickled Ginger, fried in Cottonseed Oil, Mint, Cilantro, whisked together with cream. The tinge of clam broth, The decadence of scallop and crabmeat, A pound of Roasted Beef, salted and cooked To its decadent perfection, Suckling pork dusted with sugar and salt, Lamb liver fried in mint, cinnamon and cumin. He plucks his grape from the bowl, His strawberry, his banana and apple, His pomegranate, mango and melon--- While he eats, and takes, and consumes, The people around him wane into poverty. For, his magisterial justice cares only To feed himself--- his Judges allow him The sustenance of virginal flowers. His law his his own belly. He picks up his wine, cherry and deep, And drinks, tasting the oak upon his food; The sweet grape accenting his yams and potatoes Delicately pureed with butter, salt, and cream; And his expertly crafted steak shall hint of grape berry. The men and women around him starve, though. Their work feeds him--- and he exacts all their taxes. He does not care, for he wishes it to be so. So he can incur God's wrath, And see if the sun truly will darken. To see if the stars truly do fall. To see if the moon truly will turn to blood. Boniface VIII Alain de Lille, he preaches his homilies Against Sodom and Gomorrah. Yet, the peoples still do not listen. There, they frolic like in the Garden of Earthly Delights. One in forty thousand googleplex. O, Philip, tax the clergy! Boniface orders his vain bulls. Dungeons, chains, torture, Boniface dies from his wounds. Not a perfect man, A man, who like Odysseus, Used a Trojan Bull to commit pogrom. One in forty thousand googleplex. The Pope's dictum is ignored, though, And the nations, against Papal decree, Enter into One hundred years of war. So follows with it that Ashen Death. One in forty thousand googleplex Is the probability of life originating On this planet through means of evolution. My greatest regret is not listening chasing my dreams being thirty-three and nothing. What is wisdom if I have no audience to share it with? I was that fool who believed in Universal truth. But, no atheist I ever knew was like minded. But, I found God was. So I converted. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Author’s Bio: Brandon Neifert is the author of books including In Defense of the Story, a crowning achievement of autodidactism; My Collected Writings, a medley of various writings on diverse topics; and, The Fifth Angel’s Trumpet, an epic novel starring a rowdy maverick colonel caught between a devastating, fifth world war and the love of his life. Neifert is a self educated, self published writer, who, much like his characters, strives for the moral best in both himself and society. A devoted Christian, Neifert was born-again when confronted with a sin from his adolescence that ultimately led to his confession and incarceration as an adult. Neifert has a colorful past, but makes up for it with his scrupulous observations of the human condition, framing both good and evil in ways that even the most skeptical can agree.