Poems Spring 2024

1. Alan

For seventy years you say
You watched the world grow better
As Gays were accepted, but the Bible
Reduced people's empathy.
I did not. I, instead, saw love grow cold.
I saw people grow insanely selfish and shallow
Conceited, cold, callous, callow. vain, superficial,
And at the very end, that's why I'm a Christian.
Every Atheist I ever talked to
Denied flagrantly there were morals which were universal.
And as the world grew starved of love
But had a full belly like at Sodom,
My neighbors grew cold,
And my peers colder,
And my family colder still...
I have all the evidence I need to know
That when the Bible was believed
And I mean truly believed
The world was, indeed, a better place.

I watch the world grow ever colder---
Yes, people enjoy more material things,
And have more sensual pleasure,
But at the expense of love.
For they are all selfish,
Like a D. H. Lawrence novel.
And cruel.

Rather it is Christians who were always empathetic;
True Christians.
But I can be empathetic only to a point
As I watch people destroy themselves
For worldly lust and lucre.
And all are lonely, Alan.
Do you not know the plight of my generation?
Everyone is lonely.
You grew in an era with the Law so therefore Love
And I without.
And so my generation is lonely
But yours wasn't.

2. Poetry Whispers

Muse upon one poem
For hours; if wise, its breath
Winding vicissitudes
Of a noisy brook—
For when it speaks
It is like the waters
Which whisper truth
In its most lifelike nature.

3. Aught Authors

Aught authors begin as dreamers
But then, when poesy tames their tongue,
They begin to stop dreaming, and see.
Thus, they cross the threshold into immortality.
For no program is found upon their tongue
But rather truths for all peoples, in every clime.
They shed their politics, and religion, and seek.
And then, if they are tamed, they find.

4. Seek and Ye Shall Find

Every sincere expression of faith
Has been devoid of religion.
Even Christ Himself, came and shook the Pharisees.
Remember that, brothers and sisters.
The Orthodox Faith is a faith of poetic expression
Nuance, and not simply simplicity.
It is an expression of all of man
As man tastes the fruits of the Divine.
There is only one LORD, and that is Jesus Christ;
But so many poets have touched Him
Never knowing He was the gate.

5. My Generation

I find myself so happy
I grew up with my parent's music.
I have youthful memories
Of Journey and not Nirvana.
There was something so real
About it... Also Sinatra
And Duke Ellington in my Twenties.
It's like I'm timeless,
As I have fond memories of old TV shows
And really could care less about modern ones.
I have no generation...
I am a little youthful
A little geriatric
A little middle aged.
I don't listen to Hip-Hop
But Elvis and the Eagles.
I don't even know who the modern bands are.
My generation is one man's
And it is mine...
I have no peer.
Maybe that is why I am a poet?

6. The Master Morality

If a man does anything wrong
Pound them into the dust.
What is wrong, is the milieu
We know, there is no objective "Right or Wrong."
Only what we make it.
Thus, we create, and we demand
Obsequiousness to the morality we created.
Which is to strive with all for the scraps
And to come out on top at any cost
So long as it does not break our laws.

7. The Death of a Poet

Little words in my Seamus Heaney book
Handwritten in the margins...
I had thought you kindred spirit
When you had said, "Poetry is the expression of Say."
But, upon reading the ancient cursive--
Which I both read and write--
It says, "The expression of Self."
Then I say, I do not write poetry but something new.

8. The True Patriot

The true Patriot believes in his own nation
But is a heavy critic of when it goes wrong.

9. Bat Caitie

Couldn't have been any older than 4
My childhood friends and I play in my
Bedroom. And, there is a specter we feared.
Bat Caitie... it had ears like a bat's wings
Ashen blue hue for skin, and vampire
Teeth. And this specter we invented scared
Me good, well into my old, teenage years.
We had an affinity for Batman,
And everything circulated around
It, especially the planes which would fly
Above, and once a low flying jet was
A genuine Batman plane. I didn't
Know that the further away an object
The smaller it would appear in the sky.

10. Wedding Band

The Christian, who waited thirty years
To marry, and therefore have love,
Doesn't wear his wedding band
In front of the audience of Circus Maximus.
But I, being the fool I am, expecting one Christian
To have consistency of character,
Thinking, "No man, who prayed
"Every day to have this good thing,
"Could be a fool enough to do this."
I had to shut my mouth, and the wicked were validated
In their beliefs. For, one man did not have consistency.
In fact, I thought I had lost my mind
And that time had warped me between two
Points between the present and future
Rather than dishonor this man's character.
I'm sorry friend, but I witness it
That even the man of God is unfaithful.
What more to say about the billions of other men?
Repent.

11. The Work of a Comedian

I critique paradise,
But I understand Wallace Steven's metaphor---
What does that say?

A false happiness---I never said I was happy---
Those are my thoughts.
What paradise can be made here?
Truly? If you made bad decisions like I have?

Sure, I am contented with poetry
And musings---
Would great riches or fame appease my desire?
No.
Would a womb?
Yes, partly.
Would the very paradise which your comedian critiques?
Hopefully so... for this life is vain and hollow
And though the mind's eye is the great thing
That has given me respite in this life---
Imagining the great game I could conjure
From my books, which men would be steeped in like real life---
I know a game supplants imagination
For now humans create their own stories
Through their games, and all knowledge
Is to exert willpower over others
And win their games and cheat.

12. Joy Fades

Joy fades, under the solemn breath of spring.
The microbursts throw the trees in raging waves
And the sleet falls in such a way, that is grey.
A man's wedding is but a day, and perfunctory
When the true sweetness of it, is laying at her breast
On the way home. No lust, but exhaustion.
For, boundaries were kept through life strict
But after that day, you can lay your weary head
Upon nature's comforting hills, and there rest.
Yet, the sorrow of the day, like so many,
Is it is an awkward day for all, and strange.
Joy should exist, but only angst. Though I've never had been
I understand it through literature, and see
The purgatorial affect of modern day
And wonder where joy has gone?
Some time ago, there was life in these bones
And friendship was deeply felt in my heart.
Then, I sinned---or at least the world knew of it---
And it shamed me... thus I walk with the knowledge
Of having sinned. Like many, I assume,
The gross abnormality of our purgatorial lives
Is met solely by the affect wrought by stained consciences.
That is why we no longer feel the deep joys
Or the deep sorrows, or the deep loves
But everything has a melancholy affect
Of neutral peace; except when moments come
They swell, and one wonders what it is...
This new feeling, but old feeling, this shared feeling
Though I've never been married.

13. Dancing Satyr

Dancing satyrs, in the West
You know not what is best.
You do not know the universal tongue
Of symbols which man has won.
You know not good or ill
But rather, you cause men to swallow bitter pills.
Speaking to you, is hard or worse
For any common thing I share
You are not well versed.
Common language, common thought
The human animal, you know not.
So, some strange, new thing art thou
A Satyr dancing to draw a crowd.

©2024 B. K. Neifert
All Rights Reserved

Alan

For seventy years you say
You watched the world grow better
As Gays were accepted, but the Bible
Reduced people's empathy.
I did not. I, instead, saw love grow cold.
I saw people grow insanely selfish and shallow
Conceited, cold, callous, callow, vain, superficial,
And at the very end, that's why I'm a Christian.
Every Atheist I ever talked to
Denied flagrantly there were morals which were universal.
And as the world grew starved of love
But had a full belly like at Sodom,
My neighbors grew cold,
And my peers colder,
And my family colder still...
I have all the evidence I need to know
That when the Bible was believed
And I mean truly believed
The world was, indeed, a better place.

I watch the world grow ever colder---
Yes, people enjoy more material things,
And have more sensual pleasure,
But at the expense of love.
For they are all selfish,
Like a D. H. Lawrence novel.
And cruel.

Rather it is Christians who were always empathetic;
True Christians.
But I can be empathetic only to a point
As I watch people destroy themselves
For worldly lust and lucre.
And all are lonely, Alan.
Do you not know the plight of my generation?
Everyone is lonely.
You grew in an era with the Law so therefore Love
And I without.
And so my generation is lonely
But yours wasn't.

The Woman in the Arena

"My husband climbed Jacob's ladder
"And he then shook off my clenched fist.
"He died in the arena when
"They fed him to the lions. Watch
"They made me, and I watched them feed
"And I gave up our child, both
"Of us were freed. So as I there
"The pit with lions, no Saintly
"Charm could I arouse, the beasts they
"Leapt for me, and in great pangs of
"Fear my good breasts gave forth their milk
"For I was scared; the lion tore."

Winter Maxims

Maxim 1: A globe is a good thing to own.

Maxim 2: Have some nice things you can take out of their place, and look at sometimes. But not many.

Maxim 3: The stupid thing about self deceit, is that you still know you are being deceitful.

Maxim 4: There can be as much cruelty in trying to be kind, as kindness in having a disposition that is cruel.

Maxim 5: I'd prefer a man who wears his opinion on his sleeve, and tells me honestly he does not like me, to the one who hides his hatred with sweet melodies.

Maxim 6: The kindest man, is often one with a cruel word. Whereas the vilest man, is one with flateries.

Maxim 7: The kindest people can put up the harshest defenses, and cut you with their words. Whereas the meanest man can flatter you till Sunday, and ruin you in a moment.

Maxim 8: A Russian tells the truth, and this makes them impolite; but they still tell the truth. And that makes you like them.

Maxim 9: A man who tells the truth to you, will unmistakably be a better friend, than a man who lies to you.

Maxim 10: Best friends are not those who bestow gracious words and kind gestures, but the ones who talk about real things, and don't believe everything they're told.

Maxim 11: A friend will ruin you for a moment and give you a lifetime. An enemy will cling to you for a lifetime, and ruin you in a moment.

Maxim 12: Honesty is rewarded more than flattery, by those who who truly wish to benefit from it.

Maxim 13: Flattery is rewarded more than honesty, by those who wish to never know themselves.

Maxim 14: The stupid man is nobler than the foolish man.

Maxim 15: The average intelligence of people does not allow them to grasp much.

Maxim 16: Smart men think they do the world a favor by reminding the masses they are stupid.

Maxim 17: A dictator is a bit smarter than the average person, but there is a threshold of high intelligence where a person cannot ever become one.

Maxim 18: A good ruler is often not intelligent. They rather rely on their cabinets and administrators to lead them to executive decisions.

Maxim 19: Heads of states with IQs above 150 are prone to making massive mistakes. That is why you ought not have philosopher kings.

Maxim 20: The smartest men make bad rulers because they understand all too well the people they rule.

Maxim 21: Intelligent men do not seek political office, not because they are smart and therefore avoid it, but because they cannot attain it.

Maxim 22: Politicians without greed rule countries well; envious ones are their ruin.

Maxim 23: The king who is a philosopher, allows genocides in his kingdom; the king who is a man of practical arts, usually abates them.

Maxim 24: You find no more foolish man than a philosopher.

Maxim 25: The man who thinks he can forge fortune, does not understand it. But the man who seizes fortune, does.

Maxim 26: There is a thief and liar who has a good life, and a good man who doesn't. That's just been the way of the world for six millennium.

Maxim 27: To try and change the world, is to make it have your faults, and rarely gives it your good qualities.

Maxim 28: A philosopher like myself, might be useful, if it is only in the realm of arts that I dabble, and not realpolitik.

Maxim 29: Artists are philosophers, because philosophy is best suited for art and entertainment. Not for real world decisions.

Maxim 30: A world without philosophy would be boring as hell.

Maxim 31: Literature is the best philosophy, and the worst philosophy is artless.

Maxim 32: I listened to a philosopher once spend 20 pages to prove light reflects off a wooden table. Somehow this proved God doesn't exist. I still don't understand why.

Maxim 33: The manic high, and depressed low, the euthymic middle. Not a sound mind. And usually because they caused trouble.

Maxim 34: "That's crazy," is what they say to people who tell the truth. Until the thing they thought never could, happens.

Maxim 35: People, despite insistently being proven in the wrong, will still continue down their path of degradation, and every fulfilled prophecy, is a moved goal post for them, that can prove nothing.

Maxim 36: In the 00s they boasted that 1984 could never happen. Hip teens back then thought for sure, with their swank nihilism, until they ushered in the beginnings of thoughtcrime.

Maxim 37: The silliest thing about success, is the refinement and superficial manners it brings.

Maxim 38: The silliest thing about poverty, is the depravity, and how it reveals our true nature.

Maxim 39: If you think you can move to the woods, and survive, you'll likely die in less than a week.

Maxim 40: People invariably need one another to live. That is why capitalist economies are the best. If you cannot understand that link, then don't become a politician.

Maxim 41: Marxism is conceited... it is envy and covetousness born by frustration turned into a war, and then into tyranny.

Maxim 42: The stinky thing about Freelander Society, is that it would probably last about as long as it did.

Maxim 43: Second shift hours--getting to bed at 12am and waking up at 10am--is not shameful, so long as you do work.

Maxim 44: I covet the ability to wake up early: If only I could function for so many days doing so. Having tried, I'm worthless doing it.

Maxim 45: If you could shield yourself from both poverty and riches, shame and allaudement, do so.

Maxim 46: Good fortune is modest, not extraneous. Anything more than what you need, destroys who you are.

Maxim 47: Fame is not to be coveted. Rather, it's to be avoided, unless you are someone whom the people need.

Maxim 48: If you can gain success, do it without destroying yourself.

Maxim 49: Poverty, the kind found all over the world, is actually a rich life that no one covets.

Maxim 50: Every child of the 21st century goes through a cycle of interest and boredom. I don't know whether by expectations, or by design. But it is the greatest hindrance to their chance at happiness and success.

Maxim 51: To be consistent is real. To be ever changing is false.

Maxim 52: Do not masturbate. You will make so much love in your dreams you'll want nothing to do with it.

Maxim 53: Yanking on the monkey makes a frustrated desire.

Maxim 54: The mind is privy to feel things it never knew. Be it sensations or emotions... or even tastes.

Maxim 55: Do not feel guilty for dreams, my children. They are but dreams. As Leviticus says, get up, wash, and stay out of battle. That is all the commandment says about it.

Maxim 56: You can feel pain in your dreams, often because your battle with the shadow is your greatest war.

Maxim 57: Sex feels good. Love feels real.

Maxim 58: Covet nothing in this life more than true love. Not the rapturous kind that is like soda on vinegar, but the kind that is general amity.

Maxim 59: Do not separate from your spouse for prolonged periods of time.

Maxim 60: When dating, if the woman truly loves you, she will spend all her time with you. So with the man.

Maxim 61: There is a cold artifice to modern relationships, that all love must be cut with the knife of betrayal, and all hearts must be broken. It is the rule.

Maxim 62: The woman laughs at her husband. What can he do? The child holds a grudge.

Maxim 63: If there is one thing that makes "Gay" a sin, it is the cruelty of people who believe it is okay. There can be no fidelity with the person who holds such a position... all relationships to them are foreskins, and a little controversy is the knife.

Maxim 64: A foolish man disputes with a wise man. A wise man disputes with a foolish man. Where there are two wise men, there is usually no dispute. Where there are two fools, there is mischief afoot.

Maxim 65: The best way to be wise, is to place yourself among the wise; argue with them if you must, but sooner or later you will stop and listen.

Maxim 66: The wise compels a fool in nothing, for they are a fool. The words are like cymbals, noisy and clamorous.

Maxim 67: "Evidence", yet they do not know when something actually is, and will outright lie to dispute it.

Maxim 68: A good lawyer makes up facts in the moment, and uses extraneous laws that ought not apply.

Maxim 69: A bad judge takes too much consideration of the law, and not enough of right conduct.

Maxim 70: I do not care about the Second Amendment, insofar as I do not want to own a gun. But I do want my neighbor to own a gun. So I do not have to then petition to own a knife.

Maxim 71: The true intent of the Second Amendment was to make life dangerous, so there would not be too much bureaucracy. Not to defend a country against itself, which would be futile today, as five men could kill ten thousand.

Maxim 72: Where there is a public piano, and people are forbade to play it, you know you live in a dictatorship. Whether by the people or the government, it is still what it is.

Maxim 73: At the cloister, if you can, play the piano. See what happens. Either good or ill. That shows you what kind of church you are at.

Maxim 74: At the cloister, reveal a secret to the pastor. If he cannot hold his constitution, move on.

Maxim 75: If the Altar does not cleanse sin, then what is it for? What is church if it is a place where perfect people congregate and pretend to have done no ill?

Maxim 76: One of the most ironic things about today--and probably Satan's greatest maneuver--is that Christianity is a little bit naughty in some regards with the things it allows and believes; compared to the stinginess of a modern woman, who has a morality more prudish than a nun's, but the forehead of a whore.

Maxim 77: If you write for an audience, you’re writing propaganda. If you write for yourself, you’re writing art. Propaganda sells, but art lasts.

Maxim 78: You got to love each season, in time. Winter for the snow, spring for the flowers, summer for the rain, and autumn for the peaceful silence.

Maxim 79: I Live by the New Testament, while my adversaries die by the old.

Maxim 80: Absolutely no good can come from playing with gasoline and matches, unless you’re making a cooking or heating fire.

Maxim 81: In my lifetime, I have seen the slow strangulation of freedom--at school I watched this thing happen, as first it was the Good Lunches, then it was Hall Passes restricting the number of times you could go to the bathroom; then it was the Vending Machines which sold Soda. I studiously rebelled, as I do today. I want freedom; not tyranny.

Maxim 82: Actions don't have consequence these days. There's enough desperate men to make a whore happy. I just saw one today, who was a porn star, ready to settle down with her boyfriend. Just by getting the taint, that's all most men desire these days. And women too. No love. No honor. Just a little sting from a honeybee. They don't even care if they're sharing the pot.

Maxim 83: Karma is just milieu.

Maxim 84: If the uncles are arguing politics at Thanksgiving, {...} it needs to happen in a healthy democracy.

Maxim 85: If the people want fortune over freedom, then they want Kings to be their rulers. And by extension, they are deprived of both.

Maxim 86: If depth of conversation is an offense in democracy, there is no more democracy. There is a popularity contest.

Maxim 87: People['s freedoms] need protected from their neighbor[s], as much as from their government.

Maxim 88: In ethics, a criminal knows more than someone who passed a bar.

Maxim 89: Sin causes selfishness; selfishness causes hurt; hurt causes anger; anger causes hate.

Maxim 90: The worst effect of sin, is when it breeds apathy and causes you to dash others' hopes.

Maxim 91: The most grievous evil, is sin established with contentment. Others see it, and say it is a way, but then cruelty lurks everywhere.

Maxim 92: The greatest crime of humanity, is to have always associated passionate love with adultery and not the marriage bed.

Maxim 93: Some may call what I write deranged, but its strangeness comes from without and what I've witnessed, while my heroes kill it within.

Maxim 94: It’s kind of lame to ask people to know everything, and then get offended when they don’t.

Maxim 95: Islam spread by the sword. Christianity by martyrdom. You decide.

Maxim 96: The greatest mistake made by lovers, is to court without the fires of infatuation. The second, is to assume those flames will burn on for eternity.

Maxim 97: The [Bible was] written contemporary of the events. We have plenty of evidence for that. It's just the Bible makes true predictions, which make{} Academics think it was written later.

Maxim 98: Enlightenment is just another vanity. If you know how to do right toward your neighbor, and believe in Christ, you'll be saved.

Maxim 99: What a world. We sue our geniuses. And then steal their ideas.

Maxim 100: Educate even a peasant in right conduct, and let the ancient knowledge of their professions not be interfered with, and your land shall be called "Glorious."

Maxim 101: Welfare ruins a state by fostering a forgetfulness of the family's trade.

Maxim 102: You don’t have to be a bad person. Nobody has that power over you.

Maxim 103: To hate and despise is doubt. Not confidence.

Maxim 104: I practice what I preach. Exponentiated equations have multiple answers.

Maxim 105:  Our math is defined by shapes, not our shapes defined by math.

Maxim 106: "Lift Every Voice and Sing" is not about two nations, but finally becoming one.

Maxim 107: The hymen proves virginity is not a made up concept. In fact, there's a lot of chemistry involved with that, that doubly proves it.

Maxim 108: Flatter me, I'll suppose you really mean to destroy me. Tell me honestly what you think, no matter how different, I'll respect it.

Maxim 109: To give a true compliment, there must first be resistance in other areas. And no snuff of tact or politics.

Maxim 110: We are too scientifically advanced for war, but philosophically, we have regressed back to caveman.

Maxim 111: Homosexuality blurs the line between right and wrong; when that line is blurred, it leads to worse things being accepted by the culture; and when that happens, the culture fails, gets despotic or gets conquered.

Maxim 112: The Greeks and Romans said a man without Logos was a slave. Thus, the point of American Education is to bestow the gift of Logos on students, so we have a nation of kings, and not slaves.

Maxm 113: I can know all I need to know about a person, by their dog's attitude toward me.

Maxim 114: The thing I've heard a fool say most, is "Just because you say so, doesn't make it true." Then "How does reason work," they cannot know, for they opened their mouth before they listened. And refuse to know.

Maxim 115: There was never a disagreement I saw, that didn't start and end with desire.

Maxim 116: Some may say the only thing that distinguishes humans from the other animals, is that we know we have rights. That's literally the second and third chapter of the Bible. It's literally why there are laws. It's literally the theme of all the great sages. It's like arguing there's no sense to what someone says, when you say law, morality and human rights are not real. It's simply unfounded, and not true. It's not a story we invent. It's the reason we tell stories in the first place.

Maxim 117: Just because Disney made a stinker, doesn't mean you get to sue them.

Maxim 118: It's just natural, that it's happier both for rulers and their people when they have laws and rights. Hence why civilizations founded them--some may say those principal Laws were given by God, too.

Maxim 119: If Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness are not self evident, then neither are the laws of addition or subtraction.

Maxim 120: I'm a fire and brimstone person. No more kind person you'll ever meet, than a good old fashioned fire and brimstone preacher. Quote me on it. All their bad stuff comes out in that preaching, so they live peacefully inside.

Maxim 121: People have too much compassion on animals, and not enough on humans.

Maxim 122: To know that men are inherently different than beasts, watch the beasts eat, and then men sat down at table. What you see is lawlessness contrast with law.

Maxim 123: Just in: Karma is why there are Indian men neck deep in human sewage, and Dictators swimming in money and women.

Maxim 124: To have malaise around an animal generally makes it distrust you. Just like with people.

Maxim 125: Everything in this life is really moot. Fame. Fortune. Success. Family. Achievement. We all go to the grave. And there what we’ve done is accounted for.

Maxim 126: [T]he person most likely to be a killer, is the one obsessed with other people doing it. The most likely racist, is the one obsessed with racism. You catch the drift?

Maxim 127: The act speaks volumes of the heart.

Maxim 128: I’d rather pray selfishly, and act benevolently, than pray benevolently, and act selfishly. I ask Him for things for myself, because I can do for others with what He provides me.

Maxim 129: If you can give nothing, then pray for that person.

Maxim 130: The acumen of a true artist is to know when you're done. So you don't spoil the original effect.

Maxim 131: The issue with most writers, is they worry more about their words than the idea. Have an idea, and the words will naturally flow the more lucid it is.

Maxim 132: Just because you hold a degree in a field, does not make your word gospel. In fact, the most common sense things can be overlooked by the most educated people.

Maxim 133: Christians, I've found, are the only ones who can tell the truth.

Maxim 134: You want one good moral the Bible has that the world doesn't? Sure, I'll give you one. 'Homosexuality is a sin.'

Maxim 135: To make a perfect world would be a crime. Because humans are fallible. Hence, we need God to judge. And generally, we come prewired knowing right from wrong, and it's built in us, but we don't follow it. And that's why there's suffering in the world.

Maxim 136: The most tempting thing about gaining the world, is you get to try and end its suffering.

Maxim 137: I say not a word to try and fix this world--such is futile--only to fix a man's heart, and help them find Jesus.

Maxim 138: The only one who struggles to define what a novel is, usually turns out to be a literary critic.

Maxim 139: There is such mystique surrounding novels for literary critics, like a long prose set to narrative is so hard to define, it must be transcended into some mystery it certainly is not.

Maxim 140: An epic poem exceeds 2,000 verses. A book consists of more than 800 verses, a long poem between 150 and 800; a short poem less than 150.

Maxim 141: A novel is a prose narrative greater than 40,000 words. A novelette is any prose narrative between 40,000 and 25,000 words. A short story between 1000 and 25,000. A flash fiction 1000 or less. An epic novel exceeds 500,000.

Maxim 142: I'm not prejudiced against black people, but barbarians. I enjoy civilization, no matter the color of its people. An African sage is just as interesting to me as Confucius, Moses or Thomas Jefferson. A Japanese carpenter as much as a Tribal Elder.

Maxim 143: A poem, like water, the more coldly you try to get it exact, the more it crystalizes into ice. But the more you try to see its every possible angle, even ones not foreseen by its author, it is like water. Too much unforeseen, it whisps away into an airy vapor.

Maxim 144: It is better to know love, and never have it, than to find vain relationships.

Maxim 145: Love’s only as real as the people who can make it.

Maxim 146: All the reasons that make our modern world doubt, those are the same reasons I believe.

Maxim 147: Some things are best spoken, and heard once, rather than recorded for all to see.

Maxim 148: The weird thing is I can understand everyone else, but they just can't understand me.

Maxim 149: It's amazing that the skill I have is to listen, and understand every nuance of a person's speech. I wish to employ it more.

Maxim 150: Now we are no longer called "Fishers of men" but "Hunters of men" for we must go forth, and with a little discipline, rebuke the nations and bring them back to Christ.

Çatalhöyük

Behemoth's feet; tail of cedar;
Fire breathing leviathan.
You must build doors upon the roof.
Your Venus is found across the
Ocean, in America, too.
Naqad III's red paints found in
Nevada and other caves, too.
Similar subject, and theme, too.
Your peoples live in caverns, wise
Among your years, and use the bones
Of beasts as your decorations.

White Rider

White Rider, come, and bring your peace
Upon the walshen shores of Greece...
King of Grecia, awesome King;
Named "Sin", that is your name oh King,
And upon your horse will you bring
Such peace, pleasant sex, computers
Shall make perfect obsequious
Loves, to the rules of your great day.
The men, with the Glasses, shall feel
They shall eat, taste, touch, smell, hear, see,
And shall have beauties 'pon beauties
In their pornography, for them
To touch. They shall have all things in
Their domain, adventures, and games
Wars with no suffering, but play
They will, with robotic maids made
To do their chores, so enslaved, no work
Is done, but they like a rat on
A spinning wheel will be pleased. Pleased!
Until the great suffering comes;
Which you, Greek Rider, had thus made.