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Teytonon commented on: Who Am I? by unseen_treasure 1 year 25 weeks ago
Who are you?: U U R.. URE.. SURE? U SURE? U R SURE? URE SURE? U RE-ASURE? U TREASURE? U.S. TREASURE? USE TREASURE?? U SEE TREASURE! U N SEE TREASURE? UNSEEN_TREASURE!  
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Starward commented on: Always by Teytonon 1 year 25 weeks ago
Excellent!!!  I hope the: Excellent!!!  I hope the whole country will soon be singing songs like this.
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Starward commented on: All together now! by humanfruit 1 year 25 weeks ago
I most certainly agree with: I most certainly agree with this.
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Starward commented on: Not Ok in Ok by Teytonon 1 year 25 weeks ago
I propose a strict: I propose a strict interpretation of the First Amendment---that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.  This is a constitutional restriction upon Congress.  However, it makes no mention of what a State can do.  In a world in a reality in which the establishment clause did not exist in state constitutions, could a particular state's electorate vote an approval of the state's expense to fund a religious school?  Should those from whom tax revenue is collected have the right to direct the way in which that revenue is spent?  The Deistic Founders' hostility to religion was an expression of their Freemasonry (and I write this as a former Mason), and it found its way into the Constitution.  The Founders were not perfect in their various opinions; consider how one of them declared that all people are created equal, and yet practiced chattel slavery---the poisoned fruits of which allowed him the leisure to become a vocal opponent of the British Crown.
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Starward commented on: Some Things Beyond Dimension by patriciajj 1 year 25 weeks ago
Thank you for the kind: Thank you for the kind reply.  I think back to my undergrad days, to that basement level room in the Library where the Literature and Astronomy books were housed (odd combination, really, yet to poetically significant).  I---on the exterior, an awkward, shy, nerd with a pipsqueak voice; and, interiorly, the starwatcher, eager to absorb as much Poetry as I could, the way astronomers' telescopes gathered starlight---felt frustrated, reading avidly and eagerly about great Poets, but only able to see their achievements has finished totals, complete accomplished achievements.  I wondered, almost obsessively, what it would have been like to watch the poems appear, one by one, in those works.  What would it have been like to read the Georgics without knowing The Aeneid would soon follow; or The Waste Land without anticipating Four Quartets?  But now I understand that those four years were a preparation for now---for the privilege of watching you build your Poetry, one poem posting at a time.  I have been reading your Poetry for approximately three years, reading it in real time and not in a retrospective collection; reading a Poet who is obviously walking the path of Greatness (emphasis on the verb form, walking not walked) . . . right before my astounded eyes.  Two events from my undergrad years are metaphors for this present tense experience of reading your Poetry:  the night I saw Saturn, not as a photograph, but as a present, deep sky object in the Observatory's telescope; and the first time I heard Dvorak's New World Symphony.  
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patriciajj commented on: Some Things Beyond Dimension by patriciajj 1 year 25 weeks ago
Thank you again and again, my: Thank you again and again, my talented friend, for your striking, perceptive and very moving words. So honored by your presence. Your support means more than you know.  
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Teytonon commented on: Not Ok in Ok by Teytonon 1 year 25 weeks ago
Thanks for your comment : Thanks for your comment. The problem I have with a religion being 'secular' I must admit I have a difficult time with it That is, it's very hard to find a word that rhymes with it The only word that comes to mind is 'molecular' I've given it much thought But I've come up with naught  So I say 'What the heckular!'
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djtj commented on: One to the East and One to the West: Sometimes when you stand very still, happiness will find you... by djtj 1 year 25 weeks ago
Thanks : My author pic when I hopefully need one. As long as someone doesn’t recognize the shower curtain pattern in the background lol.  Just an image I had from a photo I saw. edit photo is diff now  
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djtj commented on: Some Things Beyond Dimension by patriciajj 1 year 25 weeks ago
Drink this: Here drink this and let it fill you with light and power. That moment when you look out and see the transitioning of nature and feel it to your core...the ultimate beingness. Because the shadows are cheap and easy guides ... you could with banality talk about a seasons change but this snaring of stars Goes beyond  So many moments. Transpiring and inspiring poem. Excellently reviewed by Starward I'm like yea "what they said " Love the thought of stars being our memories. Thank you for some beautiful insights and thought provok-tion. I guess the word is provocation but a moving poem imagery and divinity Of our world. 
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Pungus commented on: FAUX NOSTALGIA by georgeschaefer 1 year 25 weeks ago
Applaud the name drops then: Applaud the name drops then deep on riddles of reality with your classic NYC twist
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patriciajj commented on: Some Things Beyond Dimension by patriciajj 1 year 25 weeks ago
You never read my poems; you: You never read my poems; you enter them and live a compact lifetime there. (Rent free. Smiling)   Truthfully, I can say that your eloquent perceptions have been one of the most rewarding experiences of my creative life because I can say, when all is said and done, that my work was not just read, it was profoundly grasped. That means more than I can say.   There were revelations in your analysis that interpreted my vision will such precision that they could have been rival poems, and all I could think was: Yes! That's what I was trying to say; that's what I was trying to accomplish.    I'm grateful on that cosmic scale you so exquisitely wrote about. Keep shining your starlight, great poet and scholar.  
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Pungus commented on: Lyrics to ‘lol’ to! by humanfruit 1 year 25 weeks ago
And your laughter is: And your laughter is contagious. thank you for that great massage
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patriciajj commented on: Some Things Beyond Dimension by patriciajj 1 year 25 weeks ago
Thank you, Radiant Poet, for: Thank you, Radiant Poet, for your poems, and one magnificent creation is this comment. My heartfelt, infinite gratitude.  
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patriciajj commented on: Lyrics to ‘lol’ to! by humanfruit 1 year 25 weeks ago
Your sardonic wit and playful: Your sardonic wit and playful satire lands gracefully, brilliantly, because you don't take yourself seriously, and "silliness" is the whole point. I saw where you were going with this and yes, I was tempted to lol the entire clever commentary on a cliche aspect of online culture.   Hilarious. Ok, I can't help myself: lol! 
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Starward commented on: Some Things Beyond Dimension by patriciajj 1 year 25 weeks ago
For a couple of years now, I: For a couple of years now, I have applauded each of Patricia's newly posted poems as events of high, even supreme, significance on PostPoems.  This new poem is also such an event; and the timing of it, immediately following Easter, makes it especially meaningful.     In my previous comments on my poems, I have emphasized the cosmic emphasis in her poems---the sense of the universe, represented by stars and planets and other extraterrestrial objects.  (The first two poems that introduced me to the brilliance of her poetic accomplishment were aptly entitled "Gates Of Orion" and "Council of Stars"---which I first read thirty-seven months ago.)  This particular poem begins bucolically---joining itself to a great, ancient tradition first presented by Theocritus, and brought to its epitome by Vergil's ten Eclogues.  Bucolic, or the so-called "pastoral" poetry (it was so designated when I took a course on it, during the Spring of 1977 . . . yes, I am ancient, too).  Bucolic or pastoral poetry provides a vision of the earth, not normally the stars.  But here, Patricia swerves the tradition (in the way that Vergil swerved it from Theocritus; and, yes, I am equating her action with Vergil's) and brings in the cosmic, in the first stanza, giving us a spectrum (always associated with light, and light is created by atomic fusion in stars' cores), a lattice of white, green and purple.  She uses purple to designate the soul of lilacs (which implies a huge metaphysical meaning which, strategically, she does not explicate, leaving it to the reader to deduce the significance), and the purple soul of the lilacs shouts to her that she can be filled with memories and power.  Here is another cosmic aspect that her poetic subtlety places before us for the taking (she reminds me of a phrase Jesus used---which I paraphrase here---whoever has ears to hear, let them here) if we but have the ears to hear it, or the eyes to read, really read, it, rather than just skimming it in a cursory way.  Memories and power:  these are component aspects of starlight.  All starlight, including our sun's, is an arrival from the past.  Even the sun's light is on a seven minute delay, and some stars' light, which we can gather in our telescopes' barrels, have taken centuries or millenia to arrive.  Thus, all starlight is, essentially, memory; and all starlight is generated by the enormous power released by atomic fusion.  So, in that single coy phrase, she has given us the essence of cosmic starlight, proclaimed by purple lilacs in their bucolic setting.    Then she gives us a process of becoming---false starts, wounds, and compressions of fears giving way to an essential state of being to which she assigns one of her most triumphant phrases:  ultimate beingness.  Let me state it again because its importance is paramount:  ULTIMATE BEINGNESS.  As I write this, I realize that this is not just the explication of a metaphysical principle . . . it is also both the explication of, and the supreme title of, her entire oeuvre.  When her poems are collected in a single volume, its title should be, Ultimate Beingness.  And I can already see the graduate students using that phrase in the titles of their dissertations on her work . . . and yes, there will be dissertations on her work.  I will likely not live to see them ,and I do not need to, because I have a privilege those future scholars will not have:  I am watching the whole oeuvre assembling itself before my very eyes.  And this, again, is another aspect of the memories and power, like starlight, that she mentioned earlier in the poem.  For future readers, her poems will be from the past---as starlight, even sunlight, is from some part of the past.  But those poems will also be manifestations of tremendous verbal power, as starlight is the manifestation of the tremendous power released through atomic fusion.        I admire Patricia's ability to convey profound metaphysical concepts in short lines that move with a light and sparkling buoyancy.  She choreographs the leap and soar of these lines to the rhythm of the profundities that her poems reveal.        The final eight lines are the poem's center of gravity.  She uses the metaphor of green leaves (a bucolic symbol) gathering stars (a cosmic symbol).  These are placed, in swarms, among tree branches.  At night, one can, with a little effort, see stars among the leaves on tree branches---it is an effect of a particular perspective.  It is also, within this poem, another example of the way she swerves the bucolic into the cosmic.  This may not seem, at the present moment, as important as it will, later, be proven to be; in the same way that Vergil's reconstruction of the Theocritan pastoral tradition was not immediately given significance by the initial readers of the Eclogues.  Having given us this resonant image, after reminding us that the center of our circle of existence, of that ultimate beingness (I cannot praise that phrase enough!), is, paradoxically, everywhere (paradoxes in Patricia's usage are not so much anomalizes as they are revelators of significances).  Then she concludes with two lines that are, gramatically, phrased in the present tense but are, poetically, bearers of the infinite and the timeless:  "We reach that far / and we're always home."  These two lines convey a confidence, an assurance, and a comfort that bypasses the ordinary act of reading and, instead, speaks directly and intimately to one's soul.  This is how her entire collection of poetry works; this is what that collection provides to her readers.  This process is present in all of the poems, but it most obviously demonstrated, and displayed, by the collection's centerpieces---of which this particular poem is proven to be one.             
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