A Poem Worth Thinking About

Discussion in 'General Discussion / Real life stuff' started by Kyashi, Sep 30, 2015.

  1. Kyashi

    Kyashi XVIII

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    This poem is one of my favorite poems. When I first saw this poem, I realized something, this poem is what made me listen to others about their perspective or view on something and observe before I make assumptions.

    "The more you talk and observe carelessly, you start becoming blind and deaf, the more you listen and observe, the more you see and hear." -Unknown

    Anyways, here is the poem.

    The Blind Men and the Elephant
    It was six men of Indostan
    To learning much inclined,
    Who went to see the Elephant
    (Though all of them were blind),
    That each by observation
    Might satisfy his mind.

    The First approach'd the Elephant,
    And happening to fall
    Against his broad and sturdy side,
    At once began to bawl:
    "God bless me! but the Elephant
    Is very like a wall!"

    The Second, feeling of the tusk,
    Cried, -"Ho! what have we here
    So very round and smooth and sharp?
    To me 'tis mighty clear
    This wonder of an Elephant
    Is very like a spear!"

    The Third approached the animal,
    And happening to take
    The squirming trunk within his hands,
    Thus boldly up and spake:
    "I see," quoth he, "the Elephant
    Is very like a snake!"

    The Fourth reached out his eager hand,
    And felt about the knee.
    "What most this wondrous beast is like
    Is mighty plain," quoth he,
    "'Tis clear enough the Elephant
    Is very like a tree!"

    The Fifth, who chanced to touch the ear,
    Said: "E'en the blindest man
    Can tell what this resembles most;
    Deny the fact who can,
    This marvel of an Elephant
    Is very like a fan!"

    The Sixth no sooner had begun
    About the beast to grope,
    Then, seizing on the swinging tail
    That fell within his scope,
    "I see," quoth he, "the Elephant
    Is very like a rope!"

    And so these men of Indostan
    Disputed loud and long,
    Each in his own opinion
    Exceeding stiff and strong,
    Though each was partly in the right,
    And all were in the wrong!

    MORAL.
    So oft in theologic wars,
    The disputants, I ween,
    Rail on in utter ignorance
    Of what each other mean,
    And prate about an Elephant
    Not one of them has seen!

    You can post some of your favorite poems in the reply section. @SinisterKnowledge I'm curious about what your favorite poem is.
     
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  2. SinisterBucky

    SinisterBucky Exemplary Gaming Co-Founder and GM Donator

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    The brilliance in the following poem is hard to dismiss, as sad as the subject matter is.

    The Book of Yolek, Anthony Hecht

    The dowsed coals fume and hiss after your meal
    Of grilled brook trout, and you saunter off for a walk
    Down the fern trail. It doesn't matter where to,
    Just so you're weeks and worlds away from home,
    And among midsummer hills have set up camp
    In the deep bronze glories of declining day.

    You remember, peacefully, an earlier day
    In childhood, remember a quite specific meal:
    A corn roast and bonfire in summer camp.
    That summer you got lost on a Nature Walk;
    More than you dared admit, you thought of home:
    No one else knows where the mind wanders to.

    The fifth of August, 1942.
    It was the morning and very hot. It was the day
    They came at dawn with rifles to The Home
    For Jewish Children, cutting short the meal
    Of bread and soup, lining them up to walk
    In close formation off to a special camp.

    How often you have thought about that camp,
    As though in some strange way you were driven to,
    And about the children, and how they were made to walk,
    Yolek who had bad lungs, who wasn't a day
    Over five years old, commanded to leave his meal
    And shamble between armed guards to his long home.

    We're approaching August again. It will drive home
    The regulation torments of that camp
    Yolek was sent to, his small, unfinished meal,
    The electric fences, the numeral tattoo,
    The quite extraordinary heat of the day
    They all were forced to take that terrible walk.

    Whether on a silent, solitary walk
    Or among crowds, far off or safe at home,
    You will remember, helplessly, that day,
    And the smell of smoke, and the loudspeakers of the camp.
    Wherever you are, Yolek will be there, too.
    His unuttered name will interrupt your meal.

    Prepare to receive him in your home some day.
    Though they killed him in the camp they sent him to,
    He will walk in as you're sitting down to a meal.
     
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