The Anti-Sam posts a poem
Mike, the penny-stamp man, on host 63.78.125.194
Sunday, April 29, 2001, at 13:20:15
Well, according to a recent post by the supreme admin (hereafter referred to as "Sam"), i apparently stand opposed to everything he holds sacred and dear. I thought about making a list of my favorite things, condensed to show that SURELY one or two points leave us common ground, and then defer to the forum (sort of like those "You make the Call" bits that ran before commercials during American baseball games during the 1980s) to decide whether or not i am truly the unholy bane of Rinkworks.
But the idea seemed far too cheap and childish, and quite deletable should Sam get on another "red button" raid of posts he doesn't like. So i deceded to can that idea, grab the bull by the antlers, and finally post one of my poems. Here goes ...
*ahem*
"Enemy"
Moving up the path, until a well-known stramger blocks the way. Staring at his fearsome visage, as he peers into my soul. And a scowl reveals that he is repulsed as I at the sight before him.
Feeling his anger burn in my own chest, a master shunned by his slave. Knowing he will use my weaknesses, i drop my gaze.
Fighting the temtation too late, my mind falls under his control. Slicing at wounded friends, Destroying the world around me. Falling to my knees, exhausted, I must surrender.
Crying out in desperation, I call to a better Master. The dark one is startled-- he knows I am leaving him behind. Seeing his terror as the Master tears the mirror from my hand. Taking again to the Path, the foe no longer before me.
And there you have it, the only poem i've ever had published (OK, so it was just the campus literary journal, but i still thought it was neat). That was written, if memory serves correctly, on spring break of my freshman year.
Of course, your comments of any sort are welcome. I hate reading poetry to friends, even English majors, because the conversation ends up being, "That was nice." Argh. Maybe this'll be better, if more brutal.
Penny *embraces on-line brutality, even if it means proof that his poetry is lousy* stamp
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