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Jon Corelis Apr 2
Never freak out when everything goes wrong:
   that won’t last long.
Don’t strut your stuff when you’ve raked in a hefty ***:
   you’re not so hot.

Whether your life has been a living hell
   that Dante couldn’t tell,
or if you’ve basked in the best of everything
   the world can bring,

life’s a balancing act.  I’ll tell you why:
   you’re going to die,
like it or not, so you might as well have fun
   before you’re done.

Sip the champagne, buy paintings, sail a yacht,
   spend what you’ve got.
Every clock is a time bomb:  there’s no way to know
   when it will blow.

The mint DeLorean,  the Pacific Heights flat,
   even your pedigreed cat,
it all ends up, whatever you did,
   with your slacker kid.

The trust fund brat and the boy who grew up in a dump
   hold hands and jump
into the pit we’re herded toward like cattle.
   You hear that rattle?

The gods are shaking your dice:  the next sunrise
   may be snake eyes.
  

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Copyr­igh­­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis May 5
If a million chickens
laid a million eggs,
they'd all jump up and down
on their two million legs;

just think of it:  a million eggs,
a million whites and yolks
would make a mile long omelet
to feed a lot of folks.


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Jon Corelis May 18
No one should ever be treated by anyone
like I've been treated by you:

you think you're so cool
you're exempt from the rule
that you pay for whatever you do;

but the earth will turn
and the sun will burn
till the day you finally see

that no one should ever treat anyone else
the way that you've treated me!



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Copyr­­­­ight 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis Apr 9
Mistakes were made.
Critics were stilled.
Bribes were paid.
People were killed.


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Jon Corelis May 10
Now we must part,
my sweet Ilona:
I must leave
for Barcelona,

and I must travel
there alone,
and every day
in Barcelon

I’ll bear a heart
that’s like a parcel
of sorrow that
you’re not in Barcel;

yet though we are
apart so far,
you’ll still be with me
there in Bar,

for with love’s constant
eye I’ll see
your image every
day in B.


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Copyr­­­­­i­gh­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis Apr 27
Hope?
Nope.
Dope.



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Copyr­igh­­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis May 15
You’re born and you’re ******;

and some little **** who’s an inch and a half taller than you wants your toy truck and you’re ******;

and here comes puberty and, man, talk about ****** ...

and a thousand luscious nymphs dazzle you from magazine covers and pick your pocket and you’re ******;

and you go to college and you major in history you idiot and you’re ******;

and you fall out of lock step and you’re ******;

and you make the mistake of going out walking on the street at night and a couple of predators nudge each other and smirk “Heyyyy – mug meat!” and you’re ******

and you waste yourself working for nothing but weekends and paydays and one morning you forget to smile at your boss and you’re ******;

and the years slam shut behind you and you’re ******;

and your wife wants a divorce the house the kids the car and two thirds of your salary forever and you’re ******;

and your big ideas end up in a drawer full of cancelled checks and you’re ******;

and your doctor says I’m afraid I have some bad news and you’re ******;

and they stick you with needles and tubes and people talk in whispers when they come into your room but you know that what they’re saying is you’re ******.










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Copyr­­­ight 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis Apr 28
In a meadow by the hill I saw my love lying there;
in a meadow by the hill, he was there;
in a meadow by the hill I saw my love lying there,
Curah crahnah rifi fahlah clee ah tah!

O my love, never leave me but remain, but remain;
O my love, never leave me, but remain:
for if you ever leave me I will never love again,
Curah crahnah rifi fahlah clee ah tah!

No, I will never leave you but remain, but remain;
while the meadow blooms in flowers, I'll remain:
while the deer is in the forest and the sun burns in the sky,
Curah crahnah rifi fahlah clee ah tah!

In the meadow by the hill he remains, he remains;
while the meadow blooms in flowers, he remains:
while the deer is in the forest and the sun burns in the sky,
Curah crahnah rifi fahlah clee ah tah!

Oh I am very pretty with my hair all in a braid,
with my hair all in a braid, hanging down:
oh I am very pretty with my hair all in a braid,
Curah crahnah rifi fahlah clee ah tah!



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Copyr­i­gh­­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

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This was originally written as song lyrics, but some people have liked the lyrics as a poem, so I'm posting it here.  A software generated demo which helps to image what the song would sound like is available at:

https://on.soundcloud.com/e7w6WvueneXdEXJz6
Jon Corelis May 4
You've left this land, but this land won’t leave you.
She’s painted like a sky inside your mind,
beneath which your true life is acted out.
Her vengeance is each day you don’t return.
As birds retrace their ways on twilit wings,
however far they forage from their nests,
so too your soul, when daylight’s had its way,
is drawn to suckle at her thorny breast,
until you waken to a world of mirrors,
where nothing is familiar but yourself,
to wander gleaming cities leached of life,
whose foreign doorways bar you from your home.



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Jon Corelis Apr 20
Dear Amanda,

    I hope this letter finds your well.
I must tell you shovel, sparkplug, grass, rice.
The meteor you sent me crumbled
because I forgot to pay my dream tax.
Amanda, Amanda, your flesh is soaked with bread.
I saw you standing barefoot with your babies in a hamper,
and I thought of you so hard I cut my hand
on a piece of candy.  Please ask Father if he’s seen my voice.
The world gets flatter:  it’s sticky in between.
Your hips are violet cycles.  They make me ashamed of the clock.
Your eyes make whatever they look at count.
You just put me on the pins of wonder.
Amanda, everything is soiled except your heart.
I’m flying as hard as I can, but the air gives out.
The wistful starlings have forgotten but are not forgotten.
Please ask Mother to make me a choice.
Give little sister as many kisses as there are daisies,
and tell little brother not to hurt himself on the dandelions.
I must tell you cloud, stoplight, window, flute.
I must tell you asphalt, armature, prairie, sky.
Amanda, I’ve got to lean on this to say it but
the words don’t matter, they can only mean.
The best revenge is not to care.  Reach.  Reach.  Reach.


                             Eventually,

                                          Me

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Copyr­­­igh­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis May 8
They say that love is only
a yearning of the flesh,
and needs the body's lonely
hunger to keep fresh,

but I, too often choosing
to keep the two apart,
have learned to my own losing
that love is of the heart.

The body's deprivation
is fed on what it takes;
the heart finds satiation
in every gift it makes:

the body rues its giving;
the heart has no regrets,
but keeps forever living
what faded flesh forgets.



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Jon Corelis Apr 24
Maria I want your bitter mouth
Maria I want your ******* of dank loam
your ******* of sullen ripeness
your ******* of childbirth

Maria I want the narcotic orchid of your tongue
I want your eyes of treason
your eyes of attack
your eyes of the moment of death

Maria I want to be washed up shipwrecked on your shore
I want to be buried in your breath
I want the venom of your passion to sear my veins

Maria I want to be a universe unborn kicking in your womb



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Copyr­­­­­igh­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis Apr 19
The difference between a finger and a thumb
is Shakespeare.  Anyone can dream
of a candle, but you’d better dodge your shadow,
because death, that great et cetera,
is the opposite of surreal.  If there were no thunder
there would be no mountains, so something like a snowflake
cannot be conferred:  it must be earned.
You will tell me that anyone can say this,
which is why I am saying it.  Your puzzlement
shows how well you understand.  It is important
to have someone to talk to
even if they can’t hear you.  You can polish a mirror
until you see your face, but it will not
be you, because meaning is created
when we are not looking, while the grass
grows, grows, grows.

That was an ode to Walt Whitman.

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Jon Corelis Apr 5
It was very hot.  The day had gone just past its noon.
   I’d stretched out on a couch to take a nap.
One of the window-shutters was open, one was closed.
   The light was like you’d see deep in the woods,
or like the glow of dusk when Phoebus leaves the sky,
   or when night pales, and day has not yet dawned.
— a perfect light for girls with too much modesty,
   where anxious Shame can hope to hide away.
When, look!  here comes Corinna in a loose ungirded gown,
   her parted hair framing her gleaming throat,                
like lovely Semiramis entering her boudoir,
   or fabled Laïs, loved by many men.
I snatched her gown off — not that it mattered, being so sheer,
   and yet she fought to keep that sheer gown on;
but since she fought with no great wish for victory,
   she lost, betraying herself to the enemy.
And as she stood before me, her garment all thrown off,
   I saw a body perfect in every inch:
What shoulders, what fine arms I looked on — and embraced!
   What lovely *******, begging to be caressed!                
How smooth and flat a belly under a compact waist!
   And the side view — what a long and youthful thigh!
But why go into details?  Each point deserved its praise.
   I clasped her naked body close to mine.
You can fill in the rest.  We both lay there, worn out.
   May all my afternoons turn out this well.


— from the Latin


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Jon Corelis Mar 31
This is a poem, but don’t be afraid,
it can’t hurt you.  You can read it without
the slightest obligation.  It won’t ask
you to sign anything or pester you
for a commitment.  It will not expect
you to sit quietly at your desk with
your hands folded until the bell rings.  You
can put it on a poster on your wall
or carry it in your pocket in case
you ever need a poem or just leave
it lying around.  It is all surface,
so you don’t have to worry about how
deep to stick your finger into it.  It
will give you the same answer each time you
ask it, which is more than you can say for
most people.  It won’t make things better or
worse.  If you think about it, you will be
thinking of nothing.  It just sits there.  It
doesn’t even have a clever ending.


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Jon Corelis Apr 22
Lord, set me a table in Byzantium:
not the rose-colored queen of the Bosphorus,
not the city of jeweled liturgies,
but the drain where the scourings of empire collect.

Give me a rough wooden bench
and a goblet of thick southern wine
that smacks of honey and dust
in a tavern on some twisted lane away from the sea,

where a plump dancing girl of uncertain antecedents
clicks the reptilian scales of her castanets,
her gaze weighing my limbs like dubious florins,
while a one-eyed Cappadocian in the corner
thoughtfully fingers his knife.

Lord, I don’t ask for much,
only a fate I can handle.


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Jon Corelis May 12
A real poem doesn't try to get you to do anything but listen to it.

A real poem doesn't insist that you have to like it because if you don't, then you are not a warm, caring human being.

A real poem doesn't claim an exemption from criticism because of the honesty of its emotion, the validity of its moral exhortation, or the personal importance to its writer of what it says.

A real poem has nothing at all to do with any sort of politics.

A real poem neither pats you on the back nor kicks you in the shin.

A real poem is not written to gain publication, fellowships, or tenure.

A real poem invokes the gods.





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Jon Corelis Mar 30
Aphrodite, immortal, enthroned in wonder,
Sky-daughter, webstress of love schemes, I entreat you
not to break my spirit with pangs of anguish,
Queen, Lady, Mother,

but now come to me, if in the past you ever
also heeded me when I cried from afar, and,
leaving behind the golden house of your father
Zeus, you descended

borne in a chariot yoked to a flock of lovely
sparrows flying fast over earth’s black richness,
thickly fluttering wings leading you a passage
through bright mid-heaven,

soon arriving, and you, O supreme in blessing,
eternity’s smile gleaming from your expression,
asked me now this time what again I suffered,
what did I pray for,

what beyond all else I would want to happen
with all my love-maddened heart: “Who now needs persuasion
to be led back to your affection? Who is it,
Sappho, who hurts you?

Though she now may run, she will soon pursue you;
now she may spurn gifts, but she soon will give them;
now she feels no love, but she soon will feel it,
even unwilling.”

Come to me this time again: act as my deliveress
from this mastering pain, and, as the fulfiller
of everything that my passion hopes for, take your
stand as my ally.

— translated from the Greek by Jon Corelis
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Copyright 2025 by Jon Corelis.

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Jon Corelis Apr 7
Poetry seduces the truth with lies.
Poetry tastes like silvery moonlight wine.
Poetry’s losses give you extra tries.
Poetry’s the ultimate pickup line.
Poetry colorizes your old life.
Poetry plays eternity for a sucker.
Poetry explains where you were to your wife.
Poetry’s a jive-*** *******.
Poetry laughs while you’re out there mowing the lawn.
Poetry tosses a ruby into your grave.
Poetry’s what’s left when the poet’s gone.
Poetry makes it easier to be brave.
Poetry molds roses out of breath.
Poetry is an argument with death.


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Jon Corelis Apr 14
Tobacco, liquor, and women are bad for you,
so I’ve quit smoking.  Someday, liquor too.

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Jon Corelis Apr 11
After Sir Walter Raleigh


Go, poem, since you are free,
and, though you know it’s hopeless,
if you make just one see,
at least there’ll be one dope less
   to chant the hymns that praise
   the liars of our days.

Tell friendship it’s just greed
to take without returning,
tell love it’s only need
to quench a ****** burning,
   and if they doubt your word,
   then flip them both The Bird.

Tell managers they care
for nothing but their perks;
tell judges they’re unfair;
tell lawyers that they’re jerks:
   when they shall have demurred,
   dismiss them with The Bird.

Tell churches that they sing
of god and worship money;
their purpose is to sting
their flocks and keep the honey:
   so let them be assured
   they won’t escape The Bird.

Tell statesmen they commit
mass ****** for their masters,
and never need admit
blame for their disasters:
   on them is well conferred
   The Order of The Bird.

Tell liberals they’re moony;
conservatives, they’re tools;
call flaming leftists loony,
and right wing ranters, fools:
   if they cry, “No we’re not!”,
   The Bird must be their lot.

Say politicians lie
and lie and lie and lie
and lie and lie and lie
and lie and lie and lie.
   They don’t like what they’ve heard?
   Perhaps they’ll like The Bird.

Tell radical professors
rebellion’s easy, when you’re
among the proud possessors
of insulating tenure.
   If they squeal, “That’s absurd!”,
   assign their grade:  The Bird.

Tell poets they’re careerist
illiterate poseurs;
tell critics they’re the merest
flotsam on auteurs,
   and if they scowl and scoff,
   then they must be flipped off.

Tell generals they delight
to climb their hierarchy
enslaving youth who fight
to keep their owners free:
   if generals howl and hoot,
   present The Bird Salute.

Say toadying little ferrets
are guaranteed a cheer,
while unconnected merit’s
rewarded with a sneer:
   if they disparage you,
   you know what you must do.

Call honor egotism’s
euphemistic name;
point out that patriotism’s
an antidote to shame,
   and if they are outraged,
   release The Bird uncaged.


Then vanish, poem, at last,
when you have done your duty,
into the spirit’s vast
retreat of truth and beauty,
   and leave this world we see
   to King Hypocrisy.




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Cop­yr­ight 2025 by Jon Corelis

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This poem is a recasting for our times of Sir Walter Raleigh's poem The Lie, which may be found in several places on the internet.
Jon Corelis Mar 30
I saw you in a house at sea

you were in every room
and each room had a light of its own

in the living room the protean light of the future
in the kitchen the busy light of childhood
in the bedroom the physical light of remembrance
in the attic the muffled light of crossroads

the sea turned into a desert
the house to a bird the color of the sky
which lifted itself on wings of wind
leaving you among the skulls and cactus

with gold to curse at

love to curse with
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Copyright 2025 by Jon Corelis

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Jon Corelis Apr 4
The victor triumphing recounts
(lest pride should mar his fame),
“It’s not to win or lose that counts;
it’s how you play the game.”

But losers, when they drown their shame
in truth-provoking *****,
will groan, “**** how you play the game:
it’s whether you win or lose.”


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Jon Corelis Mar 30
white days
of almond flower
and flesh sheathed in sunlight

white sea
dissolves laughing on flat rocks

below white chapels
where consecrated bones
crumble into purity of incense

white kisses
beating against the sun with white wings

white boats set sail for white dreams
where the white days have gone


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Copyrigh­t 2025 by Jon Corelis

joncorelis.com

— The End —