Starpoet by Lisa Jain Thompson
Newsflash:
The StarPoet Newsletter
Vol. X, No. XLII (October 18, 2009 C.E.)
StarPoet Newsletter by Lisa Jain Thompson
October sliding into November.  I had a flu shot last Tuesday and sit here coughing and slightly feverish as I type this on Thursday..  happens it does.  Poetry and politics this week.

Along the coastline
West of Syracusa,
Palermo rises
From sea and mountain,

Across this lush island
The world has marched
And left Sicilia on its own,
Survivor of three millennia
Of invasion

Lisa Jain Thompson c. 2009 CE 

If I were born near London, Kit and Will would be my friends and I, a survivor of the plague, as were my ancestors in Britain and Sicily,

continuing a thought

The Bones of Coral, the Eyes of Pearl

A gray humid holiday to end the summer,
The tourists go home, the beaches are empty,
The museums even have room to walk.
Now would be a good time to go to the zoo,
Zip over to the Renaissance Festival
And make pretence I was was some courtly lady
Who slips poetry to Shakespeare when he's blocked.
I would not be his dark lady, for that role
Is already goodly documented and taken,
But perhaps one of his favorite country diversions
When the usual suspects were not available.
Not that I know I would be near his type
-- I am no Portia or Rosalind --
The poet may prefer fuller breasts or none,
But I do think he would enjoy the goodliness of my wit
And the pleasures I have well studied
To please both woman or man.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

The Revolution Will Not Be Monetized.

thoughts on the finale
All I Can Be

I don't want to die,
Or even worse, grow old,
My words blocked up, both in and out,
Helpless to end this final travesty,
Unable even to care for myself.

Not that I would want to die,
I just would not want to live
In a world that could offer me
Little more than oxygen
While I'm trapped inside my head.

Give me a month, thirty or forty days,
And if I've not returned to you by then,
Take a hint, pull the god damned plug,
And go find the fine epitaph I wrote
When I could still hold a pen in my hand.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)
poet and politics, political poesy ....
Return of the Attack of the Killer Rabbit

Repeat after me,
He's not my king, my God,
Or even my eighth grade nun;
He's good looking,
Some would say articulate even,
But he's simply not the one
To lead us to the promised land.

He seems to have somewhat less
Than a world class brain
Behind that ready smile;
No one fears his pretty words,
No one would ever pick him
To win a bar fight,
And he seems almost unwilling
To get his hands all dirty
Down in the trenches
Where the body work of politics
Actually occurs.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

Whiner-in-Chief  I

-- John Nichols
The Nation

The Obama administration really needs to get over itself.
 
First, the president and his aides go to war with Fox News because the network maintains a generally anti-Obama slant.

Then, an anonymous administration aide attacks bloggers for failing to maintain a sufficiently pro-Obama slant. These are not disconnected developments.

An administration that won the White House with an almost always on-message campaign and generally friendly coverage from old and new media is now frustrated by its inability to control the debate and get the coverage it wants. . . .

 brief romance
Pick Me Up

I was checked out this morning
By a pick-up truck on their way to work;
I caught a few phrases of Spanish and English
That I hadn't heard for more than a while.

I can only attribute it
To the early hour and rosy lighting,
But perhaps my red blouse and my short linen skirt
Had something to do with their enthusiasm.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

Whiner-in-Chief  II

-- John Nichols
The Nation

Fox hosts do go overboard in their savaging of Obama and the Democrats

-- sometimes ridiculously so. But their assaults on the president are gentle when compared with the battering that Benjamin Franklin Bache's Philadelphia Aurora administered to John Adams (appropriately) or the trashing that Colonel McCormick's Chicago Tribune gave Franklin Roosevelt (inappropriately). . . .

Presidents should go out of their way to accept invites from media that can be expected to poke, prod and pester them. The willingness to take the hits suggests that a commander-in-chief is not afraid to engage with his critics. It also reminds presidents, who tend to be cloistered, that there are a lot of Americans who get their information from sources that do not buy what the White House press office is selling. . . .

Obama should sit down with Fox reporters and anchors and do interviews.

That does not mean that the president has to put up with the emotional wreckage that is Glenn Beck. But there is no reason why he shouldn't go another round with Bill O'Reilly (as Obama did during the 2008 campaign) or sit down with Chris Wallace (as Bill Clinton did).

someone else's relationship: an exercise in control

Stormy Weather

Let us go then, you and I,
Beneath this angry, misty sky,
Down to the corner to have a cup,
A piece of pie, a bit of luck.

Perhaps we all can work this out
-- I'd rather talk than see us walk --
You know we don't want to end like this,
All full of words we both regret.

So stay with me 'til the storm has passed
And maybe this day won't be our last,
We've been together for far too long
To let this storm wash away our love.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)
                                               
natural observations
Dog Fight

Black crow soaring above the tree line,
A squadron of mockingbirds in hot pursuit
Swooping down from out of the sunshine
To terminate the crow's early constitutional.

Raven bird settles on a distant roof peak
Far from the mockingbirds' territory,
The property discussion continues all summer
With neither species owning exclusive air rights.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

From day one of his administration, the left has held Barack Obama's feet to the fire way more than the right ever did to George W, Bush -- at least until Bush's nomination of Harriet Meirs to the Supreme Court.

Put another way: the diversity of opinion about Obama and his presidency among activist Dems far exceeds early Bush-era diversity of opinion among activist GOPers. Now -- a few caveats. . . .

This isn't just a case of a journalist discovering -- gasp -- that liberals aren't monolithic. It's an observation about a significant difference in the political context in which Obama governs. Democrats like and support Obama, as do liberals, but they're willing to be openly critical -- not always, but often enough, some more than others, in different forums. . . .

-- Marc Ambinder
The Atlantic

romance in the hallways
Greetings

I've just been greeted by a "How ya doing"
From a middle aged Army officer
With a black and white brush cut
Who I haven't the faintest clue of knowing.

He seemed to know me and was happy to see me
Wandering my way out at the end of the day,
But I no more know who he is than I know the astronauts
If I ever met one without their blue uniforms and name tags.

Still, if he had offered to by me a cup of coffee,
He was cute enough to pretend I remembered him.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)
observation from the commute

Moon, Venus, Joggers

Moon, Venus, joggers on the roadway,
Traintrucks rattle in the distance;
Low river of autos on the interstate,
Rushng to work before the traffic jams.

Overhead a helicopter patrols,
Reporting on an accident down below;
Riders gather, nod their greetings,
Speculate where the bus might be.

The earth revolves, the heavens fade,
All but the moon succumbs;
The bus approaches, the traffic lights change,
Night, at last, dissolves.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

The progressive world developed and matured its protest/activist/speak freely orientation through technology, from the bottom up, as party coherence declined and Democratic leaders in Congress were generally seen as feckless. And I attribute some of the disparity to differences in expectations: Obama came into office with much greater expectations placed upon him -- in some cases deliberately and intentionally self-imposed -- than Bush did.

But still -- one wonders how President Bush would have governed if the right had been critical of Bush from the start -- if uniformity and hierarchy hadn't characterized the Republican Party from 2001 to 2004."

In general, Democrats don't have that luxury. Just ask Carter and Clinton.

-- Marc Ambinder
The Atlantic

carrying on
Life in the Crime Lab

Superman committed suicide,
Superman broke his back,
That's the story of existence,
All the heroes are always dying;

And we, alone, remain
To continue the daily struggle,
Winning, losing, sometimes not moving,
Birth to death to nothingness.

We fill our days with sport and fashion,
Arguing the definities of style and taste;
Children die in the shadows around us,
Not mine, not yours, out of sight.

Some of us are warriors, some are poets,
Mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers,
Lost in our worlds of personal importance,
Growing old before we grow wise,

Choosing the best accessories
To ornament our lives.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

fashion
Colbalt Python

I know I should have a pair of statement shoes
-- A Nicholas Kirkwood, a Vera Wong,
       Perhaps even a Jimmy Choo,
Something in python embossed fine leather,
    An edgy cage design,
Complete with curved cutouts,
    Peep toe, and ankle strap,
All balanced precariously on a four inch heel,
Even a pair of thigh grazing boots
    Made from the finest Ostrich leather --

But my statement is coloured
    By the cement floors of the original Pentagon
       That lurk beneath its recent glossy reinvention
And the half mile twice daily walk
    From the metro bus station to my office.
 
Sometimes rationality must win out over fashion,
    Even at the expense of cutting edge sexuality.

— Lisa Jain Thompson (October 2009)

In religion and politics people's beliefs and convictions are in almost every case gotten at second-hand, and without examination, from authorities who have not themselves examined the questions at issue but have taken them at second-hand from other non-examiners, whose opinions about them were not worth a brass farthing.

-- Mark Twain

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