pages tagged memoriesPhilowixianhttp://www.columbia.edu/cu/philo/tags/memories/Philowixianikiwiki2012-12-12T07:00:31ZThe Missionhttp://www.columbia.edu/cu/philo/phlog/2008/01/mission/2008-01-28T11:53:00Z2008-01-28T11:53:00Z
Part I: Why I Write<br />a. Young lust<br /><br />True poetry can be found on this earth.<br />I lusted for her once.<br />She . . .<br /> had eyes, deep and dark,<br />as the space between stars,<br /> as the eternity ‘tween thoughts.<br /><br />She . . .<br /> was wild and of the earth.<br />Feral and magical, she hummed with the ground.<br />Poetry beaded off her skin, tellurian:<br />like the dusky dawn chanting of Shamans.<br /><br />A pure tincture of poetry and passion charged<br />through her veins,<br /> illuminating her skin.<br /><br />She saw visions<br />and through her<br />I did as well . . .<br /><br />This is not why I write.<br /><br />b. Then and Now<br /><br />Then:<br /> Meaning was wrung from life<br /> and left to dry on the rack.<br />Then:<br /> The juice of poetry dribbled<br /> down<br /> our<br /> chins and only the pit remained.<br />I did not stop to enjoy the fruit.<br />So heady was the Quest for Truth and Beauty<br />that I took to interrogating her with harsh light and demanding tones.<br />Her wondering moans of pity and fear still haunt me in the darker<br />tender times of night.<br /><br />Now:<br /> I am of a softer disposition.<br />Beauty must be encountered like a deer in the field,<br />taken for the wonder it is<br />and stalked delicately for every additional moment<br />one has in its company.<br />Truth must be recognized in the crowd,<br />like a long lost friend one has not met before.<br /><br />c. Command<br /><br />Poetry must not be written<br /> not be created.<br />Breathe poetry. Drink poetry.<br />love poetry. FUCK poetry.<br />Worship poetry, then whisper sublime wonders in her ear.<br />Smoke a cigarette with poetry in bed.<br />Warm yourself with hot chocolate and poetry.<br />Run to poetry’s house in the rain.<br />Scream and don’t stop screaming til she comes out.<br />Kiss poetry with the kisses of your mouth.<br />Promise poetry you’ll never leave her.<br />Love poetry.<br /><br />Part II: Why I Fight<br />a. Preamble<br /><br />I’ve been writing ever since I could remember.<br />In fact<br />my life can only be proven through creation.<br />By all accounts<br />my life began when I put words on paper<br />into the souls of the world.<br /><br />To live well,<br />what one creates must be beauty.<br /><br />I stand here<br />knowing my life is no longer mine alone.<br /><br />Tremble.<br /><br />b. Reminisces<br /><br />Once she kissed me and her lips felt like the shed scales of a snake.<br />I wanted to draw back in fear<br /> in revulsion<br />but I dove deeper hoping to make soft whatever appeared rough.<br />To find beauty hidden among the discarded skins and lies.<br />Her eyes were like the soft mud of the earth<br />as was her hair, and her beauty was something I created.<br />I did not want her for her body.<br /><br />c. Present Time<br /><br />One day I will look back on my time here,<br />and I will see only words,<br />echoing in the hearts<br />of friends and former lovers.<br />Each one chosen carefully to<br />elevate the potential inherent in mundanity.<br />Poetry is raising the sparks.<br /><br />d. Reminisces II.<br /><br />Once -<br /> Her back up against the glass of a bus stop -<br />I - <br /> her nose with a single blemish and our bodies pressed together<br /> at awkward positions -<br />told -<br /> even while in embrace, my mouth moved against hers<br /> with its own purposes<br />her -<br /> all my eyes could see were her, her face, her lips, her eyes,<br /> the poetry beneath the vision of her skin, the faint hum of her breath<br />that –<br /> every inch of her was beautiful.<br /><br />For a while<br />we both believed it.<br />We used to listen for each others’ heartbeats, gasping like fish out of their bowls.<br /><br />I did not want her for her heart.<br /><br />e. The Mission<br /><br />I walk with my neck at odd angles.<br />I listen for the poetry of the world.<br />It is found in disparate places:<br /> <br />the squawking of geese<br /> the insistence of car horns<br /> the percolating pot of coffee<br />the bird calls of early morning<br /> or late afternoon<br /> the last school bell<br />the music of Spanish Harlem<br /> the beat box on the street<br /> the lilting dialogue of Black women.<br /><br />I search frantically, wildly, desperate for beauty.<br />Smells are beautiful. Touch is beautiful.<br />She tasted beautiful; the poetry I found in her was of lilacs and vanilla,<br /> brown sugar and cinnamon, jasmine and chamomile.<br /><br />I did not come here for pleasant faces and witty exchange,<br />for the haughty aloofness of youth in art.<br /> I do not care for your hearts or your minds,<br />your opinions, your politics, your affectations!<br />(“The opposite of love isn’t hate; it is indifference”)<br />But I did not come for your love,<br /> I came for your souls!<br /><br />Beloved:<br /> I came for your soul.<br /><br /><br />~jss<br />12/03
more from the vault of josh's maddeningly prolific literary pasthttp://www.columbia.edu/cu/philo/phlog/2007/12/more-from-vault-of-joshs-maddeningly/2007-12-31T04:20:00Z2007-12-31T04:20:00Z
Pulse<br /><br />Now<br />in the forever<br />Now<br />spiking crystal spires<br />tearing armageddon holes in the sky<br />then<br />and Now<br />I press my<br />fingers to the flesh of my forearm.<br /><br />Pulse.<br /><br />dew drops of imagination<br />fusing in the ionosphere and<br />when they fall<br />they shatter just<br />like dreams, frozen.<br /><br />Now and Then<br />I wonder, steal<br />glimpses of a future forbidden<br />I ponder stealing<br />and other glamorous sins<br />written in the stars.<br /><br />Pulse.<br /><br />in the<br />forever. Now<br />arrogant towers of purity<br />and Truth tear apocalypse holes<br />punching wide and raggedly rending dreams.<br />Then<br />and Now.<br /><br />I gently ponder loving<br />in the dark.<br />No one can see me.<br />I hope<br />You understand?<br />I am not a disembodied heartbeat<br />nor an eidolon, phantom-like ideal<br />I am pulsating memory & purpose tentatively approaching infinity<br />forever eternal Now.<br /><br />~josh schwartz<br />4/23/02
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/philo/phlog/2007/12/hey-everybody/2007-12-16T23:17:00Z2007-12-16T23:17:00Z
Hey everybody. I hope you enjoy this poem from my sophomore year in high school.<br />On the upside, it was one i read on NPR!<br /><span><br />Meditations on a Dying Woman</span><br /><br />The streets are overcrowded with salable goods<br />and people too sick to move<br />and people too sick to live - without someone else<br />telling them how ...<br />In the midst of all the refuse, rotting fruits and animals,<br />struggling workers tearing at their bonds that they’ve been told<br />bind them.<br />Walking along on the street of metaphors,<br />between the beggars painted gold, dancing away their lives, for a buck<br />and all the almost corporeal odors, that have been here so long<br />they pay rent ... a woman dies.<br />On the corner of Society Avenue and Universe Drive,<br />In Symbolism, Illinois, someone falls and can’t get up.<br />A scream wriggles free from the claustrophobic crush<br />of the Communists and heterosexuals. Shop owners sweep their brooms.<br />Kids just out of school stand atop boxes preaching<br />to their congregation of the unfeeling masses about a Utopia.<br />And a cancer patient, female, age 32, slips on the sweetly disguised black ice,<br />feels her feet slide out from under her<br />feels gravity and other natural laws betray her and laugh cruelly.<br />Her head strikes the corner of a box containing oranges all the way from Flahrida.<br />Suddenly there is enough room for her to die.<br />Meanwhile, prophets preach, children complain, and children’s programming plays on.<br />A man who had been playing guitar and singing about freedom with responsibility<br />puts down his yogurt and rushes to the poor woman.<br />“Those poor people” grumble the suits as they step over around her and move on.<br />The guitar playing man lifts her head off the cold inhospitable sidewalk.<br />Her blood bids her body goodnight and abandons ship<br />her red blood pumps from the heart to the outside world<br />and her benefactor realizes he has her life in his hands<br />he resists the urge to rinse them off<br />but the blood won’t stop<br />bleeding unclotted and he’s scared<br />and prophets without a god preach about a perfect world<br />and a woman dies<br />and good Americans stand proudly with their country<br />and a woman lies bleeding on the unsympathetic concrete path.<br />Her life is in his hands and he can’t afford to wash it off.<br />He wants to comfort her and her breath comes belabored now.<br />He begins to sing softly to her<br />he’ll meet her in heaven, he swears up and down,<br />he’ll see her through thick and thin<br />this is nothing, he’ll see her next week right here, same time, same place<br />and she can help him sing of a world where<br />a man can find space to live without having to die.<br />She can help him, he promises, and she begins to relax ...<br />Slowly. Gently. Softly. Like satin sheets sliding off a pre-made bed.<br />She dies.<br />He wipes the tears from his eyes<br />and her life onto his denim pants. One more stain ...<br />And suddenly, he knows he will sing again<br />sing to all the self styled prophets, saviors, rioters, and protestors,<br />who didn’t know a woman can die.<br />He sings; and he accompanies himself with his old guitar.<br />And the body is beautiful and serene and is swept away into the sea of metaphors<br />and the shop owner comes out from his store<br />and wonders how those oranges will ever sell now<br />with the blood stains and all ...<br /><br /><br />by Joshua Schwartz,<br />2003