|
|
| |
"IS WAR HEROIC OR HEINOUS?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-17 12:11:15 |
"Dulce Et Decorum Est " poem written by British poet Wilfred Owen during World War I described the patriotic song as "the old Lie." It was written in direct response to a poem written by Jessie Pope a pro-war propagandist also entitled "Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori" about the glory of dying for one's country. Pope had published numerous 'jingoistic' poems in such newspapers as the Daily Mail and the Daily Express urging young men to enlist. Owen's poem is based on a gas attack during World War I. is one of his many anti-war poems that was not published until after the war had ended
Is the whole romantic martyrdom narrative of war a means to make sure that men enlist or are legitimately made to do mandatory military service? Is it a way to make the womenfolk stoic and prepare to be orphaned? Is it a device to make men in uniform beckon forth their highest emotions of sacrifice and pride in the nation to counter the ugly realities of inevitable trauma and violence? Is it a way for manipulating leaders to use these men like pawns to be discarded to the hounds of war by giving them opium dreams of valour? Who shall judge? Who pays?
Is Owen relevant in a world where the methods employed by militant groups to recruit suicide bombers is reminiscent of the methods used since time immemorial by every nation state and political body ever to have existed when trying to raise an army? Substitute ideology for country and you are essentially describing the belief system of suicide bombing. The recent Bush wars are testimony of the wanton nature of War be it political skirmishes or machinations of economic deviousness. This is the aggression of the state as opposed to the maverick destruction of fundamentalist anger and yet the two are so easily interchangeable.
Bent double like old beggars under sacks,Knock-kneed coughing like hags we cursed through sludge,Till on the haunting flares we turned our backsAnd towards our distant rest began to trudge. Men marched asleep. Many had lost their bootsBut limped on blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hootsOf disappointed shells that dropped behind. GAS! Gas! Quick boys!-- An ecstasy of fumbling,Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;But someone still was yelling out and stumblingAnd floundering like a man in fire or lime.--Dim through the misty panes and thick green lightAs under a green sea. I saw him drowning. In all my dreams before my helpless sight,He plunges at me guttering choking drowning. If in some smothering dreams you too could paceBehind the wagon that we flung him in,And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,His hanging face like a devil's sick of sin;If you could hear at every jolt the bloodCome gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,Obscene as cancer bitter as the cudOf vile incurable sores on innocent tongues,--My friend you would not tell with such high zestTo children ardent for some desperate glory,The old Lie: Dulce et decorum estPro patria mori.
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://lissome.rediffiland.com/scripts/xanadu_diary_view.php?postId=1194082807
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"IS WAR HEROIC OR HEINOUS?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-17 12:11:02 |
"Dulce Et Decorum Est " poem written by British poet Wilfred Owen during World War I described the patriotic song as "the old Lie." It was written in direct response to a poem written by Jessie Pope a pro-war propagandist also entitled "Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori" about the glory of dying for one's country. Pope had published numerous 'jingoistic' poems in such newspapers as the Daily Mail and the Daily Express urging young men to enlist. Owen's poem is based on a gas attack during World War I. is one of his many anti-war poems that was not published until after the war had ended
Is the whole romantic martyrdom narrative of war a means to make sure that men enlist or are legitimately made to do mandatory military service? Is it a way to make the womenfolk stoic and prepare to be orphaned? Is it a device to make men in uniform beckon forth their highest emotions of sacrifice and pride in the nation to counter the ugly realities of inevitable trauma and violence? Is it a way for manipulating leaders to use these men like pawns to be discarded to the hounds of war by giving them opium dreams of valour? Who shall judge? Who pays?
Is Owen relevant in a world where the methods employed by militant groups to recruit suicide bombers is reminiscent of the methods used since time immemorial by every nation state and political body ever to have existed when trying to raise an army? Substitute ideology for country and you are essentially describing the belief system of suicide bombing. The recent Bush wars are testimony of the wanton nature of War be it political skirmishes or machinations of economic deviousness. This is the aggression of the state as opposed to the maverick destruction of fundamentalist anger and yet the two are so easily interchangeable.
Bent double like old beggars under sacks,Knock-kneed coughing like hags we cursed through sludge,Till on the haunting flares we turned our backsAnd towards our distant rest began to trudge. Men marched asleep. Many had lost their bootsBut limped on blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hootsOf disappointed shells that dropped behind. GAS! Gas! Quick boys!-- An ecstasy of fumbling,Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;But someone still was yelling out and stumblingAnd floundering like a man in fire or lime.--Dim through the misty panes and thick green lightAs under a green sea. I saw him drowning. In all my dreams before my helpless sight,He plunges at me guttering choking drowning. If in some smothering dreams you too could paceBehind the wagon that we flung him in,And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,His hanging face like a devil's sick of sin;If you could hear at every jolt the bloodCome gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,Obscene as cancer bitter as the cudOf vile incurable sores on innocent tongues,--My friend you would not tell with such high zestTo children ardent for some desperate glory,The old Lie: Dulce et decorum estPro patria mori.
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://lissome.rediffiland.com/scripts/xanadu_diary_view.php?postId=1194082807
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"IS WAR HEROIC OR HEINOUS?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-11-17 12:11:02 |
"Dulce Et Decorum Est " poem written by British poet Wilfred Owen during World War I described the patriotic song as "the old Lie." It was written in direct response to a poem written by Jessie Pope a pro-war propagandist also entitled "Dulce Et Decorum Est Pro Patria Mori" about the glory of dying for one's country. Pope had published numerous 'jingoistic' poems in such newspapers as the Daily Mail and the Daily Express urging young men to enlist. Owen's poem is based on a gas attack during World War I. is one of his many anti-war poems that was not published until after the war had ended
Is the whole romantic martyrdom narrative of war a means to make sure that men enlist or are legitimately made to do mandatory military service? Is it a way to make the womenfolk stoic and prepare to be orphaned? Is it a device to make men in uniform beckon forth their highest emotions of sacrifice and pride in the nation to counter the ugly realities of inevitable trauma and violence? Is it a way for manipulating leaders to use these men like pawns to be discarded to the hounds of war by giving them opium dreams of valour? Who shall judge? Who pays?
Is Owen relevant in a world where the methods employed by militant groups to recruit suicide bombers is reminiscent of the methods used since time immemorial by every nation state and political body ever to have existed when trying to raise an army? Substitute ideology for country and you are essentially describing the belief system of suicide bombing. The recent Bush wars are testimony of the wanton nature of War be it political skirmishes or machinations of economic deviousness. This is the aggression of the state as opposed to the maverick destruction of fundamentalist anger and yet the two are so easily interchangeable.
Bent double like old beggars under sacks,Knock-kneed coughing like hags we cursed through sludge,Till on the haunting flares we turned our backsAnd towards our distant rest began to trudge. Men marched asleep. Many had lost their bootsBut limped on blood-shod. All went lame; all blind;Drunk with fatigue; deaf even to the hootsOf disappointed shells that dropped behind. GAS! Gas! Quick boys!-- An ecstasy of fumbling,Fitting the clumsy helmets just in time;But someone still was yelling out and stumblingAnd floundering like a man in fire or lime.--Dim through the misty panes and thick green lightAs under a green sea. I saw him drowning. In all my dreams before my helpless sight,He plunges at me guttering choking drowning. If in some smothering dreams you too could paceBehind the wagon that we flung him in,And watch the white eyes writhing in his face,His hanging face like a devil's sick of sin;If you could hear at every jolt the bloodCome gargling from the froth-corrupted lungs,Obscene as cancer bitter as the cudOf vile incurable sores on innocent tongues,--My friend you would not tell with such high zestTo children ardent for some desperate glory,The old Lie: Dulce et decorum estPro patria mori.
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://lissome.rediffiland.com/scripts/xanadu_diary_view.php?postId=1194082807
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"`A Wild Flower Planted Among Our Wheat'" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-06-22 07:07:48 |
Born in Bristol. England in 1890 the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants. Rosenberg first read Donne in 1911 and the Metaphysical poet’s influence is already discernable in his pre-war poems. This defies conventional literary understanding which assures us that Donne’s literary reputation was moribund before his post-war rehabilitation by T. S. Eliot and that the Great War poets – Rosenberg. Owen. Sassoon. Sorley. Blunden and Thomas – were heirs to the Romantic tradition. Rosenberg embodies a premature literary tradition truncated before it could flourish. In a 2000 interview collected in
Michael Longley says:“Pound and Eliot are not among my favourite poets…. How many people in the world actually enjoy them?…Really great English poets like Edward Thomas and Wildfred Owen and Isaac Rosenberg who died in the trenches would have made it more difficult for Pound and Eliot more complicated.…The war poems of Owen and Rosenberg ring out in my ear like modern versions of Sophocles and Aeschylus. Utterly modern. Huge. Who care if they’re `Modernist?’”Longley is being provocative but not merely provocative. Pound is important but I suspect few actually
his work. It’s more a matter of literary obligation a rounding out of one’s literacy. Eliot is another story but let’s concede Longley’s point. Had Rosenberg and the other Great War poets – especially Thomas – survived the slaughter what we recognize today as Modernism might have worn a very different more human face. Donne’s influence via Rosenberg and Keats’ via Owen and Sassoon might have mutated into unimaginable forms. In an essay that appeared shortly before
Eliot claimed Donne and George Herbert “feel their thought as immediately as the odor of a rose. A thought to Donne was an experience; it modified his sensibility.” I detect something similar in Rosenberg and his poetic brothers in arms. In June 1916. Rosenberg wrote “Break of Day in the Trenches,” a poem that mingles whimsy and horror in a manner new to Western poetry while recalling Donne’s “The Flea.” It was published the following December in the American journal
:“The darkness crumbles away. It is the same old druid Time as ever,Only a live thing leaps my hand,A queer sardonic rat,As I pull the parapet's poppyTo stick behind my ear. Droll rat they would shoot you if they knewYour cosmopolitan sympathies. Now you undergo touched this English handYou ordain do the same to a GermanSoon no disbelieve if it be your pleasureTo go across the sleeping green between. It seems you inwardly smile as you passStrong eyes fine limbs haughty athletes,Less chanced than you for life,Bonds to the whims of murder,Sprawled in the bowels of the earth,The torn fields of France. What do you see in our eyesAt the shrieking iron and flameHurled through still heavens?What quaver--what heart aghast?Poppies whose roots are in man's veinsDrop and are ever dropping;But mine in my ear is safe –Just a little white with the dust.”The “queer sardonic rat” with his “cosmopolitan sympathies” is a witty modify against shell-shock and raw horror and perhaps something of a self-portrait. In a letter he wrote from the front in the summer of 1916 to a friend in England. Rosenberg makes clear his feelings about “romantic” war poetry:“I did not like Rupert Brooke’s begloried sonnets for the same reason. What I mean is second hand phrases `lambent fires’ etc takes from its reality and strength. It should be approached in a colder way more abstract with less of the million feelings everyone feels; or all these should be concentrated in one distinguished emotion. Walt Whitman in `defeat drum beat,’ has said the noblest thing on war.”A long-time advocate for Rosenberg’s work is Geoffrey Hill. One of his first published poems. “For Isaac Rosenberg,” appeared in the journal
in 1952 when Hill was 20 and still a student at Keble College. Oxford:“Princes dying with damp curlsIn the accomplishment of fameKeep within the minds of girls,A bright imperishable name –And no one breaks upon their bet.“Yet men who grieve their hero's fall,Laying him in tradition's bed –With high-voiced chantings and the tallComplacent candles at his head –Still leave much carefully unsaid.“When probing Hamlet was awareThat Death in a worn body layCramped beneath the lobby-stair –(Whose mystery was burnt awayThrough the intensity of decay) –“It followed with ironic sense,That he himself who ever sawBeneath the skin of all pretence,Should undergo been carried from the floorWith shocked tip-toeing drums before.“With ceremony thin as thisWe tidy death; make life as neatAs an unquiet ChrysalisThat is a symbol of defeat:A worm in its own winding-sheet...”Perhaps Hill is heir to several diverse traditions in ways convention-minded critics don’t recognize. In “For Isaac Rosenberg,” we hear echoes of Donne. Shakespeare. Eliot and Rosenberg (for whom Eliot expressed public admiration). Rosenberg was killed near Arras. France on April cozen’s Day. 1918 while on dawn patrol. He was 27 and his body was never recovered. Edward Thomas had been killed nearby almost one year earlier. I’m reminded of something Michael Oakeshott wrote in one of his rare ventures into literary matters. This is from “The Voice of Poetry in the Conversation of Mankind”:“Poetry is a sort of truancy a dream within the dream of life a wild develop planted among our wheat.”
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://evidenceanecdotal.blogspot.com/2007/11/wild-flower-planted-among-our-wheat.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"`A Wild Flower Planted Among Our Wheat'" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-06-22 07:07:48 |
Born in Bristol. England in 1890 the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants. Rosenberg first read Donne in 1911 and the Metaphysical poet’s influence is already discernable in his pre-war poems. This defies conventional literary understanding which assures us that Donne’s literary reputation was moribund before his post-war rehabilitation by T. S. Eliot and that the Great War poets – Rosenberg. Owen. Sassoon. Sorley. Blunden and Thomas – were heirs to the Romantic tradition. Rosenberg embodies a premature literary tradition truncated before it could flourish. In a 2000 interview collected in
Michael Longley says:“Pound and Eliot are not among my favourite poets…. How many people in the world actually enjoy them?…Really great English poets like Edward Thomas and Wildfred Owen and Isaac Rosenberg who died in the trenches would have made it more difficult for hit and Eliot more complicated.…The war poems of Owen and Rosenberg ring out in my ear like modern versions of Sophocles and Aeschylus. Utterly modern. Huge. Who care if they’re `Modernist?’”Longley is being provocative but not merely provocative. Pound is important but I suspect few actually
his work. It’s more a matter of literary obligation a rounding out of one’s literacy. Eliot is another story but let’s acknowledge Longley’s point. Had Rosenberg and the other Great War poets – especially Thomas – survived the slaughter what we recognize today as Modernism might have worn a very different more human face. Donne’s influence via Rosenberg and Keats’ via Owen and Sassoon might have mutated into unimaginable forms. In an essay that appeared shortly before
Eliot claimed Donne and George Herbert “feel their thought as immediately as the odor of a rose. A thought to Donne was an experience; it modified his sensibility.” I detect something similar in Rosenberg and his poetic brothers in arms. In June 1916. Rosenberg wrote “Break of Day in the Trenches,” a poem that mingles whimsy and horror in a manner new to Western poetry while recalling Donne’s “The Flea.” It was published the following December in the American journal
:“The darkness crumbles away. It is the same old druid Time as ever,Only a live thing leaps my hand,A queer sardonic rat,As I pull the parapet's poppyTo stick behind my ear. Droll rat they would injure you if they knewYour cosmopolitan sympathies. Now you have touched this English handYou will do the same to a GermanSoon no doubt if it be your pleasureTo cross the sleeping green between. It seems you inwardly grin as you passStrong eyes fine limbs haughty athletes,Less chanced than you for life,Bonds to the whims of murder,Sprawled in the bowels of the earth,The torn fields of France. What do you see in our eyesAt the shrieking iron and flameHurled through still heavens?What quaver--what heart aghast?Poppies whose roots are in man's veinsDrop and are ever dropping;But mine in my ear is safe –Just a little white with the dust.”The “queer sardonic rat” with his “cosmopolitan sympathies” is a witty buffer against shell-shock and raw horror and perhaps something of a self-portrait. In a letter he wrote from the front in the summer of 1916 to a friend in England. Rosenberg makes alter his feelings about “romantic” war poetry:“I did not like Rupert Brooke’s begloried sonnets for the same reason. What I mean is second hand phrases `lambent fires’ etc takes from its reality and strength. It should be approached in a colder way more abstract with less of the million feelings everyone feels; or all these should be concentrated in one distinguished emotion. Walt Whitman in `Beat drum beat,’ has said the noblest thing on war.”A long-time advocate for Rosenberg’s work is Geoffrey Hill. One of his first published poems. “For Isaac Rosenberg,” appeared in the journal
in 1952 when Hill was 20 and still a student at Keble College. Oxford:“Princes dying with soften curlsIn the accomplishment of fameKeep within the minds of girls,A bright imperishable name –And no one breaks upon their game.“Yet men who mourn their hero's fall,Laying him in tradition's bed –With high-voiced chantings and the tallComplacent candles at his continue –comfort leave much carefully unsaid.“When probing Hamlet was awareThat Death in a worn body layCramped beneath the lobby-stair –(Whose mystery was burnt awayThrough the intensity of decay) –“It followed with ironic sense,That he himself who ever sawBeneath the skin of all pretence,Should undergo been carried from the floorWith shocked tip-toeing drums before.“With ceremony thin as thisWe tidy death; make life as neatAs an unquiet ChrysalisThat is a symbol of defeat:A move in its own winding-sheet...”Perhaps Hill is heir to several diverse traditions in ways convention-minded critics don’t recognize. In “For Isaac Rosenberg,” we hear echoes of Donne. Shakespeare. Eliot and Rosenberg (for whom Eliot expressed public admiration). Rosenberg was killed near Arras. France on April Fool’s Day. 1918 while on dawn patrol. He was 27 and his body was never recovered. Edward Thomas had been killed nearby almost one year earlier. I’m reminded of something Michael Oakeshott wrote in one of his rare ventures into literary matters. This is from “The Voice of Poetry in the Conversation of Mankind”:“Poetry is a sort of truancy a dream within the dream of life a wild flower planted among our wheat.”
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://evidenceanecdotal.blogspot.com/2007/11/wild-flower-planted-among-our-wheat.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"`A Wild Flower Planted Among Our Wheat'" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-06-22 07:07:48 |
Born in Bristol. England in 1890 the son of Russian-Jewish immigrants. Rosenberg first read Donne in 1911 and the Metaphysical poet’s influence is already discernable in his pre-war poems. This defies conventional literary understanding which assures us that Donne’s literary reputation was moribund before his post-war rehabilitation by T. S. Eliot and that the Great War poets – Rosenberg. Owen. Sassoon. Sorley. Blunden and Thomas – were heirs to the Romantic tradition. Rosenberg embodies a premature literary tradition truncated before it could flourish. In a 2000 interview collected in
Michael Longley says:“Pound and Eliot are not among my favourite poets…. How many people in the world actually enjoy them?…Really great English poets like Edward Thomas and Wildfred Owen and Isaac Rosenberg who died in the trenches would have made it more difficult for Pound and Eliot more complicated.…The war poems of Owen and Rosenberg ring out in my ear like modern versions of Sophocles and Aeschylus. Utterly modern. Huge. Who care if they’re `Modernist?’”Longley is being provocative but not merely provocative. Pound is important but I suspect few actually
his work. It’s more a matter of literary obligation a rounding out of one’s literacy. Eliot is another story but let’s concede Longley’s point. Had Rosenberg and the other Great War poets – especially Thomas – survived the kill what we recognize today as Modernism might undergo worn a very different more human face. Donne’s influence via Rosenberg and Keats’ via Owen and Sassoon might have mutated into unimaginable forms. In an essay that appeared shortly before
Eliot claimed Donne and George Herbert “feel their thought as immediately as the odor of a rose. A thought to Donne was an experience; it modified his sensibility.” I detect something similar in Rosenberg and his poetic brothers in arms. In June 1916. Rosenberg wrote “Break of Day in the Trenches,” a poem that mingles whimsy and horror in a manner new to Western poetry while recalling Donne’s “The Flea.” It was published the following December in the American journal
:“The darkness crumbles away. It is the same old druid Time as ever,Only a live thing leaps my hand,A queer sardonic rat,As I pull the parapet's poppyTo stick behind my ear. Droll rat they would shoot you if they knewYour cosmopolitan sympathies. Now you have touched this English handYou will do the same to a GermanSoon no doubt if it be your pleasureTo cross the sleeping green between. It seems you inwardly grin as you passStrong eyes fine limbs haughty athletes,Less chanced than you for life,Bonds to the whims of murder,Sprawled in the bowels of the earth,The torn fields of France. What do you see in our eyesAt the shrieking iron and flameHurled through still heavens?What quaver--what heart aghast?Poppies whose roots are in man's veinsDrop and are ever dropping;But mine in my ear is safe –Just a little color with the dust.”The “queer sardonic rat” with his “cosmopolitan sympathies” is a witty buffer against shell-shock and raw horror and perhaps something of a self-portrait. In a letter he wrote from the lie in the summer of 1916 to a friend in England. Rosenberg makes clear his feelings about “romantic” war poetry:“I did not like Rupert Brooke’s begloried sonnets for the same cerebrate. What I mean is second hand phrases `lambent fires’ etc takes from its reality and strength. It should be approached in a colder way more abstract with less of the million feelings everyone feels; or all these should be concentrated in one distinguished emotion. Walt Whitman in `Beat go beat,’ has said the noblest thing on war.”A long-time advocate for Rosenberg’s work is Geoffrey Hill. One of his first published poems. “For Isaac Rosenberg,” appeared in the journal
in 1952 when Hill was 20 and still a student at Keble College. Oxford:“Princes dying with damp curlsIn the accomplishment of fameKeep within the minds of girls,A bright imperishable name –And no one breaks upon their game.“Yet men who mourn their hero's fall,Laying him in tradition's bed –With high-voiced chantings and the tallComplacent candles at his head –Still leave much carefully unsaid.“When probing Hamlet was awareThat Death in a worn body layCramped beneath the lobby-stair –(Whose mystery was burnt awayThrough the intensity of decay) –“It followed with ironic sense,That he himself who ever sawBeneath the skin of all pretence,Should have been carried from the floorWith shocked tip-toeing drums before.“With ceremony thin as thisWe order death; make life as neatAs an unquiet ChrysalisThat is a symbol of defeat:A worm in its own winding-sheet...”Perhaps Hill is heir to several diverse traditions in ways convention-minded critics don’t recognize. In “For Isaac Rosenberg,” we hear echoes of Donne. Shakespeare. Eliot and Rosenberg (for whom Eliot expressed public admiration). Rosenberg was killed near Arras. France on April Fool’s Day. 1918 while on dawn patrol. He was 27 and his body was never recovered. Edward Thomas had been killed nearby almost one year earlier. I’m reminded of something Michael Oakeshott wrote in one of his rare ventures into literary matters. This is from “The Voice of Poetry in the Conversation of Mankind”:“Poetry is a sort of truancy a dream within the conceive of of life a wild flower planted among our wheat.”
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://evidenceanecdotal.blogspot.com/2007/11/wild-flower-planted-among-our-wheat.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"The End Of Infinity - War Poems by Mary Kimani" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-03-16 00:16:31 |
Mary Kimani is a journalist. She covered the Rwanda genocide trials at the UN court in Tanzania as well as the peace processes in Burundi and the DRC for Internews and Reuters. She has been writing poetry from a young age. One of her earliest pieces.
Children of an Inferior God
was included in a British Council Anthology published in 1991. Recently she published a collection of poems under the title -
I who undergo delivered your children
For you- truth has become too alter to see
So am forced to tell it to you-
And the shadows direct around the hut walls
like demented and disturbed spirits
no way to unmake what’s made
Like a fungus colony on the channelise stump…
A fungal infestation upon this heart.
Please copy the characters from the image below into the text field below. Doing this helps us prevent automated submissions.
register your details below to join our telecommunicate list and receive our newsletter. First Name:
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://www.africanwriter.com/articles/226/1/The-End-Of-Infinity---War-Poems-by-Mary-Kimani/Page1.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"Great Regulars: An interest in poetry now developed" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-01-01 23:23:02 |
alongside his boxing and drinking and [Vernon] Scannell was eventually able to live as a freelancer. His prose be of his placement in the 1970s as Arts Council "Resident Poet" in the "new" village of Berinsfield. Oxfordshire is as appalling in its way as any of his war stories. Vernon Scannell was still writing poems in the last weeks of his illness. The TLS published "Views and Distances" on January 8. 1999. Views and Distancesfrom ~~~~~~~~~~~
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://poetryandpoetsinrags.blogspot.com/2007/11/great-regulars-interest-in-poetry-now.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"Veteran's Day - Poems of War, Poems of Peace" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-15 15:25:31 |
Hy邰-D6DF#QֹBQOl,͝UQvMT3Jk|Dn_8R"T/tW$s9KLɷ2xOCZ2#,uv~-KPFF6Q̬0CքQk2U'!2@zXzܭ$Dw͒Sds~AȜK(Dbvq\,/`"@a+Nm#}*WN~{_&#L1p5c 0NZ*OJl5Zj &DŽ*^Run_|yA21"BTV{4,%.sD@@U:
bqv\r)omZrJӖeBɻT@Р>Dzf0wr60Ѷ x2fσ)B ;֫;2R!#. HyzM=5;LV-ỳqjm>*[sU[mܳ#r*ft0vr]km.[O1-M1$KDU19RCS̷d$tfn=xW˛7Ykaa2_[ T{=fBxzPm%^wڙבaʚeޱ6 @[P:'܈8mAR,TyĀ}mƇxn.EbܱZ3EI)0nʆٽ{V(5_&2Le-"0f!kP6zh)E=O/e_R\TWɹL2@hq}Q,!*YEmmGhBQTDRb3Z2=lUdtwCqqóz1QIiI']ht5$16&t82m HzJT&[#H##eТ'?,0RQ&HL WFxSZT{Z;^^R﹞(I|z:(GOJCY+kXhK6B26w!~P6cac}Կ|#z3=X:3XςBs,/)4wJjkim&B;8ȆM@"fr&Y$f[)2a#oL4"&2~!DbFy~aޓAy9-WCW!Vy Z+3abˍ0]|ZHܕIyr_r/-#`yäY&auNc,lY߅Lzq`!EoCaHxTs,+p{) y|Ⱦ{0!PbFQjIʨ@~8(^GebDe=D=SĔ2%b,,,ZTdɾRَ#?jvrd%ucSݡrWmvPT35zfG[P#];~wѽ*s 24 VLbF'HƑDrfQ6`DB6ɜglp!iZ>]J.`nX@χZ!4疴ߤCM#9-TҎdsbdU[Z5rDq:2lN6P2: kFPb]3(cOjV8NzM8I?.~EUvhCT6fQ^q:wT6ͯy#*Tc*˛(2ۜ8Ώ?EJ2%*FHQ9>fH)H#2Vc:LzF9~ f@.ŇZ',8U/8N(Lo3#8Egp6
b ѡeHx3j ,Q%Lw=.d2 6HbF\0⨉s|B#M)3QIZLizzv^qVGy|(Rdľj#GVfq?%v:r4 @Z|ssh',6݄tL e'ɍz2H' P6b:`#!D5*8α>RsG~]! aL|rn+KІ]Us3)+j`JHLփk IHJQT-&ZC"&|!8$l$:O8dpP~u2"!CjLaS'>,ް95]'/nH9, ?H[sº̈$GEl"}ʙjEC40)t24F`bI
D\်bHB8!U\%)f7Al ʈ2$CFHy"vc}aGBYsVdA+R//oW\[byrJ趍!%".dɪ)~hr`X+GR5Ram9"yk2R&s4yKfקѧZIάlJ5!sh4~ǖ"oE%qjCBb48Mmߢd8C-[BjRnmg[MÌO#Vճ50"^
Rq,JMf&Y1dÚW6^hDGC=&Y=iz&s[90('^8{ȝCSC#z*eZZ9APf HeОni9/+8)C&\^;bWRr2jk4VUMKҊTZ^s:cw&'l[{;2 FLau5MtmQL92dA73SLnG}t>^@bUHt5؊uHBP3S%$%8^Jj(QSLj
H!V.yS-;g()c"yFdRMYN>DnQ[S2|$@ye)/^bΠs^2_axa5i5k+B%gk8`UC~-;{+TavwxNc_*Us{jgEdvFy^!L4Mqd!0L TVc1G6 &[Oa2JjBHp#F;U dݤSyXKBE1ף1^Ȱ2%!!d0Fq>:wgm^ȸνвj2=$@y){Qp!AP FwyB\@Y(@G9[ʩiP XcIA&N0g
ɄРD#%. YEJ菨WN+I#EaR#-NmLR926'F8y7/'Tu^n]VTSMiҢ__%l!n*v3NlTx29P+8F鮋&CFRg5ܜTRE 6)MRRS2 *DzFqja[mMSpdEY)ղJ{2IF9iJDK6QΠMeWb,ưD)9i}^Pl29`M]F`wpxT%Fuh KBZXtg֗gl0%{8y:xq氏zt fLZJZE=Eayv*r$h&-tke]D¦TT;606V[N)9.pdd1la)c;zjGbBbqaę2O ^
$ѯj2M-~JxDPf\#ADWY R0@|yl"gZW(Lbp-jM哭Ȇ#(A{E~BxdFG3u"~_)2&D4zF?iYtX,Y(m8F H{L_iײOZ&ȁ8dqhWr@Et҉D>ǵu /JMVĩ(FsKϹjg`O2^HVau@]cd襜lȪ"o3ݍX0xDT2VEƣ?Q5LUl?#ޓ$ @RjcMQN\bv{iy|`?vc%.)+B;4"?d%^D0'L4yҡ)(sǙih3ٗt4ut4DdŐ!{-Ji)Z@+&ED`Q۸ƤXp4Ak z@զT\OQj#*[@u \
@e =sxPHuϩMbN6KK8,A!T9B)#BLM#~_ޙSlٻUQ;ᩐUxWݪS JZekOwϤ6Lvt-߭Rd͌Bh2"8ym>;C5\}PȂgs,9۔:Ml04,JW`}VzSGP%gTAdĨuHk%̴ 3u@$H?jhd[ti%{]3ZtT2%V4yLe4>I%2+e_h͚ˏ]}=RщyiHe(IA8X[A9LTY''xr>F^vްIX #aՁ`lgw@!7)2c
:]Q0z/#-S0[X//];Nq|#-dItyʎLD%Nkz=M*nf $=K1wcx750i'#,|^giY/\۾F~˯6~NZKigva߷GSw%8ƜeJDO/6* ;l8'Zxq iEi2DZHGcЙ%Z]xgx^^6{%2p!Jz4zFD6bFc
ЭuE$2#o$"p!uU= m%:U!7S)Z3R?(öE2Z̚w. Z˄52g,;VdVp^FԮx6B2p%cB0yBB%jRylg:17Gyanix=tǑ"Lr{q`_\WRaZVqXG:"R1(0(M$=E{DTIyEʡysee%t3ojg(Gf>|:!0!C^8yope=eN+vz{m웺V]6F
g̚x@Fo}@p/vC+"YDIF 0SmQ&dT#9P:C+pյ70I#u!2 Cx. I!uMޞ`̺Y ӦgS#*Pgd$Pbt'b,=]*Y=hqQ:RYvj[U4$aVDu!%huyToi~]ʳL0m%3lyݱItyZ@c_sYyYHś?FL`>2A@TgsJ$yz+I|?Vvn9lnF?Q[=lF}Ka{rgBzE!62e [x ykS4r,Ũ(XcV#bqpl;w KtD@im8Z^)Lb M;]%`W=w p.u*1jgɔ{+hʃǺZnnfd3¶vnQ|2bn&l$yme*N ӜmP$o,q ukM]Zǔ=?n%J[-rXK8T&QYݟ1c`bAb:ҋ&]>S!;.2|+Fx&aF{7r-:`%$QTAOP$@-,ˮEdy8`G*fn+aB.ҲLupՎ_hrzK$y@Z/hb@gB"Z%EDFD0o|'hrE@kQUT.u&Ѵe}hyɛ(7!9}#G8H8jՅLG t҃~VB)+AҋC-۴x=LBAqī&12.Ĺ2
q,rZK:eAmM0ǮE ?kS#&OWIHa`cu^)fKچdټdJ)cF@jaT\܆Ε{r02-%#xy݂yH7{5;4ΈjUƌZ2*5Tk]pn=AfZ0.Niy_˙$ڥOAPuY_{_dAlpaaś;(tK)gI4F*Gd2j$x&yH=(#L+snl3k#='`B.~: &ɣ0Hkߛ/YO^VKY.',AvgfDz{~gv~1niwk{U80zR zFiE95hu>LLȃ傊DpBV2!]IӄBUʘܢ]%BQ1S(";博ko=Oc*ٰ?pBje+ "#-F2/$x`%R9!erReKٜԡ*'q(7ۜ\C+*3$JGi"4P"!']dD(a4uٛ`x7J]y\вS֙|*FʹMZAga2%|&ɆTSq5R4y[yGj8QkiOcaG%W)%8F+KB.
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://uusterling.org/podcast/Veterans_Day.mp3
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
"vietnam war causes and effects" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2007-12-09 13:55:56 |
vietnam war cause of vietnam war causes vietnam war causes and effects vietnam war causes of vietnam war cell phone games vietnam war censorship vietnam war chemical warfare vietnam war chronology vietnam war clips vietnam war coffin vietnam war collectables vietnam war contend vietnam war contend photos vietnam war combat pictures vietnam war contend stories vietnam war communism vietnam war communist vietnam war communists vietnam war conflict vietnam war conflicts vietnam war conscription vietnam war consulate vietnam war controversy vietnam war be vietnam war be billion vietnam war be dollars vietnam war costs vietnam war coverage vietnam war crime involving lutinent kelley vietnam war crimes vietnam war crimes los angeles times vietnam war crimes museum vietnam war data vietnam war database vietnam war date vietnam war date vietnam war dates vietnam war dead vietnam war dead by express vietnam war dead by year vietnam war dead licking county ohio vietnam war dead list vietnam war dead names vietnam war death vietnam war death count vietnam war death counts vietnam war death evaluate vietnam war death rates vietnam war death statistics vietnam war death timeline vietnam war death toll vietnam war death knell us vietnam war death tolls vietnam war death be vietnam war death totals vietnam war deaths vietnam war deaths by year vietnam war deaths total vietnam war declared vietnam war demonstration vietnam war demonstrations vietnam war depicted movies vietnam war diaries vietnam war diary entries vietnam war documentary vietnam war documentary dvd vietnam war documents vietnam war dog vietnam war dog handlers vietnam war dog history vietnam war dog memorial vietnam war dogs vietnam war domino theory vietnam war draft vietnam war draft date vietnam war draft dates vietnam war draft dodgers vietnam war draft earn vietnam war draft lottery vietnam war draft numbers vietnam war draft resistance vietnam war draft resistors vietnam war compose started vietnam war drafting vietnam war drug cause vietnam war drug use vietnam war during vietnam war economy vietnam war editorials vietnam war effects vietnam war effects in america vietnam war effects on america vietnam war effects on asia vietnam war effects on soldiers vietnam war end vietnam war end date vietnam war ended vietnam war ended 1973 vietnam war ended date vietnam war ended in vietnam war ended in 1973 vietnam war ended in what year vietnam war ended on vietnam war ended year vietnam war ending vietnam war ending go out vietnam war ends vietnam war ends for america vietnam war entertainment photos vietnam war era vietnam war era map vietnam war era movies vietnam war era music vietnam war era o n i vietnam war era songs vietnam war act vietnam war essay questions vietnam war essay topics vietnam war essays vietnam war event timeline vietnam war events vietnam war experiences vietnam war facts vietnam war facts and figures vietnam war facts and statistics vietnam war faqs vietnam war feature article vietnam war fiction vietnam war fiction books vietnam war film vietnam war film clips vietnam war film footage vietnam war films vietnam war footage vietnam war gallery vietnam war bet vietnam war games vietnam war games online vietnam war games pc vietnam war command vietnam war general information vietnam war generals vietnam war government propaganda vietnam war graphic photos vietnam war guerilla vietnam war guerilla tactics vietnam war guerilla warfare vietnam war gulf tonkin vietnam war guns vietnam war hamburger forge vietnam war hawks and doves vietnam war headlines vietnam war helicopter vietnam war helicopter pilots vietnam war helicopters vietnam war heroes vietnam war heros vietnam war hippies vietnam war history vietnam war history 101 vietnam war history bring vietnam war history facts vietnam war history information vietnam war history of vietnam war history of childern vietnam war history of vietnam war vietnam war history timeline vietnam war history wikipedia vietnam war history year vietnam war ho chi minh vietnam war ho chi minh trail vietnam war ho chi minh trail change vietnam war homefront vietnam war hospitals vietnam war hueys vietnam war visualise galleries vietnam war images vietnam war immigration vietnam war impact vietnam war impact on australia vietnam war force on veterans vietnam war in media vietnam war in pictures vietnam war in south vietnam war in the 1960's vietnam war in the 1960s vietnam war in the 1970's vietnam war in the 60's vietnam war in the 60s vietnam war info vietnam war info vietnam war infomation vietnam war information vietnam war information and pictures vietnam war injustice vietnam war internet vietnam war internet communicate vietnam war converse care for vietnam war invasion map vietnam war involvement vietnam war iraq vietnam war iraq war vietnam war jane fonda vietnam war jeep vietnam war johnson vietnam war journalist vietnam war journalists vietnam war kennedy vietnam war kia vietnam war kids vietnam war killed vietnam war landing strips vietnam war laos vietnam war lasted vietnam war lasted from vietnam war lasted years vietnam war leaders vietnam war lesson plans vietnam war letter vietnam war letters vietnam war letters from soldiers vietnam war letters home vietnam war letters to domiciliate vietnam war line graphs vietnam war literature vietnam war living conditions for soldiers vietnam war magazine vietnam war magazine article vietnam war magazine articles vietnam war magazines vietnam war map vietnam war maps vietnam war walk vietnam war marine vietnam war marines vietnam war market vietnam war medal vietnam war medal of honor vietnam war medal of honor recipients vietnam war medal of honor winners vietnam war medal photos vietnam war medal winners vietnam war medals vietnam war media vietnam war media coverage vietnam war media coverage timeline vietnam war media effects vietnam war media affect vietnam war memorabilia vietnam war memorial vietnam war memorial artist vietnam war memorial dc vietnam war memorial designer vietnam war memorial designer maya vietnam war memorial facts vietnam war memorial history vietnam war memorial in washington vietnam war memorial in washington d c vietnam war memorial in washington dc vietnam war memorial location vietnam war memorial message board vietnam war memorial michigan vietnam war memorial names vietnam war memorial painting vietnam war memorial paintings vietnam war memorial picture vietnam war memorial pictures vietnam war memorial prints vietnam war memorial soliders vietnam war memorial statues vietnam war memorial wall vietnam war memorial wall poetry poems vietnam war memorial washigton vietnam war memorial washington vietnam war memorial washington d c vietnam war memorial washington dc vietnam war memorials vietnam war mental illness vietnam war mi lai vietnam war mia vietnam war mia list vietnam war mias vietnam war military vietnam war military draft resistance vietnam war military tactics vietnam war monument vietnam war monuments vietnam war movement vietnam war movements vietnam war movie vietnam war movie clips vietnam war movie music vietnam war movies vietnam war movies enumerate vietnam war museum vietnam war museum chicago vietnam war museums vietnam war music vietnam war music lyrics vietnam war music mp3 vietnam war napalm vietnam war napalm girl vietnam war news vietnam war news articles vietnam war news clips vietnam war news coverage vietnam war news reels vietnam war news reports vietnam.
Forex Groups - Tips on Trading
Related article:
http://bi-sexual-porn-movies.blogspot.com/2007/11/vietnam-war-causes-and-effects.html
comments | Add comment | Report as Spam
|
|
|
|
|
| |
|