Get Your Premium Membership

Blog on the amazing poet, Ivor Gurney- A tribute to a great poet and brave man - Robert Lindley's Blog

About Robert Lindley
(Show Details...)
Bloggers Photo

A few of my quotes over the years:

 

Listing A Personal View Of What Poetry Is

1. Poetry is a stone, turned to expose to searching winds of a once hidden earth.
Robert J. Lindley

2. Poetry is art, mind painted, heart colored and fire risen.
Robert J. Lindley

3. Poetry is a fruit, hanging on a bountiful tree, begging to fall.
Robert J. Lindley

4. Poetry is an ever expanding ocean, begging ever more creatures to swim in its swirling depths.
Robert J. Lindley

5. Poetry is cake on a golden platter, eaten with fork, spoon, butter knife or greedy hands.
Robert J. Lindley

6. Poetry is cherry blossoms, crying for the soft, cool winds to wave their beauty to the awaiting sun and the gasping skies.
Robert J. Lindley

7. Poetry is glistening dewdrops falling upon virgin ground to gift dawn's hope and night's desire to match brilliance of glistening moonbeams.
Robert J. Lindley

8. Poetry is a poet's heart and soul uniting to bless others, while temporarily shielding searching souls against this dark world's poison tipped arrows.
Robert J. Lindley

9. Poetry is brightly sent musical notes that heart sees, mind colors and spirit longs to record.
Robert J. Lindley

10. Poetry is ink blotted, soul driven splashes that cry to be read, beg to be understood and unabashedly sing to give to its dear readers.
Robert J. Lindley

11.Poetry is a colorful bird, in heavenly flight to a paradise that awaits man's sincere pleading heart and desirous spirit.
Robert J. Lindley

12. Poetry is a child happily playing, a mother joyfully singing and a father blessed to have and so very dearly appreciate loving both.
Robert J. Lindley

Robert J. Lindley, 7-17-2018
Subject, ( What Poetry Is)

'

**************************

My biography will be very limited for now.   Here , I can express myself in poetic form but in real life I much rather prefer to be far less forward  I am a 60 year old American citizen , born and raised in the glorious South! A heritage that I am very proud of and thank God for as it is a blessing indeed ~

Currently married to my beautiful young wife(Riza) a lovely filipina  lady and we have a fantastic 7 year old son, Justin ~

I have truly lived a very wild life as a younger man but now find myself finally very happily settled down for the duration of my life~

I decided to rest here and express myself with hopes that it may in some way help others, for I see here a very diverse  and fine gathering of poets, artists, and caring folks~

Quickly finding friends here that amaze me with such great talent~~

I invite any and all to comment on my writes and send me soup mail to discuss

whatever seems important to them ~


Blog on the amazing poet, Ivor Gurney- A tribute to a great poet and brave man

Blog Posted:12/18/2020 10:27:00 AM

Blog on the amazing poet ,  Ivor Gurney

A  tribute to a great poet and brave man

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/57254/laventie

(1.)

To the Poet Before Battle

                                            ---BY IVOR GURNEY

Now, youth, the hour of thy dread passion comes;

Thy lovely things must all be laid away;

And thou, as others, must face the riven day

Unstirred by rattle of the rolling drums,

Or bugles' strident cry. When mere noise numbs

The sense of being, the sick soul doth sway,

Remember thy great craft's honour, that they may say

Nothing in shame of poets. Then the crumbs

Of praise the little versemen joyed to take

Shall be forgotten; then they must know we are,

For all our skill in words, equal in might

And strong of mettle as those we honoured; make

The name of poet terrible in just war,

And like a crown of honour upon the fight.

(2.)

Ballad of the Three Spectres

                                                ----BY IVOR GURNEY

As I went up by Ovillers

   In mud and water cold to the knee,

There went three jeering, fleering spectres,

   That walked abreast and talked of me.

 

The first said, ‘Here’s a right brave soldier

   That walks the dark unfearingly;

Soon he’ll come back on a fine stretcher,

   And laughing for a nice Blighty.’

 

The second, ‘Read his face, old comrade,

   No kind of lucky chance I see;

One day he’ll freeze in mud to the marrow,

   Then look his last on Picardie.’

 

Though bitter the word of these first twain

   Curses the third spat venomously;

‘He’ll stay untouched till the war’s last dawning

   Then live one hour of agony.’

 

Liars the first two were. Behold me

   At sloping arms by one – two – three;

Waiting the time I shall discover

   Whether the third spake verity.

(3.)

Laventie

               ---BY IVOR GURNEY

One would remember still

Meadows and low hill

Laventie was, as to the line and elm row

Growing through green strength wounded, as home elms grow.

Shimmer of summer there and blue autumn mists

Seen from trench-ditch winding in mazy twists.

The Australian gunners in close flowery hiding

Cunning found out at last, and smashed in the unspeakable lists.

And the guns in the smashed wood thumping and grinding.

 

The letters written there, and received there,

Books, cakes, cigarettes in a parish of famine,

And leaks in rainy times with general all-damning.

The crater, and carrying of gas cylinders on two sticks

(Pain past comparison and far past right agony gone)

Strained hopelessly of heart and frame at first fix.

 

Café-au-lait in dug-outs on Tommies' cookers,

Cursed minniewerfs, thirst in eighteen-hour summer.

The Australian miners clayed, and the being afraid

Before strafes, sultry August dusk time than Death dumber —

And the cooler hush after the strafe, and the long night wait —

The relief of first dawn, the crawling out to look at it,

Wonder divine of Dawn, man hesitating before Heaven's gate.

(Though not on Coopers where music fire took at it,

Though not as at Framilode beauty where body did shake at it)

Yet the dawn with aeroplanes crawling high at Heaven's gate

Lovely aerial beetles of wonderful scintillate

Strangest interest, and puffs of soft purest white —

Soaking light, dispersing colouring for fancy's delight.

 

Of Maconachie, Paxton, Tickler, and Gloucester's Stephens;

Fray Bentos, Spiller and Baker, odds and evens

Of trench food, but the everlasting clean craving

For bread, the pure thing, blessed beyond saving.

Canteen disappointments, and the keen boy braving

Bullets or such for grouse roused surprisingly through (Halfway) Stand-to.

And the shell nearly blunted my razor at shaving;

Tilleloy, Pauquissart, Neuve Chapelle, and mud like glue.

 

But Laventie, most of all, I think is to soldiers

The Town itself with plane trees, and small-spa air;

And vin, rouge-blanc, chocolat, citron, grenadine:

One might buy in small delectable cafés there.

The broken church, and vegetable fields bare;

Neat French market town look so clean,

And the clarity, amiability of North French air.

 

Like water flowing beneath the dark plough and high Heaven,

Music's delight to please the poet pack-marching there.

******

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivor_Gurney

Ivor Gurney

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ivor Bertie Gurney (28 August 1890 – 26 December 1937) was an English poet and composer, particularly of songs. He was born and raised in Gloucester. He suffered from manic depression through much of his life and spent his last 15 years in psychiatric hospitals. Critical evaluation of Gurney has been complicated by this, and also by the need to assess both his poetry and his music.[1] Gurney himself thought of music as his true vocation: "The brighter visions brought music; the fainter verse".[2]

Contents

1        Life

2        Mental illness

3        Death and legacy

4        Works

4.1        Compositions

4.2        War poet/local poet

4.3        Posthumous collections of poetry and letters

4.4        Five Elizabethan songs

4.5        Other songs

4.6        Selected poems

5        See also

6        References

7        Sources

8        External links

Life

Ivor Gurney was born at 3 Queen Street, Gloucester, in 1890, as the second of four surviving children of David Gurney, a tailor, and his wife Florence, a seamstress.[3]

 

He showed early musical ability. He sang as a chorister at Gloucester Cathedral from 1900 to 1906, when he became an articled pupil of Dr Herbert Brewer at the cathedral. There he met a fellow composer, Herbert Howells, who became a lifelong friend. Alongside Gurney and Howells, Brewer's third pupil at this time was Ivor Novello, then known as Ivor Davies. He also enjoyed an enduring friendship with the poet F. W. Harvey, whom he met in 1908.

 

The adults of most significance in Gurney's early life were the Rev. Alfred H. Cheesman, and two sisters, Emily and Margaret Hunt, who nurtured Gurney's interests in music and literature. Gurney began composing music at the age of 14,[4] and won a scholarship to the Royal College of Music in 1911. He studied there with Charles Villiers Stanford, who also taught Ralph Vaughan Williams, John Ireland, Marion Scott, Rebecca Clarke, Frank Bridge, Arthur Bliss, Herbert Howells and many others. Stanford told Howells that Gurney was potentially "the biggest of them all", but he was "unteachable".[5]

 

Gurney possessed a dynamic personality, but he had been troubled by mood swings that became apparent during his teenage years. He had a difficult time focusing on his work at college and suffered his first breakdown in 1913.[6] After taking a rest, he seemed to recover and returned to college.

 

Gurney's studies were interrupted by World War I, when he enlisted as a private soldier in the Gloucestershire Regiment in February 1915. At the front, he began writing poetry seriously, sending his efforts to his friend, the musicologist and critic Marion Scott, who worked with Gurney as his editor and business manager. He was in the midst of writing the poems for what would become his first book, Severn and Somme, when he was wounded in the shoulder in April 1917. He recovered and returned to battle, still working on his book and composing music, including the songs "In Flanders" and "By A Bierside". Sidgwick & Jackson accepted Severn and Somme in July, with publication set for the autumn. In the meantime, Gurney was gassed in September the same year and sent to the Edinburgh War Hospital, where he met and fell in love with a VAD nurse, Annie Nelson Drummond, but the relationship later broke down. There remains some controversy about the possible effects of the gas on his mental health, even though Gurney had clearly shown signs and symptoms of a bipolar disorder since his teens.[7] "Being gassed (mildly) [his parenthesis] with the new gas is no worse than catarrh or a bad cold," Gurney wrote in a letter to Marion Scott on 17 September 1917. After his release from hospital, he was posted to Seaton Delaval, a mining village in Northumberland, where he wrote poems, including "Lying Awake in the Ward". His volume Severn and Somme was published in November 1917.

Mental illness

Memorials to Ivor Gurney in Gloucester Cathedral

stained-glass window

Ivor Gurney memorial window

stone plaque

Ivor Gurney memorial plaque

In March 1918, Gurney suffered a serious breakdown, triggered at least in part by the sudden breakdown of his relationship with Drummond.[7][8] He was hospitalised in the Gallery Ward at Brancepeth Castle, County Durham, where he wrote several songs, despite the piano sounding, he said, like "a boiler factory in full swing because of the stone walls".[9] In June he threatened suicide, but he did not attempt it.

 

Gurney slowly regained some of his emotional stability and in October was honourably discharged from the army. Gurney received an unconventional diagnosis of nervous breakdown from "deferred" shell shock.[6] The notion that Gurney's instability should primarily be attributed to "shell shock" was perpetuated by Marion Scott, who used this term in the initial press releases after Gurney's death, as well as in his entry for Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians.

 

Gurney seemed to thrive after the war and was regarded as one of the most promising men of his generation, but his mental distress continued to worsen.[7] He studied for a brief time with Ralph Vaughan Williams upon returning to the Royal College of Music, but he withdrew from the college before completing his studies. His second volume of poetry, War's Embers, appeared in May 1919 to mixed reviews. He continued to compose, producing a large number of songs, instrumental pieces, chamber music, and two works for orchestra: War Elegy (1920) and A Gloucestershire Rhapsody (1919–1921). His music was being performed and published. However, by 1922, his condition had deteriorated to the point where his family had him declared insane.

 

It has been speculated that Gurney's mental problems may have resulted from syphilis, contracted either while he was a music student before the war, or perhaps while serving as a soldier in France. Blevins, Gurney's biographer, however, concludes that he did not suffer from syphilis. The issue has also been discussed, more recently, by Cambridge academic and broadcaster Kate Kennedy.[10]

 

Gurney spent the last 15 years of his life in psychiatric hospitals, first for a short period at Barnwood House in Gloucester, and then at the City of London Mental Hospital, Dartford, where he was diagnosed as suffering from "delusional insanity (systematised)".[11] Gurney wrote prolifically during the asylum years, producing some eight collections of verse. His output included two plays in Shakespearean style – "Gloucester Play (1926) and "The Tewkesbury Trial" (1926).[12] During this time he appeared to believe himself to be Shakespeare in person. He continued also to compose music, but to a far lesser degree. An examination of his archive suggests that up to two-thirds of his musical output remains unpublished and unrecorded.[13]

 

By the 1930s Gurney wrote little of anything, although he was described by Scott as being "so sane in his insanity".

Death and legacy

The grave of Ivor Gurney at Twigworth, Gloucestershire

The Candle, Gloucester Docks (2011)

Gurney died of tuberculosis while still a patient at the City of London Mental Hospital, shortly before dawn on 26 December 1937, aged 47. He was buried in Twigworth, near Gloucester. The service was conducted by his godfather, Rev. Alfred Cheesman. Gurney was "a lover and maker of beauty", it was stated on his gravestone. (The stone was replaced after it was damaged – the original is now stored inside Twigworth church.) Marion Scott preserved Gurney's manuscripts and letters and worked with composer Gerald Finzi to ensure that his legacy should not be forgotten.

 

On 11 November 1985, Gurney was among 16 Great War Poets commemorated on a slate stone unveiled in Westminster Abbey's Poet's Corner.[14] The inscription on the stone was written by a fellow Great War poet, Wilfred Owen: "My subject is War, and the pity of War. The Poetry is in the pity."

 

In 2000, a stained-glass window was installed in St Mary de Lode Church, Gloucester and dedicated to the memory of Ivor Gurney.[15] A memorial to Gurney was erected in 2009 Sint-Juliaan, near Ypres, close to the spot where he was the victim of a mustard gas attack in 1917.[16][17]

 

A sculpture by Wolfgang Buttress entitled The Candle was unveiled in 2011 in Victoria Dock, Gloucester Docks; it is inscribed with lines from the Gurney's poem "Requiem" around the base.[18][19] There is also a blue plaque memorial to Gurney in Eastgate Street, Gloucester.[20]

 

In April 2014, BBC Four broadcast a documentary about Gurney, entitled The Poet Who Loved the War, presented by Tim Kendall, which focused on how the First World War had in some ways helped Gurney through the periods of depression he suffered and helped him become one of the war's foremost poets.[21]

 

In June and July 2014 Gurney was the subject of BBC Radio 3's Composer of the Week, based on Dr Kate Kennedy's biography, Ivor Gurney: Dweller in Shadows, as part of the station's Music in the Great War series. The programmes included a number of Gurney's pieces, especially recorded by the BBC.[13]

 

Works

Gurney's reputation as a poet and as a composer has continued to rise.

Compositions

Cover of a 1923 edition of Gurney's song cycle Ludlow and Teme

Gurney wrote hundreds of poems and more than 300 songs but only set a handful of his own poems to music, the best known being Severn Meadows. His well-known compositions include his Five Elizabethan Songs (or 'The Elizas' as he called them), written in 1913-14 while he was still as student at the Royal College of Music. The song cycles Ludlow and Teme (published 1923) and The Western Playland, (published 1926), both settings of poetry by A. E. Housman, were prepared for publication with the help of admirers and friends, including Gerald Finzi and his wife Joy, Howard Ferguson and Marion Scott.[22] Oxford University Press issued two sets of ten songs in 1938, a year after his death, selected and edited by Finzi and Ferguson. Three further sets of ten songs came out in 1952, 1959 and 1979.

 

Gurney set to music many of the poems of his contemporaries, including at least nineteen poems written by Edward Thomas, six of them collected in the orchestral song cycle Lights Out published in 1926, and at least seven by W. H. Davies.[23] All of Gurney's settings from the Canadian poet Bliss Carman's Sappho: One Hundred Lyrics (1904) were gathered together in a new collection, Seven Sappho Songs by Richard Carder in 1998.[24] There is something of Schubert and Schumann, but considerably less of the prevailing folk idiom of the time, in the intensity of Gurney's musical language.[25]

 

His Five Preludes for piano were written in 1919-20 and published the following year. He also wrote as many as 20 string quartets, although most of these are lost. The String Quartet in D minor, composed in 1924, received its premiere recording in 2020.[26]

 

War poet/local poet

Edmund Blunden, at the urging of Gerald Finzi, assembled the first collection of Gurney's poetry which was published in 1954. This was followed by P. J. Kavanagh's Collected Poems, first published in 1982 and reissued in 2004. It remains the most comprehensive edition of Gurney's poetry. Gurney is regarded as one of the great World War I poets, and like others of them, such as Edward Thomas, whom he admired, he often contrasted the horrors of the front line with the beauty and tranquillity of his native English landscape – these themes were explored in the 2012 musical play A Soldier and a Maker.

 

Deliberately unrhetorical in his poetic tone,[27] and writing as a ranker not an officer,[28] Gurney offered a complex, wry, unheroic view of the soldierly world of the Western Front:[29] presenting not a large statement (for or against war), but an individual experience.[30] Without diminishing the horrors of the front line, Gurney's poems often emphasise the moments of relief. "On Rest" was above all what he called "the relief of knowing mere being".[31] By detailing the "small trifles" of trench life[32] – moments of comradeship, letters from home, singsongs, bread and Fray Bentos corned beef, wine, chocolate and café-au-lait[33] Gurney was able (in Blunden's words) to "express part of the Western Front secret... with distinctive, intimate and imaginative quickness."[34] In so far as he had a "manifesto", it was to present "the protest of the physical against the exalted spiritual; of the cumulative weight of small facts against the one large".[35]

 

At the same time, Gurney was something of a local poet, rooted in Gloucester and its surroundings, which remained a touchstone of reality for him, in the front line and later in the asylum.[36] In the preface to his first book, he wrote of "my county, Gloucester, that whether I live or die stays always with me."[37] His tribute poem, "Crickley Hill", was described by Edna Longley as "perhaps Gurney's most rapturous expression of local patriotism".[38]

 

Posthumous collections of poetry and letters

Severn & Somme and War's Embers, ed. R. K. R. Thornton. Carcanet Press, 1997

80 Poems or So, ed. George Walter and R. K. R. Thornton. Carcanet Press, 1997

Rewards of Wonder: Poems of London, Cotswold and France, ed. George Walter. Carcanet Press, 2000

Best Poems and The Book of Five Makings, ed. R.K.R. Thornton. Carcanet Press, 1995

Collected Poems, ed. P.J. Kavanagh. Fyfield Books (Carcanet Press), 2004

Stars in a Dark Night: The Letters from Ivor Gurney to the Chapman Family. Anthony Boden (ed.), The History Press, 2004 (2nd edition)

Five Elizabethan songs

"Orpheus" (John Fletcher)

"Sleep" (John Fletcher)

"Spring" (Thomas Nashe)

"Tears" (anon.)

"Under the Greenwood Tree" (William Shakespeare)

Other songs

collections: A First Volume of Ten Songs (FV); A Second Volume of Ten Songs (SV); Five Songs (FS); Lights Out (LO); Ludlow and Teme (LT); Seven Sappho Songs (SS); The Western Playland (WP)

"A Bird's Anger" (W H Davies)

"A Piper" (Seumas O'Sullivan)

"All Night Under The Moon" (Wilfred Gibson) FV

"All Suddenly the Wind" (Rupert Brooke) FS

"An Epitaph" (Walter de la Mare) SV

"A Sword" (Robin Flower) SV

"Black Stitchel" (Wilfred Gibson) FV

"Blaweary" (Wilfred Gibson) SV

"Bread and Cherries" (Walter de la Mare) SV

"Bright Clouds" (Edward Thomas) LO

"Brown Is My Love" (anon.)

"By a Bierside" (John Masefield)

"Cathleen ni Houlihan" (W B Yeats) FV

"Clouds" (Rupert Brooke) FS

"Desire in Spring" (Francis Ledwidge)

"Down by The Salley Gardens" (W B Yeats) FV

"Dreams of the Sea" (W H Davies)

"Early Morn" (W H Davies)

"Edward, Edward" (anon.)

"Epitaph in Old Mode" (J C Squire) SV

"Even Such Is Time" (Sir Walter Raleigh)

"Far in a Western Brookland" (A E Housman) LT

"Goodnight to the Meadow" (Robert Graves)

"Ha'nacker Mill" (Hilaire Belloc) FV

"Hawk and Buckle" (Robert Graves) SV

"Hesperus" (Bliss Carman) SS

"I Praise the Tender Flower" (Robert Bridges)

"In Flanders" (F W Harvey)

"I Shall Ever be Maiden" (Bliss Carman) SS

"Is My Team Ploughing?" (Housman) WP

"Lament" (Ivor Gurney)

"Last Hours" (John Freeman) SV

"Lights Out" (Edward Thomas) LO

"Lonely Night" (Bliss Carman) SS

"Loveliest of Trees" (Housman) WP

"Love Shakes my Soul" (Bliss Carman) SS

"Ludlow Fair" (Housman) LT

"Most Holy Night" (Hilaire Belloc)

"Nine of the Clock" (Robert Graves) FV

"Oh Happy Wind" (W H Davies)

"One Day" (Rupert Brooke) FS

"On the Idle Hill of Summer" (Housman) LT

"The Quiet Mist" (Bliss Carman) SS

"Reveille" (Housman) WP

"Scents" (Edward Thomas) LO

"Severn Meadows" (Ivor Gurney)

"Soft Was the Wind" (Bliss Carman) SS

"Song of Caibhan" (Ethna Carbery)

"Song of Silence" (Ivor Gurney)

"Snow" (Edward Thomas)

"The Aspens" (Housman) WP

"The Apple Orchard" (Bliss Carman) SS

"The Boat Is Chafing" (Walter de la Mare) SV

"The Cloths Of Heaven" (W B Yeats)

"The Far Country" (Housman) WP

"The Fiddler of Dooney" (W B Yeats)

"The Fields Are Full" (Edward Shanks)

"The Folly of Being Comforted" (W B Yeats) SV

"The Latmian Shepherd" (Edward Shanks) FV

"The Lent Lily" (Housman) LT

"The Moon" (W H Davies)

"The Night of Trafalgar" (Thomas Hardy)

"The Penny Whistle" (Edward Thomas) LO

"There's Wisdom in Women" (Rupert Brooke) FS

"The Scribe" (Walter de la Mare) SV

"The Ship" (J C Squire)

"The Singer" (Edward Shanks) FV

"The Sun at Noon to Higher Air" (Housman) WP

"The Treasure" (Rupert Brooke) FS

"The Trumpet" (Edward Thomas) LO

"The Twa Corbies" (volkslied)

"Thou Didst Delight My Eyes" (Robert Bridges)

"'Tis Time, I Think, by Wenlock Town" (Housman) LT

"To Violets" (Robert Herrick)

"Twice a Week" (Housman) WP

"Walking Song" (F W Harvey)

"When Death to Either Shall Come" (Bridges) FV

"When I Was One-and-twenty" (Housman) LT

"When On a Summer's Morning (W H Davies)

"When Smoke Stood up from Ludlow" (Housman) LT

"The White Cascade" (W H Davies)

"With rue my heart is laden" (Housman) WP

"Will You Come?" (Edward Thomas) LO

"You Are My Sky" (J C Squire) FV

Selected poems

The following poems provide an introduction to his work:

 

"Strange Hells" – The effect of war on soldiers' psyches

"The Ballad of Three Spectres" – A soldier's vision

"Maisemore" – A soldier thinks of home

"The Estaminet" – Comradeship

"Purple and Black" – The politics of death

"To the Poet before Battle" – A soldier poet prepares for the fight

"To His Love" – A soldier writes to a dead comrade's lover of his death

"The Silent One" – An account of a moment of terror during a battle

See also…….

************************************

My Tribute poem --to this great man, great artist, great composer of song

To The Great Poet, After A Courageous Life Lived,

Tribute to Ivor Gurney

 

Now , hero-  thy darkened days away hath flown

Savage were the conflicts- within war's raging tones

Duty done, we giveth mercy pleas for the dead

We with blessings, thank heaven for our daily bread

Sleep, sleep the dear peace and quiet so well earned

All thy brave duty, world notes thee never spurned

In bloodied trenches and seeing life flee away

Hearing the screams of those dying- you chose to stay

Compose your poetry- cite the carnage war brings

Of thy many great songs others may hear and sing

We that were blessed not to face horror of war

Shall now read your fine writings-- seeing your bright star

Forgive us our lateness, life and love carries on

Those that come to know you, read grieving you are gone

 

Yours be a crown of glory for duty well done

Such courage , allows us to live free and have fun

Ours is the treasure that true sacrifice hath brought

Sad truth-  war tis a damn, horrible lesson taught

In darkened times, in that horrific war you were caught

Aware of the brighter peaceful life that you sought

We that can see, envy you not your earned rest

Not blind- we remember the dying of the best

If Heaven rewards us, greater days in the sun

We thank heroes that fight bravely rather than run

Now in your silent slumber, we give our salute

For those that served, learned well to fight and shoot

True, a brave hero and poet, such is your name

By your service, your poetry brings thee acclaim.

 

Robert J. Lindley,  12-18- 2020

Tribute to Ivor Gurney

Rhyme

Note: I found this great poet as I continue my

study of war poetry. My study of poets that wrote

a hundred years ago. This one was a soldier, a poet,

 a song writer. One that suffered horrible from the

 evils and carnage of war. A man that did his duty

Gave the world both beautiful music and beautiful

 poetry. May God bless such men…



Please Login to post a comment
Date: 12/21/2020 10:27:00 AM
Thank you for the introduction to Ivor. I like exploring their worlds. Time ever quickens and my schedule is full, but I still check the blogs and take the time to learn from them.
Login to Reply
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 12/21/2020 5:06:00 PM
Thank you reading and commenting my friend.. To better understand poetry one should perhaps read and study the great poets of the past. Such knowledge insight and creative offerings came from those tremendously talented and dedicated poets! Much of the famous poems they gifted the world are enlightening and highly instructive for this world and poetry of today. Perhaps more should pay attention, imho. Wishing You and Yours A Very Merry Christmas.. God Bless.
Date: 12/18/2020 3:18:00 PM
Ivor Gurney, 'Requiem'---- Requiem * Pour out your light, O stars, and do not hold. Your loveliest shining from earth’s outworn shell. Pure and cold your radiance – pure and cold. My dead friend's face as well. Pour out your bounty, moon of radiant shining. On all this shattered flesh, on all these quiet forms; For these were slain, so quiet still reclining. In the noblest cause was ever waged with arms. by Ivor Gurney
Login to Reply
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 12/18/2020 3:30:00 PM
He that saw amidst death- such unholy hell. Wherein each breath sent one nearer dying. In folly, war's carnage and rotting smell. Grief and deep despair for those left crying. A blackened wicked curse on mankind. Evil fruit of blinded, poor fare to find.

My Past Blog Posts

 
I am taking a short vacation
Date Posted: 9/25/2023 6:28:00 AM
BLOG- On one of my favorite Wordworth poems
Date Posted: 9/20/2023 9:55:00 AM
Linked article on 19th Century Poets
Date Posted: 9/18/2023 3:33:00 PM
Blog: Does Classical Mythology Have A Place In Contemporary Poetry?
Date Posted: 9/9/2023 12:35:00 PM
New Blog, Why Dark Poetry Fascinated So Many Famous Poets..
Date Posted: 9/7/2023 7:53:00 AM
Words On The Need For And The Benefits Of Dark Poetry.
Date Posted: 9/5/2023 6:28:00 AM
The Fifth Poet, in my famous Poets Series, John Keats
Date Posted: 8/31/2023 1:19:00 PM
A Blog On Life And Poetry.
Date Posted: 8/29/2023 11:35:00 AM
5 Writers Who Blur the Boundary Between Poetry and Essay "Poets are the Hoarders of the Literary World"
Date Posted: 8/29/2023 11:20:00 AM
Man, What A Delicious Gob-smacking Dream I Had Last Night
Date Posted: 8/28/2023 11:58:00 AM
Blog on , Thomas Hardy
Date Posted: 8/17/2023 9:26:00 AM
Blog, What Is Modern Poetry? by Alan Rankin
Date Posted: 8/12/2023 3:13:00 PM
Blog On Poetry And Truth, Think
Date Posted: 8/5/2023 5:06:00 PM
Blog on next two poets chosen to be honored in my, Second Poets Tribute Series
Date Posted: 8/3/2023 7:00:00 AM
Blog On Coleridge, A Brilliant Poet That Every Poet Should Know
Date Posted: 7/26/2023 8:06:00 AM
3 poems and a prayer, O' yes from 1973
Date Posted: 7/11/2023 2:18:00 PM
A Blog on the magnificent poet Alfred Noyles
Date Posted: 7/10/2023 10:18:00 AM
BLOG ON Shelley Notes on Percy Bysshe Shelley's A Defense of Poetry
Date Posted: 6/30/2023 3:19:00 PM
Blog, Recently Written Words, Hoping To Revive My Poetic Spirit
Date Posted: 7/4/2022 4:38:00 AM
Blog, A Hebdomad Of Poetic Thought, Musings And Deep Internal Pain
Date Posted: 5/15/2022 9:20:00 AM
Blog, ( Ancient Times, Some Fragments And Poetic Memories )
Date Posted: 4/21/2022 7:24:00 AM
Blog,A Menagerie Of Verse, Rhyme, And Meandering Thoughts
Date Posted: 4/10/2022 8:20:00 AM
Blog- To write, to not lose my sole remaining small joy amidst this darkest sea, this horrendous cavern of epic pain, mournful loss and deepest of darkest sorrows … RJL
Date Posted: 3/7/2022 7:04:00 AM
Death comes to my beloved wife.
Date Posted: 2/27/2022 9:49:00 PM
Why I am away from this poetry site, Loss of my beloved Brother... God bless one and all
Date Posted: 2/19/2022 4:27:00 AM

My Recent Poems

Date PostedPoemTitleFormCategories
10/8/2023 As I Rose From Purple Slumberland, My Heart Red Aflame Narrativeart,creation,dark,evil,ha
10/7/2023 The Time of Righteous Justice Was Then At Hand, Part One Sonnetart,creation,dark,deep,ev
9/25/2023 Hope Dawn's Welcoming Breath Honors Your Sought After Desires Rhymeart,assonance,blessing,cr
9/24/2023 O Little Earth, You Present Fruits of Primal Seed Sonnetcreation,deep,earth,earth
9/24/2023 To a Warrior's Creed, Valiant Death, Fate Oft Decrees Sonnetbirth,career,character,co
9/23/2023 United In the Depths of Love's Ravenously Sweet Ardor Verseart,devotion,love,meaning
9/23/2023 As Heaven Our Witness, Gave Its True Smile Sonnetart,beautiful,blessing,de
9/23/2023 She That With a Sweet-Laid Kiss Captured My Heart Sonnetart,beautiful,creation,gi
9/22/2023 Vampire, of Its Hellish Temper All But the Devil Was Afraid Rhymebetrayal,dark,death,evil,
9/21/2023 The Blackness and the Hard Labor of the Housemaid Verseart,creation,deep,girlfri
9/21/2023 Wake Our Dawns As True Beautiful Flightless Angels Verseangel,art,beautiful,heart
9/20/2023 The Story of the Cruel and Dark Queen That Feeds On Souls Verseart,conflict,dark,deep,ev
9/19/2023 Blowing Blissfully In Immense Wheat Fields of Fertile Minds Sonnetart,creation,dark,deep,im
9/19/2023 Humanity Exists As Sad Creatures With Evil Skins Sonnetart,dark,deep,evil,heart,
9/18/2023 Leave My Feet In Poetry Now Firmly Planted Rhymedeep,motivation,poems,poe
9/17/2023 Was She Crazy Or Had This World Gone Mad Rhymeart,dark,deep,dream,fanta
9/17/2023 To Those This Brave, True Warrior Is Sworn To One Day Defeat Rhymeart,conflict,dark,deep,fa
9/16/2023 Epic Sadness When a Beautiful Dream Crashes Free versecreation,deep,dream,fanta
9/16/2023 The Truth of Love and Its Awesome Powers Free verseart,beauty,heart,life,lov
9/15/2023 My Tired and Lost Soul Next This Wise Advice Out It Screams Rhymebetrayal,depression,heart
9/15/2023 To Ask My Mentor, Will I, Sir Will I, Ever a Great Poet Be Versecreation,dream,poetry,poe
9/14/2023 Yet I Only Desire Loves Immeasurable Truth Sonnetart,creation,deep,heart,l
9/14/2023 She the Ravenous Queen, That Can Have All My Tomorrows Free verseart,beautiful,desire,hear
9/12/2023 As Deep Darkness Its Rabid Cloak Around Me Spread Rhymeart,creation,dark,deep,ev
9/12/2023 O' What Is War But the Mad Child of Greed and Hate Rhymeabuse,conflict,death,deep
9/11/2023 And Throughout Vast Purple Range, Visions Cascade Down Sonnetart,creation,deep,lonelin
9/11/2023 Pondering the Sad and Fateful Decision Free verseart,death,deep,youth,
9/10/2023 With His Six Shooter In Hand He Emptied Its Load Rhymedestiny,encouraging,first
9/9/2023 Why Sweetheart Why Do I So Love, Then Life So Carves Me Up Rhymeart,break up,creation,lif
9/9/2023 True Tragedy Whenever a Great Romance Dies Rhymeart,beautiful,lost love,p
9/9/2023 Into Deep Raging Darkness a Poor Soul Was Once Cast , Dedicated To Master Poe Rhymedark,deep,evil,fantasy,ra
9/8/2023 Dark Poetry- the Fiercest Black Beast That a Knight Once Slew Rhymecourage,creation,dark,dea
9/8/2023 As God of Love Brilliantly Blessed Light Cast Its Glow Upon Me Verseart,creation,desire,first
9/7/2023 As I Watched the Fiery Red Sun Slip Behind the Mountain Sonnetbeautiful,fire,heart,love
9/6/2023 As I Vent On You This Hot-Born Sexual Fire Sonnetdesire,heart,passion,roma
9/6/2023 You Crushed the Bright Yellow Moon Rhymeart,creation,deep,life,lo
9/5/2023 It Happened On a Rainy Night Verseart,beauty,heart,love,moo
9/5/2023 Alive With Hope This Mortal Flesh Rhymeart,deep,emotions,heart,l
9/4/2023 I Fear This May Be Curse, That Dead Vikings Sing Sonnetart,betrayal,dark,death,d
9/3/2023 And With Tantalizing Depths Found We Paint Beauty Divine Sonnetart,beauty,deep,heart,hop
9/2/2023 How We Compose Poems As True, Dedicated Poets Sonnetcreation,fantasy,heart,po
9/1/2023 Son, Our Love Is Infinity Deep and Eternally True Sonnetbeautiful,blessing,faith,
8/31/2023 The Truth of Dearest Love Sworn, I Ask God How Sonnetart,life,love,magic,passi
8/31/2023 Byron, Your Poetry Sings To Our Wanting Hearts Sonnetart,creation,death,dream,
8/30/2023 Three Tribute Poems, Composed By Me, For Longfellow Blog Rhymeart,creation,dedication,d
8/30/2023 Wicked Queen, Her Darkness Hidden Behind Her Veil Sonnetart,beautiful,dark,death,
8/29/2023 Its Gleaming Light-Beams Washing My Old Soul Sonnetart,imagery,mountains,nat
8/28/2023 Honey-Child That Sweet-Spun Gift, You Don'T Want To Miss Sonnetappreciation,art,romantic
8/27/2023 As Saturated Earth Bids Me Adieu Rhymecourage,creation,dark,dea
8/26/2023 A Dark Curse She Still Comes To Torture Me Rhymeart,creation,dark,deep,in
8/25/2023 Her Name Was Jasmine and Her Beauty So Divine Sonnetbeautiful,crush,love,pass
8/25/2023 War, Evil Beast, Just What the Hell Is It Good For Sonnetconflict,courage,death,ev
8/25/2023 When Your Young Life Catches You Flat Footed Narrativedestiny,dream,girlfriend,
8/24/2023 Today Is Going To Be a Very Busy Day Rhymeart,creation,deep,grandmo
8/23/2023 What My Day Was Like and Why My Feet Are Sore Rhyme Royalart,deep,fantasy,meaningf
8/23/2023 Her Luscious Lips a Tantalizing Treat Sonnetappreciation,beautiful,cr
8/22/2023 Springtime and Farm Waiting For Its Harvest Haikucar,farm,garden,growing u
8/22/2023 Cascading Embers of Heart Driven Fire Sonnetcreation,deep,evil,life,s
8/22/2023 Why Does Great Gods Above, a Trellis Fling Rhymebreak up,lost love,nature
8/20/2023 If I'D Seen the Hungry Dino, I'D Not Be Dead Sonnetcreation,deep,fantasy,lif
8/20/2023 For You My Love Through Hell I'D Gladly March Sonnetcrush,emotions,feelings,p
8/19/2023 When Searching Depths of Mind Questions Its Own Sanity Sonnetcreation,dark,deep,desire
8/19/2023 It Saw Me Through Such Dastardly Purblind Eyes Sonnetdark,death,dream,evil,fan
8/18/2023 Yes, I Remember Her Venomous Sting Sonnetart,change,imagination,in
8/17/2023 Death of the Old Cowboy On the Lonesome Range Sonnetdeath,deep,feelings,imagi
8/17/2023 A Dream, a Glorious Trip To Heaven Sonnetart,devotion,dream,faith,
8/16/2023 What Are We To Do In This Earthly Life Sonnetdeep,earth,humanity,meani
8/16/2023 Hold This Deeper Thought, Love Is What We All So Badly Need Sonnetart,humanity,imagination,
8/15/2023 Dawn's Calyx Woke Her and She Saw Pink Explosions Sonnetgirlfriend,happiness,joy,
8/13/2023 To Live, To Dream, Being With the Goddess Yet Again Sonnetaddiction,appreciation,be
8/12/2023 Midnight Hauntings of Old Man Turner's House Sonnetdark,grave,horror,howl,im
8/10/2023 And I, the Poor Lost Soul That She Did Gladly Save Sonnetappreciation,art,creation
8/10/2023 On Dark Dying Sunless Beams I Went To Wait Sonnetart,conflict,cry,evil,far
8/9/2023 When Ocean Dries Up Will Be a Bad Plight Rhymeart,ocean,philosophy,spok
8/9/2023 Dare We Beat Evil With Truth and a Heavy Sledge Sonnetdeep,devotion,god,heaven,
8/8/2023 You Wake Up To Find Out Black and White Are the Same Sonnetart,deep,dream,humanity,i
8/8/2023 Now Laying In Boot Hill Under Frozen Ground Narrativeart,conflict,death,imagin
8/7/2023 Yes, While Evil Spreads Its Long Greedy Hands Sonnetart,dark,evil,how i feel,
8/7/2023 Blinded By Life and Praying To Truly See Free verseart,surreal,vanity,vision
8/7/2023 Hold Firm Your Immovable Sacred Heart Sonnetart,creation,deep,lost lo
8/6/2023 The Untruth of a Lone and Erroneous Prophecy Sonnetart,fate,girlfriend,life,
8/6/2023 Than the Grand Illusions of Those Paradise Shores Sonnetart,courage,hope,identity
8/5/2023 There In Morning Sun, Hope Circled Enticing Dreams Sonnetart,dark,fantasy,imaginat
8/5/2023 The Old Farmer Rests Warm In His Snug House Sonnetdeep,environment,home,nat
8/4/2023 The Amazing Tale the Old Stone Sphinx Never Told Rhymeart,confusion,humanity,im
8/3/2023 And Then Remember Faith and Truth Brought About This Sonnetangel,forgiveness,god,hea
8/3/2023 In Our Feasts, We Both Drank Lover's Wine Rhymebetrayal,dark,deep,imagin
8/2/2023 With Gypsie Luck, My Own Weaken Steps Retrace Sonnetart,creation,deep,feeling
8/1/2023 Evolution Is Man-Made, Lying Fairy Tale Sonnetart,earth,faith,god,human
7/31/2023 Co-Exist, Neither of Us Fear the Knife Sonnetcare,courage,friendship,h
7/29/2023 The Saddest Truth of Love and Its Deep Darker Side Sonnetdark,love,love hurts,mean
7/28/2023 As a Poet, the Importance of Truth Sonnetcharacter,courage,deep,id
7/27/2023 Of Homer, Iliad and the Fall of the Mighty Greeks Rhymecourage,history,mythology
7/27/2023 Life, and Trekking Across Wild Wilderness Rhymeart,beauty,bird,deep,eart
7/24/2023 Life Now Cries Out, This Truth, There Is No Holy Grail Rhymecreation,death,deep,histo
7/24/2023 Comment On Decency and Morality Quatrainart,best friend,car,death
7/24/2023 There Beyond the Purple Veil, I Hear Her Calling Rhymecreation,imagination,life
7/23/2023 A Cowboy and His Thoughts On Dodge City Versecharacter,conflict,histor
7/23/2023 Concepts From the Thoughts of the Old Beggar Imagismart,assonance,character,d
7/22/2023 I Walk Midnight Arena All Alone Sonnetart,life,perspective,phil

My Photos


photo

ps_wedding 018.jpg

Fav Poems

PoemTitleFormCategories
Mountain Drop Rhymedeath,depression,
Beauty Exposed Rhymelife,
Beautiful Day Free verseseasons,
To a Despondent Friend Quatraindepression,
What the Angels Whisper Free versegod,hope,youth,
His Song and Mine I do not know?bird,life,poems,prison,,L
A Letter To Emily Dickinson Rhymepoetess,
White Lace Sonnetlife,seasons
Black Diamond Night Epicbody,death,history,lonely
If Walls Could Speak Narrativefeelings,for him,joy,toge
In An Old Cathedral Rhymeloneliness,love,
Echoes In the Stone Epicadventure,death,hero,hist
Spring On the Wind Rhymechange,nature,spring,
The Tree of Life Rhymeage,child,death,mystery,t
Crying River Balladbeautiful,cry,deep,freedo
Our Little Haven Rhymecousin,fairy,fantasy,gree
Sweet Memories Rhymelost love,
Colours In Our Lives Rhymebeauty,color,
Stairway To the Stars Free versefarewell,kiss,
Her Hidden Gem Rhymemother,voice,
Daddy Free verseblue,dad,depression,fathe
Oak Rhymetree,
Eyes of Blue Rhymefreedom,hero,memorial day
Bobcat Moon Rhymeautumn,friendship,loss,mo
Indian Ink Dramatic Verseabuse,autumn,death,deep,f
Midnight Poet Free verseaddiction,character,devot
Contest Consternation Free versecommunity,poetry,words,
A New Bird Rhymebirth,
My Day Is Coming Rhymefriendship,journey,life,
The Clock It Mocks Free versebreak up,heartbroken,jeal
Amidst the Fallen Petals Free verselonging,love,
A New Love Found Free verseinspirational,
When Love Found Me Rhymeblessing,love,
Sometimes Rhymeblessing,thanks,
Write You Out Free versegoodbye,how i feel,
The Evil Eye Rhymeevil,
The Lords Sweet Morning Rhymemusic,nature,
Mist Song Rhymebeauty,music,nature,
Autumn's Gown Rhymecolor,inspiration,
Hey You Free verseanger,conflict,forgivenes
Letting Go Rhymeson,
Wild Love Narrativegarden,love,rose,sweet,
Kresge's Five and Dime Stores Rhymenostalgia,
O the Grieving Free versedeath,funeral,grief,
I Walk On Water Free verseintrospection,life,
My Fallen Brother Rhymeangst,brother,history,los
The Blackberry and the Rose Personificationimagination
Holding a Wilting Red Rose Versedeath,mother,mothers day,
Aquarius Coupletimagery,water,
Strong Point Sonnetlove,
Eccentric Eyes Sonnetpain,
I Hate You All Light Versedark,death,philosophy,sad
What Is Love Sonnetlove,
Sunset Tableau Versepain,
Mother's Garden Rhymeflower,garden,nature,
Heaven Or Hell Free versedark,heaven,light,love,
Releasing Me Sonnethappiness,peace,
So She Broke Your Heart Free verseanalogy,betrayal,hope,lov
Intolerable Rhymeabuse,betrayal,racism,
Starstruck In Your Deep Beauty Free versebeautiful,beauty,flower,l
The Sowing Free versedevotion,
Neverland Narrativechildhood,nostalgia,place
As We Walk Hand In Hand Rhymehappiness,how i feel,love
Fragment Trioletlight
Angel Tears Light Verseangel,
Wild Pure and Free Love Free versebeautiful,love,romance,
Put Your Head On My Shoulder Light Versedance,romantic,
The Perfect Painting Rhymeart,beauty,
Eccentricity In Love Sonnetlove,universe,
Rain Over Vietnam Quaternrain,war,
The Ripping Free verseabuse,addiction,anger,ang
I Am the Mighty Mountain Personificationearth,mountains,
Ancient Warrior Iambic Pentameterangst,culture,native amer
The Tomb of the Unknown Soldier Light Versesoldier,violence,war,
December Magic Quintain (English)nature,
Diamond In the Sky Sonnetstar,
Simply Time To Go, a Little Brother's Lamentation Rhymebrother,conflict,confusio
Long Distance Dreamer Light Versebeautiful,i miss you,long
Autumn's Dreams of a Country Road Rhymenature,seasons,
Approaching Storm Rhymeweather,
In One Fell Swoop Free verselost love,
Invitation Rhymelost love,
When Shadows Fall Rhymelife,music,nature,seasons
New World Order Rhymedrug,society,
Whilst Walking Through the Woods Sonnetanimal,beauty,bird,nature
To Him Who Loves Me Sonnetlove,relationship,romanti
A Shade From the Past Sonnetart,nostalgia,people,
Tear Drops Free verseallegory,desire,devotion,
Yellow Shoes In the Darkness Quatrainme,metaphor,places,yellow
For Nineteen Years Lyricbereavement,
Why So Afraid Iambic Pentameterlove,
What Use Have I For Words Sonnetwords,
Sonnet For Statues Sonnetart,poems,poetry,
On Blood's Own Sand Free versedeath,desire,emotions,pas
But I Must Stay Villanellesad,
Through the Dust Pantoumchildhood,memory,
Star Gazer Free verseallegory,beauty,metaphor,
Sixty This Year Quintain (English)birthday,future,inspirati
Church Quatrainblessing,change,devotion,
When Bubbles Dissipate Tankabeautiful,beauty,i love y

Fav Poets

12345
PoetCountry 
Skat A United States Flag United States Read
Poet Destroyer A United States Flag United States Read
Audrey Haick United States Flag United States Read
Keith O.J. Hunt Canada Flag Canada Read
Anne-Lise Andresen Norway Flag Norway Read
Sara Kendrick United States Flag United States Read
Jan Allison Isle Of Man Flag Isle Of Man Read
Jake Ponce Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Carolyn Devonshire United States Flag United States Read
Vera Duggan Australia Flag Australia Read
Robert Nehls United States Flag United States Read
Joyce Johnson United States Flag United States Read
Eileen Manassian _Not Listed Flag _Not Listed Read
Lisa Duggan Australia Flag Australia Read
Barbara Gorelick United States Flag United States Read
Gary Bateman Germany Flag Germany Read
Liam Mcdaid Ireland Flag Ireland Read
Gry Christensen United States Flag United States Read
Arthur Vaso Canada Flag Canada Read
Debbie Guzzi United States Flag United States Read
Roy Jerden United States Flag United States Read
James Fraser United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Robert Lindley United States Flag United States Read
Richard Lamoureux Canada Flag Canada Read
Paul Callus Malta Flag Malta Read
Miss Sassy United States Flag United States Read
Cherl Dunn United States Flag United States Read
Kp Nunez Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Peter Lewis Holmes Viet Nam Flag Viet Nam Read
David O'Haolin Whalen United States Flag United States Read
Keith Bickerstaffe United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Lu Loo United States Flag United States Read
Connie Marcum Wong United States Flag United States Read
Lin Lane United States Flag United States Read
Vladislav Raven United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Gail Foster United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Pandita Sietesantos United States Flag United States Read
Danetta Barney United States Flag United States Read
Tom Quigley United States Flag United States Read
Jill Spagnola United States Flag United States Read
Andrea Dietrich United States Flag United States Read
Avis Bailey United States Flag United States Read
Kelly Deschler United States Flag United States Read
Len Gasun Thailand Flag Thailand Read
Feli Elizab United States Flag United States Read
Casarah Nance United States Flag United States Read
Edlynn Nau United States Flag United States Read
Leslie Philibert Germany Flag Germany Read
Miraj Raha India Flag India Read
Sarai Virden United States Flag United States Read
C T United States Flag United States Read
Jt Nyx United States Flag United States Read
Charmaine Chircop Malta Flag Malta Read
Timothy Hicks United States Flag United States Read
Sandra Haight United States Flag United States Read
Tim Smith United States Flag United States Read
Suzanne Delaney United States Flag United States Read
Joseph May United States Flag United States Read
Constance La France Canada Flag Canada Read
Daniel Turner United States Flag United States Read
Manmath Dalei India Flag India Read
Kabuteng P.Ink K. Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Robert L. Hinshaw United States Flag United States Read
Nette Onclaud Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Harry Horsman Australia Flag Australia Read
Red Fiery Singapore Flag Singapore Read
Brian Davey United States Flag United States Read
Walter T. Ashe United States Flag United States Read
Carrie Richards United States Flag United States Read
Anisha Dutta India Flag India Read
Caycay Jennings United States Flag United States Read
Emile Pinet Canada Flag Canada Read
Teddy Kimathi Kenya Flag Kenya Read
Julia Ward France Flag France Read
Frederic Parker United States Flag United States Read
Olive Eloisa Guillermo - Fraser Philippines Flag Philippines Read
Laura Leiser United States Flag United States Read
John Hamilton Canada Flag Canada Read
Rhonda Johnson-Saunders United States Flag United States Read
Robert Stoner Jr United States Flag United States Read
Faye Gibson United States Flag United States Read
Michael Tor United States Flag United States Read
Carol Eastman United States Flag United States Read
Charlie Smith United States Flag United States Read
Maurice Yvonne Canada Flag Canada Read
Elaine George Canada Flag Canada Read
Bob Quigley United States Flag United States Read
Shadow Hamilton United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Charles Henderson United States Flag United States Read
Robert Pettit United States Flag United States Read
Francine Roberts Canada Flag Canada Read
Eve Roper United States Flag United States Read
Jack Horne United Kingdom Flag United Kingdom Read
Andrew Crisci United States Flag United States Read
Kash Poet India Flag India Read
Janice Canerdy United States Flag United States Read
Judy Konos United States Flag United States Read
Bl Devnath India Flag India Read
Susan Gentry United States Flag United States Read
Earl Schumacker United States Flag United States Read
12345

Book: Shattered Sighs