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Omar 7d
Upon the threshold of the one I love, we came,
Only to be turned back by the stranger’s law, the sentry’s wall.
And so I told my soul, perhaps this is a mercy after all;
For what would you see in Jerusalem, should you enter now?

You would see all that your heart cannot endure,
As its houses rise to meet you from the path’s slow bend.
For not every soul, in finding its beloved, finds a friend,
And not all absence is a wound that brings us low.

If the joy of meeting came before the sorrow of the farewell,
That fragile joy could never be a fortress for the soul.
For once you have seen the ancient city, whole,
That vision will follow you wherever you may go.

In Jerusalem, a Georgian grocer, weary of his wife,
Mulls over a vacation, or a new coat of paint for the hall.
In Jerusalem, a scholar down from Manhattan
Deciphers the Law for Polish boys.

In Jerusalem, an Ethiopian cop shuts down a market street.
A machine gun rests on a settler not yet twenty,
A skullcap greets the Wailing Wall.
And blonde tourists from the West who see nothing of Jerusalem at all,
You see them, capturing photos of each other,
With a woman who has sold radishes in the square all her living day.

In Jerusalem, soldiers, booted, tread upon the clouds.
In Jerusalem, we prayed upon the asphalt of the ground.
In Jerusalem, who is in Jerusalem, but you?

And History turned to me, a knowing smile:
“Did you truly think your eyes would miss them, and see another kind?
Behold them now before you. They are the living script; you, a footnote, left behind.

Did you think a single visit, my son, could peel away
The city’s thick veil of what is,
So you might see in her what your heart has always held?
In Jerusalem, every man is someone else.”

She is a gazelle in the long desert of time, a fate decreed.
You are still running in her wake since she last looked at you and fled.
Have mercy on your soul an hour; I see the strength has left you.
In Jerusalem, who is in Jerusalem, but you?

O Scribe of History, wait. The city’s age is not one, but two.
One is a foreign age, assured, that sleepwalks through the day.
And another, hidden, cloaked and silent, that slips unseen along the way.

Jerusalem knows herself. Ask her people, and they will show you.
For in the city, everything
Is given a tongue, and when you ask, it will make its meaning plain.

In Jerusalem, the crescent moon arches like an unborn child,
Leaning protectively over its kin on the domes below,
A father’s love for his sons, nurtured over years of sun and snow.

In Jerusalem, the buildings are themselves quotations,
Carved from the Gospels and the Qur’an.
In Jerusalem, beauty is an octagon of lapis blue,
And above it, may its glory last, a golden dome,

A convex looking-glass, where heaven’s face is captured and distilled.
It cradles the sky, brings it near,
And hands it out like aid in a time of siege, to those who have a claim,
When a nation, after Friday prayer, stretches out its hands.

And in Jerusalem, the sky is scattered amongst the people.
We protect it, and it protects us.
We carry it upon our shoulders, a sacred trust,
If time should wrong its moons.

In Jerusalem, the pillars of dark marble stand,
Their ancient veins like trails of smoke, turned into stone.
And windows, high on mosques and churches,
Take the morning by the hand, to show it how to paint with coloured light.

And the morning says, “No, like this.”
And the window says, “No, like this.”
Until, their long debate concluded, they agree to share.
So the morning is free outside the hallowed walls,

But should it wish to enter,
It must yield to the judgment of the Merciful’s windows.

In Jerusalem, a Mamluk school, for a boy who came from beyond the river,
Sold in a slave market in Isfahan,
To a merchant from Baghdad, who brought him to Aleppo,
Where its prince feared the glint of blue in his left eye,
And gave him to a caravan bound for Egypt.

And there, after some years, he became the scourge of Mongols,
The Sultan’s right hand.

In Jerusalem, a scent that holds both Babylon and India
In a perfumer’s shop in Khan al-Zayt.
By God, it is a scent that speaks a language you will know, if you but listen.
It whispers through the tear gas: “Heed them not.”
And when the cloud has passed, it breathes: “You see?”

In Jerusalem, contradictions rest at ease.
The people do not deny the wonders,
They are like bolts of cloth, the old and new turned over in their hands.
And miracles, there, can be touched by the hand.

In Jerusalem, if you were to shake an old man’s hand,
Or touch a stone façade,
You would find the text of a poem etched upon your palm,
O noble son, or perhaps two.

In Jerusalem, despite the endless tragedies,
A scent of childhood on the air, an innocence that breathes.
So you see a dove declare a kingdom in the sky,
Between the space of one shot and the next.

In Jerusalem, the graves are ordered,
Like lines of scripture in the city’s book, whose pages are the earth.
All have passed this way.
For Jerusalem accepts all who come to her, the faithful and the faithless.

Walk through her and read the headstones.
All the tongues of this world are here.
The Zanj, the Franks, the Kipchaks and the Slavs, the Bosniaks,
The Tatars and the Turks, the people of God and the people of ruin,
The pauper and the lord, the sinner and the saint.

All who have walked this earth are here.
They were the margins of the book,
But they became the city’s text before us.

O Scribe of History, what has changed,
That you have made us the exception?
O Sheikh, rewrite the book, and read it once again;
I fear your reading was flawed.

The eye closes, then it opens.
The driver of the yellow cab turns us north, away from her gate,
And Jerusalem falls behind us.

The eye sees her in the right-hand mirror,
Her colours shifting in the pre-dusk light,
When a smile surprised me; I know not how it crept upon my face.
It spoke to me, as I stared and stared:

“You who weep behind the wall, are you a fool?
Are you mad?

Let your eye not weep, you, the forgotten one from the body of the text.
Let your eye not weep, you Arab, and know,
That in Jerusalem, there are those within the walls, and yet…
I see no one in Jerusalem, but you.”
Skaidrum Jun 2018
(harvested from my heart)

12:24 a.m. --old friend
Well, if it isn't the moon herself
"Hello Icarus,"
You came home
"Black holes aren't homes."
Yet you were raised here, my dear
"How could I forget?"

1:05 a.m. --past lover
And how is she now?
"Who?"
That wolf girl you adored
"Smoking on other stars."
Stars?
"Planets as well,"
Does she fancy other moons?
"She fancies all celestial things."
Surely that is not the case-
"Her songs ate silence long ago."
What?
"Her wolfsong for me is but
loose ashes and
an epitaph now."

2:42 a.m. --current lover
Was the revolution delicious?
"Like a glass of unborn names,"
That many?
"The light spared no one."
No one at all?
"All perished under his gaze."
But you fell in love with him, didn't you?
"Yes."
Why?
"Simple;
I am a chaser of the light."

3:17 a.m. --state of mind
Why are you here?
"I spent all my faith up."
And you think you'll find more here?
"No."
Then why-
"The gates summoned me."
That is suicide, my dear
"I imagine it more like--
salvation in disguise."

4:08 a.m. ---medicine
Too many ghosts are glued to your spine
"I can't shake them."
You can shed them into poems
"They'll just turn into puppets."
But you will be their puppet master
"You expect me to play god?"
I expect you to rule over this wreckage,
like you used to


5:32 a.m. --homeward bound
Have you missed me over the years?
"Only in blinks."
Why's that I wonder?
"The moon sleepwalks across the sky."
So, are you going back now?
"Depends,"
On?
"If the night has eaten my name,
and craves these ruins again."
ft. the story behind
why the moon leaves our sky sometimes

© Copywrite Skaidrum
Matt Proctor Feb 2014
The birds call from the vines clenching the church
next door but it’s the drums that clatter
me from sleep 8 o’clock Sunday morning
into that good prelude to the hangover
where you’re ***** and lucid as the young grey light
sneaks through the window without it’s  pants.

I have no girl with me, so I remember you
by your rambunctious smell, not at all like the perfumes
on the shelf of the Rite-Aid, your feral hair,
the wide wing-span of your eyes.
I click right past your text. Leave me alone again.
Alone is where we belong. We can give each other that.

She didn’t mean that much to me.
I’m not sure what does. I’m not sure anything can
in the delirious corral of this city.
You’re the last girl I’ve got to think of.
Maybe you regret that. Maybe you don’t know.

The D-train sleepwalks the bridge.
The Gowanus lays down and dies. The Hudson does not.
I am a Mummy in ***** brown sheets.
I turn up the volume on the birds and go back to sleep.
Love, Text, Nature, Church, New York City, Brooklyn, ***, Hangover
Satsih Verma Jun 2019
Moon sleepwalks,
crashes head on the palms.
Hurls silver coins.


*

To respect you, I
will meet you here and there.
Will that do in dark?

*

Looking out at the
twilight, I would think of you,
in time, space and void.
Yenson Jan 2019
boring, boring, boring....Oh...yawning...yawning
The folks sleepwalks and drone on in glorious haze
In reverent throes they recite the Bible of Urban Myths
Paying homage to the Prophets of Factual Fabrications

Allegiance is beyond doubt, unquestioning devotion
Forgive this passion, History teaches mankind nothing
Over five million innocent people gassed while a Nation
Hailed The Monster Leader with that obvious bright idea

Yes, its for our fatherland, our birthright, our commonality
It's them and Us and we are not greedy parasites bleeding us
And in this age they all rush forward quoting the Bible of Myths
All the One-sided 'facts' are here the Red Fuhrer unblemished

Watch their antics, hear them talk and read their witless writes
A disgraceful lesson in cult management and herd mentality
gross validation of the deficit in balanced independent thinkers
Minds that just absorb, unable to question or reason or resist

I watch waiting to find the rare gem, another real mind
Came across one long time ago, so rare I was beyond amazed
Since then all I see are fuhrer's children, blinded intoxicated
Eager devotees sprouting Hate and reciting updates from the
Bible of Urban Myths and Factual Fabrications.  


copyright@yenson7/07/2019



“Face after face contorted in hate, men, women, children. Whatever lies had been voiced against me had clearly gained near-universal acceptance. I knew then that, regardless of what transpired here, my home was now lost to me. It wasn’t just that these people would never accept me, more that I would never forgive their gullibility.”
― Anthony Ryan, Queen of Fire
“You can't believe everything people tell you - not even if those people are your own brain.”
― Jefferson Smith, Strange Places
“Fame is proof that people are gullible.”
― Ralph Waldo Emerson
Some of us are still here
scrambling about on this sphere
hurtling through space
where time's just a face on the
universal clock.

Life is so good and
sobering or not we all got drunk
on that dream.
Barton D Smock Oct 2017
a brother sleepwalks and beats his sister. daylight, brother looks for her abuser but can’t stay awake long enough to catch the person he doesn’t know he is. sister fears what he may become. I have two children, Object and Permanence. they examine my spotless body

like aliens

who cannot hurt their own but want to.



boy has no name
so town
has no name



when my younger brother was born, his program made him human. because of this, my mother was thrown in jail. my own program gives me the power to look like anyone I’ve seen. I need you to write down what you look like because it’s me to the rescue.



her hand is a ray gun that can only stun babies not yet born. her grief is a time machine that wants to grow old.



as they had no memories of being children, mom pretended she had been their mother and told them stories of the funny ways they’d been in trouble.
Yenson Nov 2020
The backseat apparatchiks
in doctrinaire control
minds signed over to diktats unquestioned
the State puppets marching to order in vain weeps
losing power in subjugation and arrested free-wills
the reign of fear by the apparatus that owns them
the muzhiks baying in sleepwalks
scrambling in piteous droves to curry favours
look, we are Believers and comrades
we are from nothing and wear depravations with pride
we are obedient to all diktats and we do as told
we are flying monkeys
servants of the Politburo of east London
totally assimilated and loyal to this crusade of lying dummies
in fear we tremble at risk of disobedience
what becomes of us to be cancelled
without brains, inner core, *****, camaraderie
and that cheapest of entertainment for us muzhiks, ***
surely its SUICIDE
made depraved and then deprived what else is there
we are slave to the system and will do anything, anything please
yes, we serve you, we will show you how faithful we are
we will persecute any REFUSNIKS according to your words
ours is not to think or question WHY
ours is to do or die.....
Success is not measured by what you accomplish, but by the opposition you have encountered, and the courage with which you have maintained the struggle against overwhelming odds.

— The End —