Dreaming,
an escape
from reality.
Dreams
recollection,
re collection
elusive
Mind.
Mine
ceases to
dream.
No escape.
Dungeons
deep
down
mine
mind
mined
buried
breaking
breaking
broken.
Dreadful dream.
No awakening.
Sue Tonge, 1976, going mad….
Monday, 3 January 2011
Wall of Seclusion
You melted the ice surrounding my heart,
wrenched out my emotions, tore them apart.
My island, my rock of defence, you invaded,
feelings once hidden, now are paraded
for all to see
when you laugh at my tears.
My life, always, once, ruled by my head,
now dominated by a heart of lead, instead.
That fear of hurt, of emotional pain -
that dread, it fills my heart again.
A dream of love came alive
in reality it died.
Your hands created ecstasy, a moment in time
a natural pleasure – the senses - sublime.
I craved your touch, desired your heart;
we pull apart.
I'm afraid once again, must pretend an illusion
and build that hardened, darkened
wall of seclusion.
Sue Tonge, June 1986 – hurting again...
wrenched out my emotions, tore them apart.
My island, my rock of defence, you invaded,
feelings once hidden, now are paraded
for all to see
when you laugh at my tears.
My life, always, once, ruled by my head,
now dominated by a heart of lead, instead.
That fear of hurt, of emotional pain -
that dread, it fills my heart again.
A dream of love came alive
in reality it died.
Your hands created ecstasy, a moment in time
a natural pleasure – the senses - sublime.
I craved your touch, desired your heart;
we pull apart.
I'm afraid once again, must pretend an illusion
and build that hardened, darkened
wall of seclusion.
Sue Tonge, June 1986 – hurting again...
Mother Earth to her children
Listen to my message infant man,’
This world would answer back.
I scream my plight. Now hear my words:
no more soundbites, no spin, no promises.
Your rhetoric hasn’t worked.
Now! I call for action.
Now! I’m fighting back.
Inside my furnace is firing as
tears of sadness become tears of rage.
Millions of years I lived before you...
You who rip off my clothes;
Blow holes in my skin!
You, you who make my blood boil.
Beware infant man...
Your cradle is rocking.
This world would answer back.
I scream my plight. Now hear my words:
no more soundbites, no spin, no promises.
Your rhetoric hasn’t worked.
Now! I call for action.
Now! I’m fighting back.
Inside my furnace is firing as
tears of sadness become tears of rage.
Millions of years I lived before you...
You who rip off my clothes;
Blow holes in my skin!
You, you who make my blood boil.
Beware infant man...
Your cradle is rocking.
Ode to a planet
We test your trust,
drag you down,
use you up.
We create havoc with your weather.
We love you, we need you, yet we abuse you.
Our planet is dying...
"Whatever."
Your greatness is taken for granted,
Your planetary plight is ignored.
Perniciously we plundered mindlessly.
We manoeuvred and we messed
with you for our wares.
drag you down,
use you up.
We create havoc with your weather.
We love you, we need you, yet we abuse you.
Our planet is dying...
"Whatever."
Your greatness is taken for granted,
Your planetary plight is ignored.
Perniciously we plundered mindlessly.
We manoeuvred and we messed
with you for our wares.
Mammonism rules,
And so you are dying.
"Who cares?"
Sue Fewster 2009
"Who cares?"
Sue Fewster 2009
Poetry
Poetry!
That monster that seems to scare.
We fear it at school 'cos it baffles our brains
yet we loved it when we were small!
But, It’s only words written in a different way
that add extra meaning somehow.
But at school it’s destroyed -
Here, there’s no time to play
With words, with rhyme, with meter, with time.
No fun with puns, no gleanings and
No meanings self discovered.
Poetry becomes work:
a chore, a pain, a nightmare, a bind.
Please, forget all the rules for a moment and write
a song that tells a story, that fights
a battle, talks of love, makes wrong a right.
Describe a peanut, a sherbet lemon -
The sound, smell, taste, the feel, the sight.
Just play with words:
alliterate, similise, neologise.
Break the rules and make up new ones.
Then, read your words out loud and
wonder at the power of poetry.
Sue Fewster - 2009
That monster that seems to scare.
We fear it at school 'cos it baffles our brains
yet we loved it when we were small!
But, It’s only words written in a different way
that add extra meaning somehow.
But at school it’s destroyed -
Here, there’s no time to play
With words, with rhyme, with meter, with time.
No fun with puns, no gleanings and
No meanings self discovered.
Poetry becomes work:
a chore, a pain, a nightmare, a bind.
Please, forget all the rules for a moment and write
a song that tells a story, that fights
a battle, talks of love, makes wrong a right.
Describe a peanut, a sherbet lemon -
The sound, smell, taste, the feel, the sight.
Just play with words:
alliterate, similise, neologise.
Break the rules and make up new ones.
Then, read your words out loud and
wonder at the power of poetry.
Sue Fewster - 2009
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