how love knew
love new
when love flew
we old lovers stepped
in again out
and so flew
new
too
like that reckless bird in the dark storm
mad for home and life
wild in love of that zany wind
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Bill Nevins published his book of poems, Heartbreak Ridge via Swimming With Elephants Press this year. He organized the program Resolana Burque which can be viewed on YouTube, and he hosts monthly poetry gatherings at both South Broadway Cultural Center, Albuquerque (third Wed) and The Range Cafe, Bernalillo (second Wed) at which all are welcome. His is mad in love. bill_nevins@yahoo.com
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“José Julián Martí Pérez (January 28, 1853 – May 19, 1895) was a Cuban national hero and an important figure in Latin American literature. He was a poet, an essayist, a journalist, a revolutionary philosopher, a translator, a professor, a publisher, and a political theorist. Through his writings and political activity, he became a symbol for Cuba’s bid for independence against Spain in the 19th century, and is referred to as the “Apostle of Cuban Independence.” READ MORE
Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as Multimedia Books while promoting literacy in our communities.
Beware, my son, words
that carry the loudnesses
of blind desire also carry
the slime of illusion
dripping like pus from the slave’s battered back
e.g. they speak of black power whose eyes
will not threaten the quick whitening of their own intent
what days will you inherit?
what shadows inhabit your silences?
I have aspired to expression, all these years,
elegant past the most eloquent word. But here now
our tongue dries into maggots as we continue our slimy
death and grin. Except today it is fashionable to scream
of pride and beauty as though it were not known that
‘slaves and dead people have no beauty’
Confusion
in me and around me
confusion. This pain was
not from the past. This pain was
not because we had failed
to understand:
this land is mine
confusion and borrowed fears
it was. We stood like shrubs
shrivelled on this piece of earth
the ground parched and cracked
through the cracks my cry:
And what shapes
in assent and ascent
must people the eye of newborn
determined desire know
no frightened tear ever rolls on
to the elegance of fire. I have
fallen with all the names I am
but the newborn eye, old as
childbirth, must touch the day
that, speaking my language, will
say, today we move, we move ?
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“Born in 1938, Keorapetse ‘Willie’ Kgositsile left South Africa in 1961 as one of the first young ANC members instructed to do so by the leadership of the liberation movement. He was a founding member of the ANC Department of Education as well as that of Arts and Culture. The recipient of many poetry awards, he has also studied and taught Literature and Creative Writing at a number of universities in the United States and in Africa.” READ MORE
Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as Multimedia Books while promoting literacy in our communities.
Fragile
Everything seems so fragile
every attempt at peace
Futile
Fragile
Like a Crystal Swan
stuck inside a glass jewelry box
Crystalline
Fragile
Like when we hold hands (i feel the strength of our love)
but how easily it is overwhelmed by
Anger
Fragile
But still beating
the delicate rhythms of
Love
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Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as Multimedia Books while promoting literacy in our communities.
not losing to the rain
not losing to the wind
not losing to the snow nor to summer’s heat
with a strong body
unfettered by desire
never losing temper
cultivating a quiet joy
every day four bowls of brown rice
miso and some vegetables to eat
in everything
count yourself last and put others before you
watching and listening, and understanding
and never forgetting
in the shade of the woods of the pines of the fields
being in a little thatched hut
if there is a sick child to the east
going and nursing over them
if there is a tired mother to the west
going and shouldering her sheaf of rice
if there is someone near death to the south
going and saying there’s no need to be afraid
if there is a quarrel or a suit to the north
telling them to leave off with such waste
when there’s drought, shedding tears of sympathy
when the summer’s cold, wandering upset
called a blockhead by everyone
without being praised
without being blamed
such a person
I want to become
For more info on featured image please click here
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Landlord, landlord,
My roof has sprung a leak.
Don’t you ‘member I told you about it
Way last week?
Landlord, landlord,
These steps is broken down.
When you come up yourself
It’s a wonder you don’t fall down.
Ten Bucks you say I owe you?
Ten Bucks you say is due?
Well, that’s Ten Bucks more’n I’l pay you
Till you flx this house up new.
What? You gonna get eviction orders?
You gonna cut off my heat?
You gonna take my furniture and
Throw it in the street?
Um-huh! You talking high and mighty.
Talk on-till you get through.
You ain’t gonn a be able to say a word
If I land my fist on you.
Police! Police!
Come and get this man!
He’s trying to ruin the government
And overturn the land!
Copper’s whistle!
Patrol bell!
Arrest.
Precinct Station.
Iron cell.
Headlines in press:
MAN THREATENS LANDLORD
TENANT HELD NO BAIL
JUDGE GIVES NEGRO 90 DAYS IN COUNTY JAIL!
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Langston Hughes is one of the most important literary figures of the 20th Century. His poetry and fiction portrayed the lives of the working-class African Americans in America, lives he portrayed as full of struggle, joy, laughter, and music. Read More…
Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as Multimedia Books while promoting literacy in our communities.
I climb up high and look on the four seas,
Heaven and earth spreading out so far.
Frost blankets all the stuff of autumn,
The wind blows with the great desert’s cold.
The eastward-flowing water is immense,
All the ten thousand things billow.
The white sun’s passing brightness fades,
Floating clouds seem to have no end.
Swallows and sparrows nest in the wutong tree,
Yuan and luan birds perch among jujube thorns.
Now it’s time to head on back again,
I flick my sword and sing Taking the Hard Road.
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Li Bai (701 – 762), also known as Li Po, was a Chinese poet acclaimed from his own day to the present as a genius and romantic figure who took traditional poetic forms to new heights. He and his friend Du Fu (712–770) were the two most prominent figures in the flourishing of Chinese poetry in the mid-Tang Dynasty that is often called the “Golden Age of China”. READ MORE
Aged and weather beaten are his
hands. A few broken knuckles from
days gone past. His face has
the engraving of an intaglio master, and
yet the smile on his face
betrays the fact that his heart is tired.
His mind is still sharp, but tires
quickly, especially when it lingers on his
wife. The delicate contours of her face,
the lingering scent of lavender from
her evening cup of tea, and
how she never cared for all the items they had.
The children he loved, wishing he had
hugged them more. Their sweet faces tired
by the time he got home from work, and
laying their heads to rest upon his
shoulders, he carried them from
kitchen to room, while memorizing their faces.
Broken hands hold a tear stained face.
His life, his wife … kids, it had
happened so suddenly. She ran from
him one night – took the kids – all were tired.
They had argued, and out of nowhere his
hand came down upon her face, and …
“The accident happened so fast, and
they’re all gone,” the officer said, hand over face.
“I am truly sorry for your loss.” He
walked away, the broken man who had
never felt so tired
the broken man from
a hard working life. Where did he come from?
he was so happy once and
then at the age of 27 he was a tired
old man who just lost his family. His face
twisted with pain; his heart, his entire life had
shattered in a moments time, all because of him.
He remembers the pain, he remembers their faces
from those days so long ago, and he never had
the chance, for he was too tired, to say that he loved them.
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Community Publishing is committed to providing a digital platform for local artists of all mediums through the creation of multimedia eBooks, while promoting literacy in our community. Community Publishing uses a “ground up” approach which emphasizes an all-encompassing collaborative method.
For all the madness in our world,
where people teach children to pick up guns
For all the sadness in our world,
where children starve in sprawling slums…
In a society carved with hate,
where we are taught to fear our tears,
and tear down our empathy,
We strive on.
In the middle of all this madness,
and the cries amidst the sadness
we can hope for a better day,
but we must create a better way.
For all the destruction of livelihoods,
living things and
lives
For all the desensitized masses,
misinformed folks, and
lies,
We strive on.
In the eye of all this madness
and beneath the cries of the unheard
we can hope for a better day,
Look your child in the eye, tell them you love them,
hold them,
and create a new way.
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Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as Multimedia Books while promoting literacy in our communities.
I’m a dopefiend sitting in my bedroom high
I didn’t even light up no muggles, don’t know why
I’m just naturally a dopefiend under empty sky
Yes I’m a dopefiend I don’t sniff cocaine
I hear the walls ringing my nose is still in pain
It’s snowing all round NY City gimme a 2 penny plain
Oho I’m a dopefiend shoulda seen me usta mainline
Yah seen me shoulda shoot that white heroine
useta get the chills but never burnt down my mind
Hey hey Oh Lord Dope Fiend I dropped LSD
I seen Manhattan’s towers stick up in Eternity
Ten years ago you shoulda took the elevator up with me, Holy!
Ha Ha I’m a dopefiend niggerlovin commie faggot queen
I’m a beatnik hippie longhair but a square I never been
But if you Mother see my picture in the paper she say I look clean
Hey I’m a dopefiend I’m a dopefiend I breathe sweet clean air
I don’t shoot speed in my arm never more I’m a dopefiend everywhere
I’m a dopefiend in the policeman’s eyes Yeah They wouldn’t dare
to bust me for dopefiend I don’t carry any shit around
I’m just a dopefiend by nature I like to sit on the ground
all naked with my clothes on make a blue mantra sound
I’m a dopefiend I’m a dopefiend gonna bust this nation’s mind
I’m gonna put LSD in your prayers & laughing gas in the wind
ether & peyote gonna drive Mount Rainier blind–
I’m a dopefiend I roll my soul in friendly grass
Dopefiend Dopefiend I carry Nothing but Dharma up my ass
Yeaas all you dopefiends hear me! out there in the middle class!
Hey rich dopefiend when you gonna change the laws?
Hey poor dopefiend join the Socialist Revolutionary party because
They gonna legalise existence, everybody ride a big white horse.
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“Renowned poet, world traveler, spiritual seeker, founding member of a major literary movement, champion of human and civil rights, photographer and songwriter, political gadfly, teacher and co-founder of a poetics school. Allen Ginsberg (1926-1997) defied simple classification.” Read More
Community Publishing brings local artists of all mediums together in creative collaborations for distribution as Multimedia Books while promoting literacy in our communities.
Curated by Mary Ann Gilbreth, Ed.D., Department of Teacher Education, Educational Leadership and Policy, at the University of New Mexico. This collections includes the work of her students from several of her Reading Methods Classes, promoting cultural diversity in the classroom.