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Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Sep 27, 2014 - 10:13am PT

Agnes Obel - Chord Left
[Click to View YouTube Video]
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 4, 2014 - 11:33pm PT
Super Topo
Filling station for the imagination
Waste not your youth
For surely it, youth, was wasted on me,
That I regret not shuffling farther than I did
Seeing at least twice as much would still not be enough
Said to have only an hour to see Yosemite,
The rangers tell it over and over
Just sit down right here, and cry.
--Gnome Ofthe Diabase
Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Oct 5, 2014 - 01:38am PT

Bach - W. Kempff (1955) - Siciliano from Flute Sonata No 2 in E flat major, BWV1031
[Click to View YouTube Video]
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 5, 2014 - 01:53am PT
So you're saying in your way that Siciliano from Flute Sonata No 2 in E flat major, BWV1031, has poetry.

It has that vibe, certainly.

[Click to View YouTube Video]
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 9, 2014 - 11:23am PT
This poem is too good not to be saved here!

10-09-14, following Coz' rigging accident.


"for YOU scott"
by neebeeshaabookway

some days may seem, they never end...
they drag on, just a tedious blend...

perhaps a blend of discomfort-and-pain...
BUT--cherish this thought, it all LEADS to a gain...

you are the captain--no matter, if hospital-staff, be the crew...
you can TAKE charge of your 'innerman', in your tasks, that you do...

sail your self, as if a ship...
ride-out every: lift, roll, or dip...

as the storm subsides...
you will catch glimpses of warm, gentle tides...

bask in those, and catch more wind, to mend...
and hold tight, to each hope and hand, from each friend...

and know that the north star, never falters to 'lead'...
an example of god above, to use, as we need...

sail and master the troubled-waters, charted, that you face...
and later, no matter how later, smile, and thank god, for such grace...

you can't keep supertopo-climbers at bay...
they are sailing, 'round about' FOR YOU, even if/or at play...

you are in our thoughts and hearts, you see...
and if you need anything, well--here they all be!...
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 9, 2014 - 11:41am PT
nICE THOUGHt

take a bearing on the Barents Sea straight from the Bering Strait
straightaway from there to your household,
for the bare, warm breast that I there see
calls stronger than any sea I've seen.
--thebravecowboy
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 10, 2014 - 04:29pm PT
A Waltz with Walk Whitman


I used to go to Pfaff’s nearly every night. . . after taking a bath and finishing the work of the day. When it began to grow dark, Pfaff would politely invite everybody who happened to be sitting in the cave he had under the sidewalk to some other part of the restaurant. There was a long table extending the length of this cave; and as soon as the Bohemians put in an appearance, Henry Clapp would take a seat at the head of the table. I think there was as good talk around that table as took place anywhere in the world. Clapp was a very witty man.
—from an interview with Walt Whitman, July II, 1866, The Brooklyn Eagle.

The butcher-boy puts off his killing clothes, or
sharpens his knife at the stall in the market,
I loiter enjoying his repartee and his shuffle and
his breakdown.

Walter crosses the Fulton Ferry as usual, views the waves and the sky as placidly, contemplates the forests of tall masts, the laboring tug-boats, the big ships bound in or out, and the details of that great picture, our busy bay, with the same studious and undazzled vision. Walter exchanges his accustomed joke with the deck hands, and winks to the pilot just the same as ever, and over at Pfaff’s, where the convivial coteries of Bohemia are wont to congregate, no happier soul shines forth its radiance o’er the festive scene than Walter’s.

And speaking of books, here comes Walt Whitman, author of ‘Leaves of Grass,' . . . His shirt collar is turned off from his muscular throat, and his shoulders are thrown back as if even in that fine, ample chest of his, his lungs had not sufficient play-room.

Tall, large, rough-looking man, in a journeyman carpenter’s uniform. Coarse, sanguine, complexion; strong, bristly, grizzled beard; singular eyes, of a semi-transparent, indistinct light blue, and with that sleepy look that comes when the lid rests half way down over the pupil; careless, lounging gait. Walt Whitman, the sturdy, self-conscious microcosm, prose-poetical author of that incongruous hash of mud and gold, ‘Leaves of Grass.'

Washes and razors for foofoos. . . . for me freckles
and a bristling beard.

They who piddle and patter here in collars and
tailed coats. . . .
I am aware who they are. . . and that they are
not worms or fleas,
I acknowledge the duplicates of myself under all
the scrape-lipped and pipe-legged concealments.

For none other than Walt is it who, in response, turns up with springing and elastic motion, and lights on the off side top of the stage with his hips held against the rod as quietly as a hawk swoops to its nest. . . As onward speeds the stage, mark his nonchalant air, seated aslant, and quite at home. —Our million-hued and ever changing panorama of Broadway moves steadily down; he, going up sees it all, as a kind of half dream. —Mark the salute of four out of five of the drivers, downward salutes which he silently returns in the same manner—the raised arm, and the upright hand.—


The old Whitman said: “I suppose the critics will laugh heartily, but the influence of those Broadway omnibus jaunts and drivers and declamations and escapades undoubtedly entered into the gestation of ‘Leaves of Grass.'"

Whitman would have dropped off the Fifth Avenue near Bond Street and then strolled over to Broadway, heading for Pfaff’s. Past Bond Street on Broadway he would go by a line of newly-built hotels, theaters, and institutions as the new entertainment district had moved to “upper Broadway," going up as far as Fourteenth Street. At No. 677 Broadway on the west side stood the Metropolitan Hall, rebuilt and renamed after fire had destroyed it along with a companion building in 1854. (The companion building was renamed the New York Theater and Metropolitan Opera House.) At No. 659 was the Egyptian Museum, housing a private collection owned by a scholarly Englishman, Dr. Abbott, with whom Whitman spent many hours and who inspired the poet to read books on Egyptology and other ancient civilizations and religions.
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 19, 2014 - 11:37am PT
I deleted a thread to place what was (apparently) unread
In this graveyard of thoughts that came here to die.

dude

u no who

i will say no more say no more

like monty python crawlin' under ur door

if u will just listen to my story 'bout a man named u

i am flexible about ur choice of pronouns

but what's this reality gig?

are u not secure in ur fantasy?

are life's persistent questions beginning to need answers?

this is not an intervention, by the way

it is an invention

it has a real title and everything



Das Kapital of Misery


Hey there, say, masochist for the ages

I'm talking to your ass

So turn around and grab your ankles

You've been naughty

A neo-khan came to ride horde on the Walking Taco today.

He never said his name. Nor do I remember it.

We’ll call him Jingus Con.

He was dressed up in some weird orange Mexican jumping suit

Said he’d been to Bumfuk

Wanted to die there but they kicked his ass out

disregard those civil moments.
the ones that are assigned hyper-meaning;
the ones shoved into my mind by
the bored universe.

He needed a break

So I cut him some slack

I gave him some bark tea

I made him promise to grow into a bright young man

With more promise in him than the arch-fiend liar

Who got to him in the first place

A paradise of words with no worn-out phrases

And lots of silent listeners

To his troubles in El Foresta del Paradiso

Which is just a jumping-off place for the big-tme

At the end of the line

Exclamation Point Beyond

And what do you think he did

he snubbed the protection
and entered the bath naked....

Use your imagination on this one

It’s really not hard to do

Just lay down your guitar and pick up that double-bit ax

And start chopping

Don’t worry where the chopped bits land

We are all just sawdust on the floor of the wood-shop

Cow turds in the mountain of manure at the dairy

Tat on the anchors of our routes through the Province of Real

Soiled pillow cases in the laundry hamper of this smelly old world

Less than perfect but with more potential than Tesla ever had

More than Edison ever dreamed of



We are incandescent bulbs of beautiful flowers

It’s just some are dimmer than others

It’s not time to turn out the lights

This party is far from over, neithernorwegian

There are many more logs floating down into your pond

Don’t let them roll over on you

The tide will come in on little mouse feet

And drown you in front of your brothers

And you will be forced to become a new man

Don’t forget to turn over in your grave

And I won’t forget to put flowers at your door

And try to keep the tip of your tool out of the mud

Nawmean?

Marlow

Sport climber
OSLO
Oct 19, 2014 - 12:00pm PT

And when it's time to rest...

Elisabeth Schwarzkopf: Vier Letzte Lieder- Beim Schalfengehen (Strauss) - "Going to Sleep"
[Click to View YouTube Video]
Fossil climber

Trad climber
Atlin, B. C.
Oct 19, 2014 - 04:23pm PT
A friend, having delved into the Oxford English Dictionary web site, challenged me to create some doggerel using the only five words in the English language ending in uum.

Well, I failed. The first result was not in good taste. If she will accept 4 out of 5, padded with a couple of Latin words and a few which end in ium, here’s a shot at it, which almost strangled my spell-checker.

Opprobrium
or
The Deluge)

Earth once was an Elysium
Within the space continuum
Which stretches in perpetuum.
It’s now a fouled residuum
Which orbits in the vacuum.

Said Yahweh, during triduum,
“That place is Pandemonium,
I’ll cure that rank contagium!
I’ll quench that foul effluvium -
I’ll send down a diluvium!

“An inundating menstruum
Dissolves that human odium
And brings back equilibrium -
And for the next millennium
I’ll have an oceanarium!”


(And sea level is rising. Hmmmm.)




mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 19, 2014 - 04:33pm PT
Encomium


Cutting edge

Avant garde

On the ledge

Wasn't hard



Wayne Merry

Sees you through

If it's hairy

Or five-two



Fossil owns

The big prize

His big stones

Are giant-size






Fossil climber

Trad climber
Atlin, B. C.
Oct 19, 2014 - 08:32pm PT
I remember with moans
That I once had great stones -
Those huge painful lumps
Were a symptom of mumps.
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 20, 2014 - 01:42pm PT
Is Gnome “Staring Into the Abyss?”

So quietly he squats, kneels, assumes the pose.
The lemon tree, kumquats, grapes, surround his soul.
Then he suddenly smiles, sniffs, this is no rose.
He comes to see, neath the lemon tree, the mole.

Holy Moley, pastor of the garden of fun on the Isle of Repose

"This sure beats thinking of bird-eating spiders," he muses.
mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Oct 21, 2014 - 09:35am PT
I have heard BooDawg's sung tale twice now, a capella around a fire.

Nancy McQuacken, hand upon the wheel.


DR. MCQUACKEN

Dr. McQuacken (To the tune of “Casey Jones”)
Come all you dieters we have right now
A program to help you lose some weight, and how!
If you have excess baggage that you’d like to lose,
Sign up with us for the Doctor’s cruise.

Chorus:
Dr. McQuacken, hand upon the wheel;
Dr. McQuacken with the jib-sheet in his hand;
Dr. McQuacken has the weight-loss program for you,
And you can’t get off it ’til you reach dry land.

Oh, the doctor’s wife, Nancy, she’s a mighty fine cook.
She’ll whip up any meal from the old cook book.
She’ll make up any meal that your heart could wish,
But you still lose weight because you feed the fish.

The exercise program is a mighty fine treat.
You dance rock & roll to a windward beat.
You do isometrics with each move you make.
And to lose your cookies is a piece of cake.

You’re up after midnight in the pouring rain.
The doctor’s orders are to reef the main.
You pull in sail ’til you’re soaking wet.
And there goes another seven pounds in sweat.

And when you’ve arrived at your port of call,
Your excess baggage, you’ll have lost it all.
At the celebration party, there will be no lack,
And in one night of feasting, you will gain it back!
Gnome Ofthe Diabase

climber
Out Of Bed
Nov 3, 2014 - 12:36pm PT
The first time I stayed trough the end of the season in the valley.
While I had seen photos of early snow, that caught me intrigue, the hush of the place compared to the noise pollution of only weeks before, had never been described.
Some where someone had turned off the flow switch.

At the time it even seemed like the world spun one way for all most everyone else.
and spun the other way for me.

November fourth, then the sixteenth, then in the mornings
the snowmelt would re freeze, the glaze with a dark wet streak
shines and glistens as sunlight plays with growing shade.

Car doors closing and alarm chirps
The background cacophony that droned in alert ears
Just a month ago are replaced with a skeet shooting like game
DID YOU SEE THAT- Turn your head and stare as the ice,
sheets of verglas
come crashing down. That is cool, a must see show.
The first time that I was smart enough to listen to my hart,
and stayed in the valley till only the few and that last November light
I wish I had seen a New Years sunrise from a wall
what was the question ? When I realized that I Should Never leave
YOSEMITE winter, spring summer, or fall. In so many ways I stayed. I took some of the valley with me where ever I roamed.

mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Nov 6, 2014 - 06:10pm PT
PASS

its been nearly 20 years since i drove it
living out there is like dreaming
the highway takes off west of town
rising over the pass
in the shadow of pikes peak

thinking about travelers of the past
this highway
my truck flying up it
magic carpets
over millions of years

looking at those mountains
the walls and the shadows
beneath me
Gnome Ofthe Diabase

climber
Out Of Bed
Nov 6, 2014 - 11:03pm PT
Four nine nine is a tough number
Almost 500 it is one away from that a biblical age
Who was that old?
(I tell anyone that dares to ask that I am forty nine and a half at seventy it will a good joke be)

My Old Testament is to rusty to open

Noah ? No ahh it was Abraham 1st last most ghost

frigg that marble rye won't toast and seeds lead to a dental emergency

that dawg don't call or hunt if called a runny count so let's not call a cat a dog
or a dawg a cool kat. (not callin boodawg any thing )not speaking is choice as well
? a bartered peace if the duplicitous cod piece you will wear
who would know and why do any care?
if it is for protection then I will wear it
but to HAVE to
oto , is to not be free
a cup will not stop a blow to the taint which is to say unt
running has been no thing
for me
for thirty years I stand
Stand and if not love
then fight

to take one in and savour the spice and roll another then hit it twice is freedom
that it is all that
is enough but add scoffing at the powers
while harnessing the lion of Selasie
makes the puff puff that floats on the breeze
attracts Richards the great but also big dicks
(but you dare not say slurs that's right ihkuonts a female more than once
put that where it should be)
Not in the thrown pipe that I also left out of the better memory early yesterday
Bushman

Social climber
The island of Tristan da Cunha
Nov 7, 2014 - 06:15am PT

'Empty Spaces'

To prove that I am nothing,
What have I to lose,
So let me take my leave,
If it would so amuse,
To chum the ocean full and rife,

The proposition that I go,
Would leave no empty space,
Void to fill the void,
How then the disgrace,
And what then of my family life,

Where trinkets and spare change,
With pet hair, lint, and green,
The yellowed photographs,
Aging brittle and unseen,
Are hiding out with my old knife,

The leaves that crunch and rustle,
As the autumn winds do blow,
Empty stepping spaces are what's left,
Where memories once did go,
And failing this my only strife,

Now all is stripped away,
There's nothing left to hide,
What dignity I'd hoped for,
In this short and frail reside,
Has been imparted to my wife.

-bushman
11/07/2014

Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Nov 7, 2014 - 09:24am PT
LUSH LIFE (Billy Strayhorn)

I used to visit all the very gay places
Those come what may places
Where one relaxes on the axis of the wheel of life
To get the feel of life from jazz and cocktails

The girls I knew had sad and sullen gray faces
With distant gay traces
That used to be there you could see
Where they'd been washed away
By too many through the day, twelve o'clock tales

Then you came along with your siren song
To tempt me to madness
I thought for a while that your poignant smile
Was tinged with the sadness of a great love for me

Ah yes, I was wrong
Again, I was wrong

Life is lonely again
And only last year everything seemed so sure
Now life is awful again

A troughful of hearts could only be a bore
A week in Paris will ease the bite of it
All I care is to smile in spite of it

Ill forget you, I will
While yet you are still burning inside my brain
Romance is mush, stifling those who strive
Ill live a lush life in some small dive

And there Ill be, while I rot
With the rest of those whose lives are lonely, too


Third quatrain swaps out the magic for terms and catch phrases, but the overall vibe is lonely and distant, like cool jazz.

A stark version of the same adventure was trotted out few years ago by ZZ Tops (Mescalero). Thar she blows:

-


"Goin So Good"

Just when I had the money to spend
And I was always thinkin' it would never end
Then the time came, to the end of the game
Don't you know?

And just when the sky got shiny and bright
There never seemed to be an end of the light
But then the clouds came, it started to rain
Don't you know?

Just when it was goin'
Just when it was goin' so good
Just when it...
Just when it was goin' so good

Just when the highway straightend out for a mile
An' I was thinkin' I just cruise for a while
A fork in the road brought a new episode
Don't you know?

Just when it,
Just when it was goin' so good
Just when it was goin'
Just when it was goin' so good

But baby don't you worry
I said baby don't you cry
We're gonna get it together
And I know you're askin' why

Just when it,
Just when it was goin' so good
Just when it was goin'
Just when it was goin' so good

mouse from merced

Trad climber
The finger of fate, my friends, is fickle.
Nov 7, 2014 - 01:37pm PT
DAM THE ZIGGURATS! FULL SPEED AHEAD!

Spill.

Dish it.

Open says me.

I hope everything Otay today.

One day at a time, one twinge at a time.

Dying is easy. Comedy is hard. Life's funny that way.

This is an easy leftward traverse leading up to the top of the spillway.

You can do it you can do it you can do it you can do it you can do it, you can.

They just pulled the plug on our elevator here in Middle Earth.

We now need to climb the stairs for what it's worth.

The easy path is not for such as us.

We just fuss & fuss & fuss.

But we get the job done.

Rule number one.

Gotta be fun.

I'm done.

MFM

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