Eight-hundred men were killed Eight-hundred were sent to the war. The emperor sent the eight-hundred Ronin To the battlefield So he could seize control of the citadels. Their death would send an outcry Throughout the kingdom. Their death would be heroic, A testimony of loyalty to their emperor. The eight-hundred were slaughtered Without much fight. Swords clashed, iron flashed Mounts hurdled over children. In the towns children were slain Elderly were thrown to the ground. The 800 Ronin defended the village From twenty-thousand mongols Who landed their ships upon The beaches of the Rising Sun. The eight-hundred fought hard, But in two hours were swept by the hordes of the Mongols. They killed, among them, seventeen-hundred. Each Ronin had killed two. Three Hundred and Thirty two Ronin had killed three. One Ronin had killed four. The report got back to the country As the Prince was in the citadel with his father Who expected to be lauded a great hero For the fame awarded by these Samurai's loyalty. Instead, the peoples held outside, Never knowing the misdeed that was done. They mourned the Ronin, but did not give honor to the king. They did not even know that the king's honor was why this act was done. Therefore, the peoples wept for the Ronin. But none knew it was the King who sent them into battle. For his honor... But none understood how it made the king honorable So it did not bring him any honor, Nor dishonor.
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The Hyperborean Sea
Longships, fly to the heavens To the Hyperborean sea. Great flights through the oceans, By the sails of Solar Fleets. "Must we bring ourselves there? Must we fare the forbidden trek?" Or, "Shall we be careless, And steal the lust from every beating breast?" Great ships fly; strong sails are sorn Through the oceans of the Hyperborean sea. To see the lands of giants.--- To one day, this planet, leave. One day the World will be filled With the seed of Earth's great saints. One day Christ's religion Will fly to Andromeda's event'h. Oh great hearkened warships, Oh great, and mighty fleet. The day we Men set sail Through that great Hyperborean sea.
Oh Eye, Thy Magic; A Haiku
Oh eye, thy magic Cast upon my busy back, Cause the hand to fail... If you like my writing, please support me by purchasing a book. Thank You.
The Baker, the Customer and the Christian
Callous was the hand that fed, Gracious was that man’s bread Who gave the man his open feast. However, like the duck fed in his wilderness He could not kneed nor roll, Nor press nor make the slits Within the loaf for the steam to vent. There was something meager in his existence. Something offensive to the man who fed him. It was like a pet, of sorts, Which was given the crumbs which fell to the dog’s feet. There came one day a customer, however, Who saw this fellow. This fellow eating his meager loaf, The strange dance of the baker and the homeless man. The customer asked the baker, “Why don’t you give this man a job?” The baker had thought of it. But, the homeless man had no teeth. Truthfully, he had no way of doing any job. He was like a dog in a cage Being electrocuted every time it tried to come out. Cramped, it was, very cramped. But, when it poked that little nose through the crevice It would get shocked. What to do with such a one as this? The baker fed him. The customer said give him a job. Which was the right man? Which was the more just man? The baker who took pity, but bound the homeless man in his chains? Or the customer who tried to liberate him, Knowing not it would only lead to another humiliation? There came a third man, however… This one was different. He saw the homeless man, And he took pity on him. He brought the homeless man into his house. Nursed him like a child. Slowly, over several years, This last man became a father of sort To the homeless man. This last man fed And nourished the homeless man, And soon the homeless man had a home. He neither could work. He neither could do anything. He never would get a job. But, the homeless man was suffering less. And being that this last man was not so rich, But had enough to support himself, All of his effort was placed into caring for this broken man. The homeless man died at a ripe old age. And for his entire life, He kept good company with the last man. He was conversational, Sympathetic, Warm, friendly, for he owed this man so much Yet nothing was to be given. The man was insured a future Of not the most loathsome suffering. Which of these men do we fall into? It is hard to know. It is always hard to know. The Baker is the Democrat. The Customer the Republican. The last man is the Christian. That’s about the only way I can distinguish it.
Forged in the Fires of Mordor
Forged in the fires of Mordor O' ring of power, You crux of the Great War;--- The meaning of World War I Is found in your coercion. Kings seeking to be Power, To bring forth the blackened age Of industry's might, To burn what's green And make what's violet The color of ash. The Sauron was crushed By the Somme, and other such evil. The Orcs were the raping Huns, As war marched from the green And battlefields turned blackened under war. Yes, the meaning of World War I Was Green in conflict with Black;--- The Green grasses, and the auburn rivers Turned into ashen mud and oleaginous ducts. It's the meaning I have never seen Who a man like Tolkien Suffering under the same sicknesses as me Needed a meaning to the war he witnessed. A war no man understands, Nor rhyme or reason. All he could see,--- The war was Green against Black;--- Nature against Industry Sauron against the little Shirefolk of Hobbits The Germans against peace loving Englishmen Who did not wish to fight in a war. Men who did not want adventure, But adventure was forced upon them. That is why The Lord of the Rings Are the novels containing the meaning of World War I.
Black Lives Matter
Sallow silence... How can I not say "Black Lives Matter"? How can anyone say it? Yet, politically charged, The semantics of the group make it so That it is pure rhetoric. Black Lives Matter, So we must forfeit our fortune... Our aspirations... Our futures... Our freedoms... To even say this, I know, Puts me under their condemnation. Yet, I support the fact that Black Lives Matter. So much so, that I believe the organization could effect real change. I see its potential, To free me from my own bonds. But, it will not. Rather, it will take from me everything I've worked for. To fix the problems, Abolish criminal records. For it is not a race that is subjugated, But those of us who have sinned, And none will let us regain our footing. Many blacks live good lives, And it's because they hadn't gotten into trouble. Yet, a cop shouldn't harass a black man. A man should be judged on the content of his character. There is a certain mien to a bad man That on black or white, It can be seen, And it can be understood that such a man is bad. Perhaps it is misfortune that brings that mien, But it is a universal fact. Judge the content of character, A lot of character traits can be known at first glance. It can be known, So to purge the known, Purge the criminal records. Yet, don't abolish the people who protect us.
The Three Buzz Words
Postmodernism is just Premodernism. Absent of God, it is just the self which dictates truth. The self becomes a god, And the predilections of teenage angst Become adult philosophies. The Modernist, they say, Is concerned with rational ways of being. The Postmodernist is concerned with one's own being. The Premodernist is concerned with being. The postmodernist is just a religious zealot of the self. The modernist is a man who believes heroes ought to be The average man, and that average men make good literary subjects. The Premodernist, he is concerned with heroes, With magic, with systems of divine truth. Which of these kinds of men are right? Solomon said all three have merit, Yet I find myself holding to two of the traditions;--- For there are only two. There is the Premodern, who believes what is outside of him Is defined by God. The Postmodernist just goes one step further And believes themselves to be God. The Modernist, he believes truth can be found In reason, and the study of the outside world. At some point, an ontological question gets asked, "Is there any outside world to begin with?" The Modernist doesn't speculate on such issus. The Premodernist doesn't either. The Postmodernist, however. wonders so very much whether solipsism were true. The Premodernist man, he tells the tales of heroes. The Modernist man, he tells the tales of average men. The Postmodernist man, he doesn't believe in tales of any kind. The prophets speak in similitudes The scientists speak in data The lunatics speak in self-aggrandizement. A religious man is concerned with the well being of others. A secular man is concerned with the well being of the state. A lunatic man is concerned with the well being of himself. A good man is concerned with treating others the way one would want to be treated. A civil man is concerned with treating others the way society has constructed with their laws. A lunatic man is concerned with how others treat himself. A saint is concerned with soothing heartache. A businessman is concerned with soothing poverty. A demon is concerned with soothing himself. A righteous man is concerned with being good. A worldly man is concerned with being rich. A stupid man is concerned with being himself. A meek man is concerned with charity. A strong man is concerned with his strength. A weak man is concerned with how he appears to others.
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Love’s Funny
My foreboding turns into delusion As I told him he needed to be better. I feel like the Asian mom haranguing The child because they aren't quite at the level. Of course, he goes, and instantly gets accepted. Oblivious to the fact that I am right. I don't say these things to upset him, Only to make him better. Yet, maybe my pleonastic prose are his sour notes. Maybe my long first paragraphs are his tawdry bends. Maybe my attempt at Pentameter is his sweet picking Or, perhaps, he is just better than me at everything. His professors laude his writing skills; All I see is that it needs work. He plays his guitar well, But then must play fast, And when he does, various inarticulate notes creep in, But perhaps I am the only one that hears them. He beats me at chess, a game I've studied. He beats me without studying it. However, I have been quite dull these days With my mind flattened by the stress. Maybe I am just mediocre. Maybe... But, I tell him my folksy wisdom To choose his notes. And he succeeds, and I fail. As he takes a test online for his class, I say a silent prayer, "Don't let him fail." Because my failure is enough to break me. No door opens, my poems don't make it to the search page. What's more frustrating, is that everything I do Is hedged in, and I cannot break free of it. I see him skipping over fences. I ask myself why this is? It's not jealousy; It's just watching someone else succeed While I languish in the pit I have dug for myself. I speak, and it doesn't come true. All the better if it doesn't. Yet I can't help but speak... I try to well up the words. But they come out. And I suffer for it, Facing a wall of poverty. Is it because I cannot trust in God? Why would I trust in God? God doesn't open doors for me. Though I love him, I feel like a caged pig, A worthless, slovenly animal Trapped in a cage; But love is funny. Any sense of true anger Turns into thankfulness that my brother doesn't have to suffer this. I am thankful that it's him suffering nothing, And I suffer. But, at some point, The suffering needs to end So I do not become a bitter man. For love is funny, In that I can be happy for my brother Yet, for myself, I will be unloving to all around me because my life is bitter And all my joys are turned to darkness.
Hedonism
Hedonism, Hedonism, O, thy wreath of fame. Vomitoriums no longer, For men... they say... do not display. Callously, the atheist chomps To win the never ending debate. His Reason is his tool, His tool is his gate. For love, he says, is more beautiful as a chemical. Morality, more beautiful without a law. Science can reason our goodness. Archaeology why Satan did not fall. To this dark omen, A chemical can one day cease. A world without a Law, would be violence in the streets. Animals do, yes they do, commit every terrible crime. Archaeology, they say, shows why men are not divined. For the evidence proves, That men are like the beasts. And Noah's flood is immoral, Yet this forecast is quite bleak. For at the end of times, What is beautiful cannot sway. For beauty is just a chemical Like a photosynthesized ray. Does not the truth put sway upon our hearts? Do not the stars, impart a certain charm, And geometry lighten the more one does chart? Is not love a good thing And is not the chemical inspired by the truth? Not the feeling is the truth, But the liquor of it true? For feelings do not say, What is good or so very dark. But, rather, they are gifts given by God To help us know when a thing's a farce. A good heart tests the liquors, A good heart tastes all the wines. And when an inebriation becomes hollow Idolatry is the kind Of drunkenness, worshiped above our God. For feelings do not make true, But truth does feelings impart. Yet, when the heart is bad And cannot draw a sympathetic string When kindness does not etch Into the hearts of man and king... When instead, the heart is dull The feelings unfelt. When another man's feelings One cannot tell. Then, I say, corrupt it has to be. Yet even more so than that Is saying God is but a fleet Of feelings, and wrong assumptions made. For it is indeed Christ Who brings peace to all hearts this way. Yet, Hedonism, The ode upon my lyre, Dulls all good feelings And dampens a holy fire. For the liquors come, And tamper down the flames. It dulls the heart The heart it breaks. For all sympathy is broken, The heart is so unkind Who hedonism has broken Who hedonism has maligned.
The Realized Philosopher
When every idea is mastered... The art of subtlety commenced into the ephemera of time... A fruitful mind will, no shall know... That only the fruitful can agree. Only the artist can understand The peering question. A snap crackle and pop for the inquisitor, But, the artist shall know. When every idea is mastered, The master then becomes the teacher. The joy of instilling the past Of passing down a tradition To the next generation of young minds. The philosopher spent his journey learning what is Wisdome... when he came to his own wisdom It was simply chaff. The eccentricities of bitter wars, Of conflicts, diseases of the mind. Upon the still of reason The refinery of our liquor, The wine of our words Became infused with the mastery over the subject. So that all was under the philosopher's domain. Thus, upon his rood of wisdom, He had only one thing left to do.