Yesterday, my son, Trevor, saw me posting a poem on this blog. He was suddenly inspired to write his own poems and wanted me to post them. So, here are a couple of my son's poems, written yesterday and completely unedited by me. :) The first is about the state of the poor and the second is about smiles. Poor People Some people want that chance to find something to enhance. Sometimes they wait days or years so helpless while they watch us cheer. All they want is life, instead they are living in strife. Smiles A smile is something you would like to see every once in a while. To see someone in joy to see their smile is great, to see a smile is the opposite of seeing fate. Smiles around the world is something I've been waiting for. It will be something I greatly adore. by Trevor Bailey 1/1/2012
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Showing posts from January, 2012
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Back in college, during my 19th century Russian literature course (which in fact extended into the early 20th century), we studied the Russian symbolists. Their writing was filled with a lot of irrationalism and mysticism. You can read more about it here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_symbolism, though it doesn't really show you any of the poetry. I wanted to write a poem in the same vain - irrational, colorful, and maybe a bit somber, among other things (though I don't have a full listing of my exact intentions at the time, so part of my understanding of my drive to do this was lost). I feel sad that I have forgotten more about them than I remember, but I have this poem as a memory of it. However, the following is the resultant poem. The intent was to show a world that could have been that faded, using simple colors to portray the loss of imagination and whimsy. Blue Grass & Green Clouds The grass' first blue waned and died in the end. T...