Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Poetry. Show all posts

Friday, May 10, 2013

All I want is a call from you...

All I want is a call from you.

All I want is to hear your laugh
And I'd like to be the cause.
All I want is to hear the smile
In the way your voice tilts.
I want to get lost in conversation
As the room around me fades.

All I want is a call from you.

Lately I've been surrounded by emptiness,
By words with no depth,
And meaningless conversation.
Loneliness rests heavily in my chest,
Even though many surround me
And my days are full.

All I want is a call from you.

Though distance and cities separate us
And life demands our attention
I yearn for a small reprieve.
I know why we must be apart
And I agree with all the reasons,
But I miss you something terrible.

All I want is a call from you.

Let me warm my cold loneliness
In the blanket of your voice.
Let me close my eyes
And imagine us together.
Let our words embrace
Even if our arms cannot.

So please...
All I want is a call from you.


By Darlee Hart


Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Smooth Plastic

My awareness of the sound starts as a pressure at the back of my head
In the place where my skull meets my neck
In just a few short moments though I feel it move to the front
Now it is a sharp, headache-like pressure right behind my forehead and eyes
I'm not awake enough to form a full thought yet
All I can feel is a sickly mental groan as I reach blindly with one arm
My fingers fumble over smooth plastic
I trace the three large, rectangular buttons
Searching for the middle one
I press with my index and there is a loud click
A few more minutes of peace
I roll over on my other side to get more comfortable
Oh no...
Now it will take even more effort to press the button next time
But I'm too tired to move again
My limbs seem to sink into the mattress and covers
Though I remember tossing and turning and waking up several times last night
Every inch of the bed seems perfectly comfortable now
Just when I have to leave it
The sound goes off again
This time it goes straight to the painful headache pressure
I must have dozed because it seemed way too fast
I moan and roll over again
The movement seems to take more effort than it should
I fumble for the small switch
Click
I move to lay on my back
It takes me nearly a whole minute just to open my eyes
And once I do they fall shut again almost immediately
When I force them open again there is nothing to see but the boring, white ceiling
Maybe I should put a poster there to make it a little more interesting
One with dark colors
Even with the limited light in the room the white seems blinding
I force myself to blink quickly
So that gravity will not get a hold on my eyelids again
I take a deep breath of cool air to expand my chest fully
And to clear out any sleepy dust or cobwebs that sleep has accumulated
I stretch my arms towards the ceiling and rotate my hands at the wrists
They flop back down by my sides like lifeless fish
I arch my back slightly as I straighten my legs and point my toes
I tighten my muscles in a refreshing stretch
When I release them I feel my blood flow a bit faster
And my body feels more awake
Even if my mind doesn't
I roll to my side in preparation for getting up
I reward myself for being so productive with a few seconds rest
A few seconds turn into a few minutes
Then a few more
Finally I sigh and jerk myself into a sitting position before I can think about it
I force myself let my mind drift and my body to go into auto-pilot mode
This way my mind stays half asleep but I'm still moving
The few times I have to sharpen my mind to actually think through a question or problem
My mind takes twice as long and I have to go over the information twice
All the colors seem very muted
A coat that was a vivid red yesterday now looks more like a dusty maroon
At one point I drop one of my socks
It seems like such an effort to bend down and retrieve it
Standing again makes my tired head spin
There is pressure in my ears and I yawn to relieve it
My jaw pops slightly
I finish my morning preparations a few minutes early
I find myself standing aimlessly in the middle of the room
I can't quite remember how I got there
Did I brush my teeth?
I taste mint, so I must have
Dressed...check
Shoes...check
Hair brushed...check
Jacket on...check
Backpack...check
Keys in pocket...check
Cell phone...check
Water bottle...check
I have three minutes until I have to leave
I look at my chair
There's enough time to sit down
But if I do...it'll be even harder to get up
Maybe I should just leave now
I don't want to though
I end up standing sluggishly in the middle of the room until the clock changes
Then I mentally give myself a shove to get going
I forget to be careful with the door as I leave
The loud bang brings me fully awake for a moment
But only for a moment...


By Darlee Hart


Saturday, October 20, 2012

I love you, little sister

I have been missing my little sister Cristina something awful since leaving for college.  It's barely been a month, but I've never been away from her for this long ever!  So last weekend we went on a day trip to Seattle.  While we were there my mom met us (it was so nice to see her!) and we went to the musical "Wicked" at the Paramount Theatre.  It was amazing!  But that wasn't the best part of the day!
 
          It was a total God thing, but Cristina's High School Homecoming Dance just happened to be on the very same day and it just happened to be at the Space Needle!  What are the odds!  Not only that, but we just happened to have bought tickets for the matinee and she was arriving with a group of friend at 6:30pm!  The trap was laid!  Mom told Cristina that she was going to see me and my friends off at the bus station and then head over to the Space Needle so that she could take pictures when Cristina got there.  I even sent her a few texts before hand, talking about how disappointed I was not to be able to see her. 
 
          When the time came and we were waiting at the Space Needle for her to arrive I sent a few fake texts from the "bus".  I put some humor in them to keep her from suspecting anything.  I'll copy them down:  1) "There's some weird people on this bus.  There is a lady with a chiuahua (sp?) >:( "  By the way, in case you didn't know, I consider chihuahuas rats, not dogs.  2)  "I should call an exterminator!  This place has a rat!"  She was replying with lots of "hahahahaha"s and that sort of thing. 

          When she finally arrived.  I stayed inside and mom went out to the sidewalk to take some pictures.  Soon I was sneaking up behind mom and, oh!  The look on her face was priceless!  So was the scream!  I think everyone in a two mile radius must have heard her!  I sooooooo wish we'd thought to video-tape it!  Soon she was hugging me so tight I thought I would burst!  I was hugging her right back, though trying not to smash her hair or ruin her makeup.
  
SURPRISE!!!!!
(best picture EVER!)


          My baby sister looked just beautiful.  It's scary how fast she's growing up.  16 years old already...  I hope I don't miss the last of her childhood. 
       
          Unfortunately we had only a few minutes together. She was reluctant to let go of me long enough to take a few pictures with her group.  Soon she had to go upstairs with her friends to the dance. It was over far too quickly for both of us. 
 
Renee, Rachelle, Cristina, Me
Cristina (far left) and her friends
          After she was gone, we stayed around for a bit to say "hi" to some of our other friends from the school.  Mainly Kabrina and Evie.  It was so nice to see them. 
 
Rachelle, Kabrina, Evie, and Renee


          But once we finally got back to the dorm late that night, I couldn't help but feel rather depressed.  I tried to go to sleep, but so many thoughts kept running around in my head.  Eventually I got up and sat down at my laptop.  I needed to get some of the thoughts out or I'd explode.  I wrote this poem at o-dark-thirty in the morning before finally crawling up my ladder and falling back into bed:
Cristina and Me
 



I Saw Her Today
 
I saw her today
I held her close
And squeezed her tight
I was laughing
We’d been apart for so long
Longer than we ever have

But a part of me cried
For I knew
We had only minutes
So I took in every detail
That I possibly could
 
She looked so beautiful
Her fancy dress
Her high-heeled shoes
Her makeup
Dressed for a night
Of High School revelry
In some ways
She looked so grown up
I thought of all the things
I now had to miss
I hoped she wouldn’t
Grow up too much
While I was gone
  
And yet…
There were some things
That reminded me
Of the young girl
She used to be
And, in many ways
Still was
 
She’d forgotten a necklace
If I’d been there
I’d have given her
One from my own
Homecoming days
I forgot to check
But I think she forgot
A pair of earrings as well
Her hair was curled
Full of hairspray
And partly pulled up
In a small bun
With a plain black clip
I’d have dug around
In my cluttered drawers
And found her
A sparkling hair clip
To ornament her outfit
 
Oh my darling sister
How I wish I could
Have been there
To help you prepare
We’d have had so much fun
Laughing and talking
Hugging and grinning
I’d tease you about anything
And everything
I’d poke you in the side
Just to see you jump
I’d tickle you
Just to hear you laugh
 
I would have
If I’d been there
But I wasn’t
And I won’t be
For quite a while
So I drink her in
This strange and familiar
Beautiful and funny
Young girl before me
 
She used to depend
On me for so much
I never truly realized
How much I leaned on her
At the same time
Now we must support ourselves
And I’m left with a limp
For I only walked straight
Through life in the past
With her by my side
 
It’s time to go already
Hardly time for
A last quick hug
It’s not good-bye forever
But it feels as though
It might as well be
And eternity of ocean stretches
Between this moment and
The island, which is when
We’ll meet again
 
I saw her again tonight
My dear baby sister
My beautiful, lovely,
Giggly, funny, annoying,
Chatty, amazing, irreplaceable,
Wonderful, grown-up girl
Now she’s gone
 
I traveled through the rain
Through the fog and the traffic
Knowing with every single
Turn of the wheels
More space fell
Between her and me
As I sit here in the dark
Listening to the snores
Of my roommates
With only my laptop
For company
I remember…
 
I remember her scream
When she saw me today
I remember…
I remember her little nose
That I once teased her about
I remember…
I remember how hard she held me
As I held her just as tight
I remember…
I remember each second
Of those short, sweet minutes
I remember…
And those memories both
Warm and torment me
 
I will see her again
But until then…
 
Goodnight sweet sister
I love you
 




 

I love you, little sister...more than you know.

Friday, September 28, 2012

The Mountains of Mourne

         
          I love listening to Celtic music.  My favorite groups are Celtic Thunder and Celtic Woman.  There is a song by Celtic Thunder called "The Mountains of Mourne" that makes some good points.  It comes across as having old fashioned and over-used themes.  Yet these are things we face every day.  I think that if people didn't dismiss them so quickly and actually thought about them more often, there wouldn't be half so many that made these mistakes.


The Mountains of Mourne
Oh Mary this London's a wonderful sight
With people here workin' by day and by night
They don't sow potatoes, nor barley, nor wheat
But there's gangs of them diggin' for gold in the street
At least when I asked them that's what I was told
So I just took a hand at this diggin' for gold
But for all that I found there I might as well be
In the place where the dark Mourne sweep down to the sea.

There's beautiful girls here, Oh never you mind
Beautiful shapes nature never designed
Lovely complexions of roses and cream
But let me remark with regard to the same
That if at that those roses you venture to sip
The colours might all come away on your lips
So I'll wait for the wild rose that's waitin' for me
In the place where the dark Mourne sweep down to the sea.

You remember young Davey Mc Clarin of course
Well sure, now, he's round here with the rest of the force
I saw him one day as I was crossin’ the strand
And he stopped the whole street with a wave of his hand
And as we stood talkin’ of days that are gone
The whole town of London stood there to look on
But for all his great powers he's wishful like me
To be back where the dark Mourne sweep down to the sea

But for all his great powers he's wishful like me
To be back where the dark Mourne sweep down to the sea





          The song is about a man writing a letter to Mary (who is likely his girlfriend).  He describes the people in the city and the things that they do.  All of them seem promising at first.  But then he realizes how useless and fake they all are and he yearns to be home where life is more simple and the sea and beautiful mountains are nearby.
          Firstly, when the man goes to London (and this could be true where ever you are in the world) he sees people digging for gold instead of planting crops.  The significance is that they are trying to earn money fast instead of work hard and being patient.  It's like all of those "get-rich-quick" schemes that you here about.  But they hardly ever work.  So he decides that since he's wasting his time he might as well be in the place that he loves doing honest labor.  That's true of anyone.  You could also stretch it a bit and say that it's better to work hard doing what you love than working for the money.
          Secondly, he talks about the beautiful girls in the city.  They almost don't seem natural because they are so lovely.  He admires them, but soon realizes how fake they really are.  I love the line, "if at that those roses you venture to sip / The colours might all come away on your lips".  He's content to wait till he gets home to his wild, but true rose.  He is probably talking about Mary, which I think is sooooo sweet.  " I'll wait for the wild rose that's waitin' for me / In the place where the dark Mourne sweep down to the sea."  He is saying that even though the girls there are beautiful beyond belief, he'd still rather have her.  Ahhhhhhhhhhhh!!!  Sorry, that was the girlish, romantic side of me showing through.  It's a good example of how beauty is in the heart.  How girls expect a man to love them when they constantly wear a mask is beyond me.
          Then he runs into an old friend of his, Davey McClarin, who has grown up and become very powerful in the city.  So powerful that the whole city stops and is silent when he commands it.  Yet even Davey admits that power isn't everything.  He misses the simpler, homey life back in the Mountains of Mourne.  Power isn't all people crack it up to be.  You miss so many of the sweet and simple things in life.
          I like this song.  It has a very simple tune which only makes its point even better.  You can't really find it by Celtic Thunder on YouTube though, which is sad.  You can hardly find any of their songs on their.  It's easier to find Celtic Woman songs, but I get tired of watching them parade around in their dresses.  Celtic Thunder is much more interesting to watch.  RABBIT TRAIL!  Sorry!
          I wish modern music were more like this.  I miss the simple morals and themes that encouraged real, attainable happiness.    
           

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Canadian Poetry and College

          I have just recently moved into a dorm at Western Washington University in Bellingham, WA.  Classes start tomorrow and I'm getting excited...and nervous.  Oh not scared in the way most students are at this time.  I'm not too worried about the workload or the studying (that much anyway).  I am very anxious about how my time at college will affect my character and my future chance/choices.  I want to stay true to myself, and yet be able to explore all that I can be.  I want to improve myself, but sometimes change for the sake of change becomes negative change. 

          Also, I want to make a difference.  I know that is a completely cliche thing to say, but it's true.  I don't care right now about a really wide sphere of influence and fame like many do.  Eventually I want to be an High School or college English teacher and that will include a great deal of influence.  But for now I simply want to make people's lives better for knowing me.  Not just feel-good/happy/makes me smile better.  If I make someone hate me for the rest of their life, and yet plant a seed in their mind that eventually leads them to making better decisions or turns them to God (even if they don't realize it) I'll be happy with that.  I don't plan on making enemies.  I know a lot of people think I hate everyone because I'm not the always-smiling and constantly-chipper and likes-everyone type.  My mother has scolded me for years about not being more social.  That has already changed quite a bit in my first few days as a college student (it's easier to make friends and meet people when no one knows anyone, everyone needs new friends, and no one has any prior expectations about you).  Yet I am not about to give into post-modernistic ideas that everything is okay and there are no moral absolutes.  In short I want to spread God's love and message to those around me.  It doesn't have to be through words necessarily.  Leading by example is often the best method.  And I will need God's help to keep strong and choose the right course. 

          This poem comes from a book of poetry that I picked up in Victoria, Canada of all places.  The author is Donald A. Fraser and his poetry is amazing!  I've read the whole book (Pebbles and Shells) a dozen times and my favorite poems hundreds!  The book itself is old, and was published in 1909 (I LOVE old books!!!!!).  There is one poem in particular that I think describes my hopes perfectly.


The Builder    

"gloomy heath"
An angel came and carried me away
To where a lonely wilderness held sway
For leagues around.  Its dreary face was strewed
With stunted scrub and rocky fragments rude;
No human habitation soothed my eye;
So sight save gloomy heath and leaden sky.

The angel set me in the midst, and said:
"Build."  And in great amaze I turned my head,
And gazed about.  "Build what?"  I cried, but lo!
The angel vanished ere I saw him go.
In grief I threw myself upon the ground,
And lay sometime, as one doth in a swound;
But ever was my sleep with visions filled
Of that stern angel who aye bade me "Build."

"Build, build,"

I rose.  a wild-fowl cleft the barren sky;
"Build, build," too, seemed the burden of his cry;
And echoed, "Build," a cricket in the grass.
"What shall I build, and how?"  I cried.  "Alas!
What can he build who no supplies commands?
How can he build who has no tools save hands?"

I sat me down upon a grassy mound,
And as my sullen glances stole around,
I saw a tiny ant, with fervid will,
At ceaseless work upon her patient hill;
"Can I not do the same,"
A grain of sand, a little piece of straw,
A withered leaf --of such materials raw
She built her home.  "Why then," aloud cried I,
"Can I not do the same, and, striving, try
To rear myself a hut, a dwelling, found
Of such crude things as here are strewn around?"
"O God," I cried, "help me myself to help!
O Thou, who carest for the lion's whelp,
Aid me, Thy child, with all my might, to do
this solemn task which Thou hast set me to."

In eager haste I doffed my coat, and seized
Rough blocks of stone, and these up-piled, and squeezed
Into the crevices thick plaster-mud
That edged a near-by springlet's precious flood.
A doorway and a window-space I left
"Rough blocks of stone, and these up-piled"
In the coarse walls:  and then, with hands grown deft,
I sloped the growing walls, till o'er my head
They well-nigh met;  when, last of all, I spread
A large flat stone that taxed my utmost strength;
And thus my humble cot was built at length.
A couch I made upon the earthen floor
Of the parched grass that spread the moorland o'er.
When this was done the day had gone to rest
Beyond the distant portals of the west.

With my mind and body tired, I stood before
My feeble work, and slowly gazed it o'er.
As well as I knew how my time I'd spent;
Within me rose a feeling of content;
And so, though rude the work and bleak the scene,
Peace filled my heart where once despair had been.
"my Lord and Master stood within."

Then knelt I on the sward, and thanks to God
I gave; but as I raised me from the sod,
I heard again the angel's ringing voice,
But now more soft and kind.  He cried "Rejoice,
O Man!  and see how God hath blessed thy pain."
I turned, and there before my vision plain
Now rose a temple where my hut had been;
And lo, my Lord and Master stood within.



          Please excuse the old fashioned spelling, grammar, and pacing.  I copied it exactly from the book.

          I hope to use what God has, and will, give me and do the best I can with it.  Maybe, with His blessing, it will become something beautiful and wonderful that will be an asset and not a blight to the world.

         

Thursday, September 6, 2012

The Home We Are Building

          The second year I went to New Orleans, I wrote a second poem for the daily web update.  I didn't win any awards for this one, but it is still dear to my heart.

Home

Home
Four simple symbols
Two vertical lines
Plus a horizontal
A circle
Two small hills
Like tiny speed bumps
A half-circle
With a curved tail
Home
Such a simple word
Yet all the words
In the whole world
Could never describe it

Home
Two small boys
Racing friction cars
Down a long hallway.
Home
Daddy and a baby girl
Asleep on the porch swing
In the soft evening sun.
Home
Grandma struggles downstairs
To make her grandchildren
Breakfast before school.
Home
The kids carefully
Avoid the squeaky step
And let mama nap.
Home
A teenager moves quick
To shove the whole big mess
Into the small closet.
Home
A woman puts away work
And sits with her tea
Simply enjoying the peace.
Home
Sneaking quietly downstairs
On Christmas Eve
Hoping to spot Santa.
Home
Reaching under the pillow
And where a tooth once was
Is now a shiny quarter.
Home
The boy’s old room
Kept just the same
When he died serving his country.
Home
Little Daisy always losing
At hide and seek because
She always hides in the closet.
Home

Lives and deaths
Pots and pans
Walls and roof
Quilts and rugs
Floors and stairs
Dreams and nightmares
Small miracles
Baby’s first steps
Songs past down
Stories shared
Memories
Thoughts
That is what makes
A Home

When it’s gone,
When the family stands
On their old front steps
Staring
At a plain concrete slab
All that’s left
Of the house that held
Thousands of times shared.
As they watch,
Without walls or roof
To hold them in,
The memories float away
Like a breeze
Clearing away smoke.
They can never be replaced

All you can do
Is move on,
Though your heart longs
To chase after the wisps
Of escaped memories
Like trying to grasp
A shaft of moonlight.
But you must continue
And build a new place,
A treasure chest,
To hold all the new memories.

This is the home
We are building 
          

          Some of the things mentioned in here are specific instances that were special to our mission trip.  The friction cars came from something that started the first year I went on the trip.  We usually split into 2-3 groups that each work on a different house during the week.  The group I wasn't in was working on this one house and they kept saying how the hallway there was long and straight and perfect for kids to race friction cars down it like Mrs. McCrady used to do as a kid.  The second year I went, we were able to stop by the house and see it now that it was completed.  No one was living there yet and we got to look around.  The hallway WAS perfect.  Mrs. McCrady declared that she would personally buy the toy cars and give instructions for them to be given to the homeowners. 
          The third paragraph which lists a lot of random items and memories comes from something we saw our second year.  On our last day we got done with our house early and so we headed over to the other two houses which were side by side.  Across the street from them was an abandoned house with nothing but rotting floorboards and bare supports inside.  The door had fallen in, so we decided to investigate.  There was no furniture or personal belongings.  The garage was filled with a pile of rotting boards obviously taken from the house.  There were several holes in the floor.  Then we went into what was the front room.  There was a simple window seat covered with an assortment of random items that must have been gathered from the rubble.  There were many scraps of paper, a bent pot, a single baby slipper, several framed photos including a framed copy of a poem a daughter had written for her daddy, a spoon, an old lantern, and much more.  We looked at it all and not one of us could escape the intense sadness of looking at these mementos of lives forever changed.  You could feel the memories attached to every item.  One couldn't help but be moved. 
          Also, the slab of concrete is significant.  We drove down to the lower ninth ward, which got hit the hardest in the hurricane, several times.  In many places there is no evidence of a home at all besides a concrete slab and a pair of concrete steps leading to a porch that no longer exists.  This was another sight that never ceased to make us stop and think.  All of these things inspired and touched us.  We saw how the seemingly little things we did really did make a difference in these peoples' lives.  Who cannot help but be changed by experiences like these?