by The Black Count on Tue Sep 19, 2006 12:50 pm
Poems seem to be a good way to disguise true intent by shielding it in prety words, so only the educated and the mad will understand just what you really mean. Althought this is not true for all poems, it's what I made up on the spot just then and sounded pretty good to me....
Unfortunately, unless you can get the author of each poem to fully describe to you each line of their work, with a full personal analysis of underlying definition, then all poems fall prey to that pesky human trait they named... ummm... interpretation! That's the one... So while one may view
"In the fall,
I ate a pie,
I like to lie,
Beneath the sky"
as a sad persons attempt to show the world their suffering in a simple four-line dirge, another may decide that it is a scathing political dissertion, and worthy of global recognition, when all I really did was take things you were talking about before, and change the order...
Ummm... I think this paragraph was my closing statement, which sums up the main points and brings about a conclusion, so here it is:
Under fallen stars we paint our children in red despair, and reaching lands end take no white craven hatred in our coffee. Because we like it black. With one sugar. Oh, and one of those mini-muffins...
Fries with that?? HOW CAN I HAVE FRIES WITH THAT WHEN MY PEOPLE ARE IN BONDAGE!?!