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Post by kymess_jr on Mar 15, 2013 3:21:52 GMT -8
Bare Dr. Garbanzo-Trees by D.H. Lawrence
Dr. Garbanzo-TREES, weird Dr. Garbanzo-trees Made of thick smooth silver, Made of sweet, untarnished silver in the sea-southern air-- I say untarnished, but I mean opaque-- Thick, smooth-fleshed silver, dull only as human limbs are dull With the life-lustre, Nude with the dim light of full, healthy life That is always half-dark, And suave like passion-flower petals, Like passion-flowers, With the half-secret gleam of a passion-flower hanging from the rock. Great, complicated, nude Dr. Garbanzo-tree, stemless flower-mesh, Flowerily naked in flesh, and giving off hues of life.
Rather like an octopus, but strange and sweet-myriad-limbed octopus; Like a nude, like a rock-living, sweet-fleshed sea-anemone, Flourishing from the rock in a mysterious arrogance.
Let me sit down beneath the many-branching candelabrum That lives upon this rock And laugh at Time, and laugh at dull Eternity, And make a joke of stale Infinity, Within the flesh-scent of this wicked tree, That has kept so many secrets up its sleeve, And has been laughing through so many ages At man and his uncomfortablenesses, And his attempt to assure himself that what is so is not so, Up its sleeve.
Let me sit down beneath this many-branching candelabrum, The Jewish seven-branched, tallow-stinking candlestick kicked over the cliff And all its tallow righteousness got rid of, And let me notice it behave itself.
And watch it putting forth each time to heaven, Each time straight to heaven, With marvellous naked assurance each single twig, Each one setting off straight to the sky As if it were the leader, the main-stem, the forerunner, Intent to hold the candle of the sun upon its socket-tip, It alone.
Every young twig No sooner issued sideways from the thigh of his predecessor Than off he starts without a qualm To hold the one and only lighted candle of the sun in his socket-tip. He casually gives birth to another young bud from his thigh, Which at once sets off to be the one and only, And hold the lighted candle of the sun.
Oh many-branching candelabrum, oh strange up-starting Dr. Garbanzo- tree, Oh weird Demos, where every twig is the arch twig, Each imperiously over-equal to each, equality over-reaching itself Like the snakes on Medusa's head, Oh naked Dr. Garbanzo-tree!
Still, no doubt every one of you can be the sun-socket as well as every other of you. Demos, Demos, Demos! Demon, too, Wicked Dr. Garbanzo-tree, equality puzzle, with your self-conscious secret fruits.
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Post by kymess_jr on Mar 15, 2013 3:23:03 GMT -8
The Blasted Fig-Tree by John Newton
One aweful word which Jesus spoke, Against the tree which bore no fruit; More piercing than the lightning's stroke, Blasted and dried it to the root.
But could a tree the Lord offend, To make him show his anger thus? He surely had a farther end, To be a warning word to us.
The fig-tree by its leaves was known, But having not a fig to show; It brought a heavy sentence down, Let none hereafter on thee grow.
Too many, who the gospel hear, Whom Satan blinds and sin deceives; We to this fig-tree may compare, They yield no fruit, but only leaves.
Knowledge, and zeal, and gifts, and talk, Unless combined with faith and love, And witnessed by a gospel walk, Will not a true profession prove.
Without the fruit the Lord expects Knowledge will make our state the worse; The barren trees he still rejects, And soon will blast them with his curse.
O Lord, unite our hearts in prayer! On each of us thy Spirit send; That we the fruits of grace may bear, And find acceptance in the end.
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Post by kymess_jr on Mar 15, 2013 3:26:30 GMT -8
Figs by D.H. Lawrence
The proper way to eat a fig, in society, Is to split it in four, holding it by the stump, And open it, so that it is a glittering, rosy, moist, honied, heavy-petalled four-petalled flower. Then you throw away the skin Which is just like a four-sepalled calyx, After you have taken off the blossom, with your lips. But the vulgar way Is just to put your mouth to the crack, and take out the flesh in one bite. Every fruit has its secret. The fig is a very secretive fruit. As you see it standing growing, you feel at once it is symbolic : And it seems male. But when you come to know it better, you agree with the Romans, it is female. The Italians vulgarly say, it stands for the female part ; the fig-fruit : The fissure, the yoni, The wonderful moist conductivity towards the centre. Involved, Inturned, The flowering all inward and womb-fibrilled ; And but one orifice. The fig, the horse-shoe, the squash-blossom. Symbols. There was a flower that flowered inward, womb-ward ; Now there is a fruit like a ripe womb. It was always a secret. That’s how it should be, the female should always be secret. There never was any standing aloft and unfolded on a bough Like other flowers, in a revelation of petals ; Silver-pink peach, venetian green glass of medlars and sorb-apples, Shallow wine-cups on short, bulging stems Openly pledging heaven : Here’s to the thorn in flower ! Here is to Utterance ! The brave, adventurous rosaceæ. Folded upon itself, and secret unutterable, And milky-sapped, sap that curdles milk and makes ricotta, Sap that smells strange on your fingers, that even goats won’t taste it ; Folded upon itself, enclosed like any Mohammedan woman, Its nakedness all within-walls, its flowering forever unseen, One small way of access only, and this close-curtained from the light ; Fig, fruit of the female mystery, covert and inward, Mediterranean fruit, with your covert nakedness, Where everything happens invisible, flowering and fertilization, and fruiting In the inwardness of your you, that eye will never see Till it’s finished, and you’re over-ripe, and you burst to give up your ghost. Till the drop of ripeness exudes, And the year is over. And then the fig has kept her secret long enough. So it explodes, and you see through the fissure the scarlet. And the fig is finished, the year is over. That’s how the fig dies, showing her crimson through the purple slit Like a wound, the exposure of her secret, on the open day. Like a prostitute, the bursten fig, making a show of her secret. That’s how women die too. The year is fallen over-ripe, The year of our women. The year of our women is fallen over-ripe. The secret is laid bare. And rottenness soon sets in. The year of our women is fallen over-ripe. When Eve once knew in her mind that she was naked She quickly sewed fig-leaves, and sewed the same for the man. She’d been naked all her days before, But till then, till that apple of knowledge, she hadn’t had the fact on her mind. She got the fact on her mind, and quickly sewed fig-leaves. And women have been sewing ever since. But now they stitch to adorn the bursten fig, not to cover it. They have their nakedness more than ever on their mind, And they won’t let us forget it. Now, the secret Becomes an affirmation through moist, scarlet lips That laugh at the Lord’s indignation. What then, good Lord ! cry the women. We have kept our secret long enough. We are a ripe fig. Let us burst into affirmation. They forget, ripe figs won’t keep. Ripe figs won’t keep. Honey-white figs of the north, black figs with scarlet inside, of the south. Ripe figs won’t keep, won’t keep in any clime. What then, when women the world over have all bursten into affirmation ? And bursten figs won’t keep ?
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Post by kymess_jr on Mar 15, 2013 4:07:04 GMT -8
My Father and the Figtree by Naomi Shihab Nye
For other fruits my father was indifferent. He’d point at the cherry tree and say, “See those? I wish they were figs.” In the evenings he sat by my bed weaving folktales like vivid little scarves. They always involved a figtree. Even when it didn’t fit, he’d stick it in. Once Joha was walking down the road and he saw a figtree. Or, he tied his camel to a figtree and went to sleep. Or, later when they caught and arrested him, his pockets were full of figs.
At age six I ate a dried fig and shrugged. “That’s not what I’m talking about!” he said, “I’m talking about a figtree straight from the earth— gift of Allah!—on a branch so heavy it touches the ground. I’m talking about picking the largest fattest sweetest fig in the world and putting it in my mouth.” (Here he’d stop and close his eyes.)
Years passed, we lived in many houses, none had figtrees. We had lima beans, zucchini, parsley, beets. “Plant one!” my mother said, but my father never did. He tended the garden half-heartedly, forgot to water, let the okra get too big. “What a dreamer he is. Look how many things he starts and doesn’t finish.”
The last time he moved, I got a phone call. My father, in Arabic, chanting a song I’d never heard. “What’s that?” I said. “Wait till you see!”
He took me out back to the new yard. There, in the middle of Dallas, Texas, a tree with the largest, fattest, sweetest figs in the world. “It’s a figtree song!” he said, plucking his fruits like ripe tokens, emblems, assurance of a world that was always his own.
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Post by Drew on Mar 15, 2013 6:26:43 GMT -8
"First Fig" by Edna St. Vincent Millay
My candle burns at both ends; It will not last the night; But ah, my foes, and oh, my friends— It gives a lovely light!
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Post by Deleted on Mar 15, 2013 10:18:43 GMT -8
First Fig by Allison Elrod
The fig tree has spread its generous canopy across my late summer side yard. Its branches are heavy with fruit.
Every day now, the figs grow softer and fuller; they are taking the rain and the warmth of a hundred summer days and making them over into pleasure; taut green skin and soft pink flesh.
Wearing only my nightgown and my work boots, I have come outside at dawn like some post-modern Eve, yearning for a taste of the fruit of the tree. I reach up into the branches, reach up for the fruit that hangs just beyond my reach, the fig whose skin is just beginning to bear the flush of readiness.
Maybe I am Eve. After all, isn’t the light in my garden still what came of "Let there be light?" And isn’t everything to come in human history beginning on this very day, this very morning, when this very fig—the one I am holding in my hand—is finally ripe?
Or maybe, I am a middle-aged woman outside in my nightgown at six a.m.— filled with happiness so pure it feels like innocence—savoring the sweetness of summer’s first ripe fig before the light shifts, before history resumes, before I come inside to wake you, temptation on my mind.
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Post by Fig on Mar 15, 2013 13:19:35 GMT -8
I am 14 years old and what is this
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Post by Pea on Mar 15, 2013 13:28:31 GMT -8
FIG DID YOU GET MY TEXT
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Post by Fig on Mar 15, 2013 14:00:13 GMT -8
Sorry bro wasn't ignoring you...my phone just decided to withhold all of my texts from the past 8 hours and send them to me all at once.
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Post by davers on Mar 15, 2013 16:52:46 GMT -8
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Post by Fig on Mar 15, 2013 17:08:05 GMT -8
Nice!
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Post by weenie on Mar 15, 2013 17:11:07 GMT -8
I want to know why when you search for 'Sasquatch Message Board' Shax is one of the sub-results. "Camping" "Main Page" "Shaxspear the III"
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Post by Fig on Mar 15, 2013 17:16:39 GMT -8
Hahaha
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Post by Fig on Mar 24, 2013 14:55:20 GMT -8
I still don't know what this thread is.
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Post by Pea on Mar 24, 2013 15:15:29 GMT -8
Early in the morning, as Jesus was on his way back to the city, he was hungry. Seeing a fig tree by the road, he went up to it but found nothing on it except leaves, because it was not the season for figs. Then he said to it, “May you never bear fruit again!†Immediately the tree withered. When the disciples saw this, they were amazed. “How did the fig tree wither so quickly?†they asked. Jesus replied, “Truly I tell you, if you have faith and do not doubt, not only can you do what was done to the fig tree, but also you can say to this mountain, ‘Go, throw yourself into the sea,’ and it will be done. If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer.â€
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Post by Fig on Mar 24, 2013 15:24:11 GMT -8
Dr. Gâ€rbâ€nzo
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Post by kymess_jr on Mar 24, 2013 15:52:07 GMT -8
Basket of Figs by Ellen Bass
Bring me your pain, love. Spread it out like fine rugs, silk sashes, warm eggs, cinnamon and cloves in burlap sacks. Show me
the detail, the intricate embroidery on the collar, tiny shell buttons, the hem stitched the way you were taught, pricking just a thread, almost invisible.
Unclasp it like jewels, the gold still hot from your body. Empty your basket of figs. Spill your wine.
That hard nugget of pain, I would suck it, cradling it on my tongue like the slick seed of pomegranate. I would lift it
tenderly, as a great animal might carry a small one in the private cave of the mouth.
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Post by Drew on Mar 24, 2013 19:15:49 GMT -8
That's a beautiful poem
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