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Robert Lindley
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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)

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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 ~

New Blog, Why Dark Poetry Fascinated So Many Famous Poets..

Blog Posted by Robert Lindley: 9/7/2023 7:53:00 AM

New Blog, Why Dark Poetry Fascinated So Many Famous Poets..

 

 (1.)

Poe's Nightmare And Penitence

 

The statue in the hall, moved ever so slightly,

I saw this movement upon every midnight stroke-

Alone, eagerly waiting for this dark magic nightly

Shivers given, very addictive but sadly were no joke,

Anticipation burned awaiting that movement refined

For each night at midnight it moved just a bit more

And sat I, there to watch as I so greedily dined,

Upon the tender, ethereal flesh of my love, Lenore!

 

As the darkened years swiftly raced into the mists:

I prayed to the dark gods for mercy evermore,

And Lenore's name was always on my pleading lists

Come back, come back again to me- my sweet Lenore!

 

Last year, that eerie, moving statue began to smile

A wicked little grin, a grimace for to be sure

My mind confused, for this was not in her style

The movement and soft grace of my Lenore so pure;

Aha! Could this be the spirit of the Raven gone?

Returneth to plague and so vex my tired old Soul,

Or my mind deranged from its loneliness trying to atone

For a grieving hate-darkened heart as black as coal?

 

Now the statue has made it all the way to the door,

There was no creaking and groaning as it slowly walks

Nor any of the great beauty resplendent in my Lenore

Yet for years now, we've had our mystical, nightly talks!

 

Last night the door opened and away she magically flew

By all the dark gods, I cried for her to not fly away!

Please stay and in this dark dungeon reside, just we two,

Alas! Aghast at this penitence my ruined heart to pay;

Where once the sheer brightness of her love and name,

Would heal my wounds and thus join us in bright light of day

Raven! What hellish playing you've done in this wicked game

For now I grieve ever the more, for my Lenore to love and stay!

 

Robert J. Lindley, 11-27-2015

 

 

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The Beast, Hideous Monster That Lived To Kill

 

PART 1

 

It was a dark beast, hellish in fury and deep hate

I that came to know it, wondered its wicked fate

And mysterious way its unlucky victims it chose

Insanity of violence and leaving the red rose

Humanlike, the way it rearranged each torn dress

Always their hair combed neat, tho' each a bloody mess

Why did it scratch my door night of its deadly attacks

From behind my barn leave its hideous bloody tracks!

 

O'how I worried that somehow me they would accuse

True,  I had a temper and record of a short fuse

Yet they knew me and as a truly kind hearted-man

And a courageous soul, the kind that never ran

Did not those savage attacks happen ten miles away

Always at moonlit night, never at light of day

Had seen it, had trailed it to its forest lair

But no further, even found chunks of its black hair!

 

Then it came to me, an idea why it killed

What a clever thought, in my heart it so thrilled

Could it be acts of dark vengeance it was doing

Well thought plan it was diligently pursuing

For six months the beast killed at least once a week

Fierce, so deadly, nothing about it mild and meek

Always a victim that was innocent and weak

And I just behind it, waiting to take a peek!

 

With newfound knowledge a clever plan came to me

To take action,  no longer hide behind a tree

First step, find a deadly weapon, one sure to kill

A long blade too cut it, O' what a wondrous thrill

With a new plan and a fine weapon in my hand

Tonight I would dare it, take a brave hero's stand

Strike the massive beast down before it did the deed

And stand there in wanton delight, watching it bleed!

 

Then it stopped no more scratching on my front door

I felt lost, into aching heart a hole it tore

Why, why had it so suddenly abandoned me

Could it somehow into my sad, lonely heart see

A whisper, passing phantom or was it a dream

Had we not both become a great night-stalking team

Then in the mirror hairy image did I see

Only this,  savage beast staring right back at me!

 

Robert J. Lindley, 6-11-2021

Dark poetry-

As A Tribute to Edgar Allan Poe

 

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

(1.)

 

https://interestingliterature.com/2018/02/10-of-the-best-poems-about-darkness/

 

 

LITERATURE

10 of the Best Poems about Darkness

The greatest dark poems selected by Dr Oliver Tearle

 

Poetry isn’t all sweetness and light, of course. In fact, much of it is concerned with the darker aspects of the natural world, whether it’s the mystery or solemnity of night-time darkness or some other, more abstract or metaphorical kind of darkness (‘O dark dark dark’, as T. S. Eliot put it in Four Quartets). Here, we offer ten of the best poems about darkness of various kinds.

 

 

1. Charlotte Smith, ‘Written near a Port on a Dark Evening’.

 

All is black shadow but the lucid line

Marked by the light surf on the level sand,

Or where afar the ship-lights faintly shine

Like wandering fairy fires, that oft on land

Misled the pilgrim …

 

This sonnet was written by one of the great proto-Romantic poets of the second half of the eighteenth century. Smith’s sonnets anticipate Romanticism partly because nature in her poetry is so often feared with an awesome power that verges on the terrifying: ‘life’s long darkling way’ is brooding and full of menace here.

 

2. Lord Byron, ‘Darkness’.

 

 

I had a dream, which was not all a dream.

The bright sun was extinguish’d, and the stars

Did wander darkling in the eternal space,

Rayless, and pathless, and the icy earth

Swung blind and blackening in the moonless air;

Morn came and went—and came, and brought no day …

 

This poem was inspired by a curious incident: the eruption of Mount Tambora in Indonesia, which drastically altered the weather conditions across the world and led to 1816 being branded ‘the Year without a Summer’. The same event also led to Byron’s trip to Lake Geneva and his ghost-story writing competition, which produced Mary Shelley’s masterpiece Frankenstein.

 

For Byron, the extermination of the sun seemed like a dream, yet it was ‘no dream’ but a strange and almost sublimely terrifying reality.

 

 

3. Robert Browning, ‘Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came’.

 

If at his counsel I should turn aside

Into that ominous tract which, all agree,

Hides the Dark Tower. Yet acquiescingly

I did turn as he pointed: neither pride

Nor hope rekindling at the end descried,

So much as gladness that some end might be …

 

A grotesque quasi-medieval dramatic monologue detailing the quest of the titular Roland, this poem was produced in an attempt to overcome writer’s block: in 1852 Browning had set himself the New Year’s Resolution to write a new poem every day, and this vivid dreamscape is what arose from his fevered imagination.

 

 

Browning borrowed the title from a line in Shakespeare’s King Lear; the character of Roland as he appears in Browning’s poem has in turn inspired Stephen King to write his Dark Tower series, while J. K. Rowling borrowed the word ‘slughorn’ from the poem when creating the name of her character Horace Slughorn.

 

4. Emily Dickinson, ‘We grow accustomed to the Dark’.

 

We grow accustomed to the Dark –

When Light is put away –

As when the Neighbor holds the Lamp

To witness her Good bye –

 

 

A Moment – We Uncertain step

For newness of the night –

Then – fit our Vision to the Dark –

And meet the Road – erect …

 

The first line of this poem also provides the poem with its main theme: the way our eyes adjust to the darkness, just as our minds adapt to the bleakness of life and contemplation of the ‘night’ that is death.

 

5. Thomas Hardy, ‘The Darkling Thrush’.

 

At once a voice arose among

The bleak twigs overhead,

In a full-hearted evensong

Of joy illimited.

An aged thrush, frail, gaunt and small,

With blast-beruffled plume,

Had chosen thus to fling his soul

Upon the growing gloom …

 

 

This classic Hardy poem captures the mood of a winter evening as the sun, ‘the weakening eye of day’, sets below the horizon and gives way to dusk on New Year’s Eve. Hardy hears a thrush singing, and wonders whether the thrush is aware of some reason to be hopeful for the coming new year, some reason of which Hardy himself is unaware.

 

In ‘The Darkling Thrush’ itself we are given clues that religion is on the speaker’s mind. In the third stanza, when the thrush of the title appears (‘darkling’ is an old poetic word for ‘in darkness’ – it also, incidentally, echoes Matthew Arnold‘s use of the word in his famous poem about declining faith, ‘Dover Beach’, published in 1867), its song is described as ‘evensong’, suggesting the church service, while the use of the word ‘soul’ also suggests the spiritual. (Such a religiously inflected analysis of Hardy’s poem is reinforced by ‘carolings’ in the next stanza.)

 

6. Gerard Manley Hopkins, ‘I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day’.

 

 

I wake and feel the fell of dark, not day.

What hours, O what black hours we have spent

This night! what sights you, heart, saw; ways you went!

And more must, in yet longer light’s delay …

 

One of Hopkins’s ‘Terrible Sonnets’, this poem is one of the finest evocations of a sleepless night that English poetry has produced. When we wake to find that it’s not yet morning but we are still surrounded by darkness, and undergo some sort of ‘dark night of the soul’, we often feel as Hopkins describes here. For him it is a spiritual battle as well as a mere case of insomnia.

 

As so often with Hopkins, the spiritual and psychological are experienced as a vivid visceral force that is physical as well as metaphysical: his depression and doubt weigh upon him like heartburn or indigestion (‘heartburn’ picking up on the poet’s more abstract address to his ‘heart’ in the third line of the poem, but also leading into the ‘blood’ mentioned a couple of lines later).

 

 

7. Carl Sandburg, ‘Moonset’.

 

This short poem is almost actively ‘unpoetical’ in its imagery, and offers a fresh look at the moon. The poem’s final image of ‘dark listening to dark’ is especially eye-catching.

 

8. Edward Thomas, ‘The Dark Forest’.

 

Dark is the forest and deep, and overhead

Hang stars like seeds of light

In vain, though not since they were sown was bred

Anything more bright …

 

This poem from the wonderful nature poet Edward Thomas (1878-1917) begins by describing a forest at night, above whose trees the stars shine like ‘seeds of light’.

 

 

9. Joseph Campbell, ‘Darkness’.

 

One of the first ‘modern’ poems written in English, this short lyric by the Irish-born poet Joseph Campbell (1879-1944) shares affinities with the poems of T. E. Hulme, and seems in some respects to prefigure the ‘bog’ poems of Seamus Heaney. You can read Campbell’s ‘Darkness’ by clicking on the link below, which will also take you to three other short poems by Campbell.

 

10. Philip Larkin, ‘Going’.

 

Philip Larkin never learned, in Sigmund Freud’s memorable phrase about King Lear, to make friends with the necessity of dying. ‘Going’ is an early example of Larkin’s mature engagement with the terrifying realisation that death will come for us all.

 

In ten unrhymed lines, ‘Going’ explores death without ever mentioning it by name, instead referring to it, slightly elliptically, as ‘an evening’ that is ‘coming in’. Larkin uses the metaphor of the coming evening – an evening which ‘lights no lamps’ because there is no hope of staving off this darkness, the darkness of death.

 

 

Continue to explore classic poetry with these short poems about death and dying, our pick of the best poems about eyes, and these classic poems about secrets. We also recommend The Oxford Book of English Verse – perhaps the best poetry anthology on the market (we offer our pick of the best poetry anthologies here).

 

The author of this article, Dr Oliver Tearle, is a literary critic and lecturer in English at Loughborough University. He is the author of, among others, The Secret Library: A Book-Lovers’ Journey Through Curiosities of History and The Great War, The Waste Land and the Modernist Long Poem.

 

 

**********

 

(2.)

 

http://famouspoetsandpoems.com/thematic_poems/dark_poems.html

 

Dark Poems and Poetry

 

A Collection of Dark Poems and Poetry from the most Famous Poets and Authors.

 

 25 POEMS-

 

Under Her Dark Veil by Anna Akhmatova

Senlin: His Dark Origins by Conrad Aiken

The House Of Dust: Part 01: 06: Over the darkened city, the city of towers by Conrad Aiken

The House Of Dust: Part 02: 01: The round red sun heaves darkly out of the sea by Conrad Aiken

The Door in the Dark by Robert Frost

An Electric Sign Goes Dark by Carl Sandburg

My Country in Darkness by Eavan Boland

Behold, As Goblins Dark Of Mien by Robert Louis Stevenson

From the Dark Tower by Countee Cullen

In the Dark Pine-Wood by James Joyce

The Dark Hour by William Henry Davies

Dark Night by Frank Bidart

The Dark Forest by Edward Thomas

When the Dark Comes Down by Lucy Maud Montgomery

The Night is Darkening Around Me by Emily Bronte

Night is Darkening Around Me, The by Emily Bronte

Written near a Port on a Dark Evening by Charlotte Smith

Childe Roland To The Dark Tower Came by Robert Browning

Through the Dark Sod -- as Education by Emily Dickinson

Not quite dark yet by Yosa Buson

Darkness by Lord Byron

My Soul is Dark by Lord Byron

My wheel is in the dark! by Emily Dickinson

We grow accustomed to the Dark by Emily Dickinson

I see thee better -- in the Dark -- by Emily Dickinson

 

 

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

 

https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/45176/huge-vapours-brood-above-the-clifted-shore

 

Huge Vapours Brood above the Clifted Shore

                                                                       --  BY CHARLOTTE SMITH

Huge vapours brood above the clifted shore,

Night o'er the ocean settles, dark and mute,

Save where is heard the repercussive roar

Of drowsy billows, on the rugged foot

Of rocks remote; or still more distant tone

Of seamen, in the anchored bark, that tell

The watch relieved; or one deep voice alone,

Singing the hour, and bidding "strike the bell."

All is black shadow, but the lucid line

Marked by the light surf on the level sand,

Or where afar, the ship-lights faintly shine

Like wandering fairy fires, that oft on land

Mislead the pilgrim; such the dubious ray

That wavering reason lends, in life's long darkling way.

 
 
 
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 



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Date: 9/7/2023 6:10:00 PM
Today I read just Poe's "Nightmare And Penitence" and Thomas Hardy's "Darkling Thrush", but planning to slowly read the others in your blog. Thank you for posting these great poems.
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Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 9/7/2023 6:24:00 PM
Thank you, my friend. Yes, my friend that is a very good list to read. I hope you enjoy those great poems. GOD BLESS.
Date: 9/7/2023 8:20:00 AM
Im coming back to read this, again and again, so insightful and i personally love dark poetry. This made me smile and my heart full! Its so good to read this especially Poe there mentioned, is a fave for me, as I love Poe, i read his work sometimes to sleep. Thank you for sharing and If i can fave this i would
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Empress Avatar
Ink Empress
Date: 9/7/2023 8:58:00 AM
I will be reading this to sleep. So much to learn
Empress Avatar
Ink Empress
Date: 9/7/2023 8:47:00 AM
There are so many dark poets on instagram and they love Poe too, ah thank you, i do write romance too and i like emotions in a poem, evocative poems are my fave but it excites me to read about Poe anywhere. I cant wait to read when you post them. Look forward to see them on your feed
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 9/7/2023 8:38:00 AM
Yes, my good friend, there is much to be absorbed in this blog, not just about Poe but about this fabulous Art that we engage in. A lot of other information here too. God bless you..
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 9/7/2023 8:32:00 AM
And yes, I may soon post those Poe poems on my home page with my others. I just slammed them out for the blog back then. I may proof read and edit to post soon. God bless you.
Lindley Avatar
Robert Lindley
Date: 9/7/2023 8:30:00 AM
Thank you, my friend. Poe lovers are indeed a very special and separate sect within the poetry community. We tend to love dark poetry same as we do the rest of poetry, some us may even favor dark poems, dare I admit that! Truth is very famous poets wrote dark poems. May God bless you my good friend.

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