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Conference turris::womannotes-v2

Title:ARCHIVE-- Topics of Interest to Women, Volume 2 --ARCHIVE
Notice:V2 is closed. TURRIS::WOMANNOTES-V5 is open.
Moderator:REGENT::BROOMHEAD
Created:Thu Jan 30 1986
Last Modified:Fri Jun 30 1995
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1105
Total number of notes:36379

249.0. "A Poem for General Discussion" by PRYDE::HUTCHINS () Fri Oct 21 1988 13:55

    This poem was discussed at a meeting I attended last night, and
    I would like to enter it here for general discussion.  It was
    interesting to hear the various interpretations.
    
    		THE PEOPLE
    
    The People are like 
    A surging and boundless sea
    That stretches beyond the horizon.
    Their waves soar with joys
    As they dance through each day
    Over inner roars
    Of suffering and sadness.
    
    Nothing can withstand 
    The People's strength;
    Their cries, their ranks, their banners
    Will conquer all.
    Their voices will prevail;
    The pace of their wisdom is sure;
    The banners of their justice rise
    Triumphantly above all others.
    
    Histories for the People
    And histories about the People
    Continue to be written with tears
    Wrong from suffering and want.
    
    A poet has said it:
    Our struggles will never cease
    Till tyranny and misery
    Are banished from the earth.
    
    You selfish leaders.
    The people are not made of wood!
    Their misery smarts, they suffer from it;
    Can't you hear their wretched sighs?
    
    You intellectuals,
    Don't you know that if you 
    Lay an atom bare you find it packed
    With every law of the universe?
    Are the People who grope around
    On the edges of your brilliance
    Nothing more to you
    Than meek and spiritless puppets?
    
    But I know the beauty of that word:
    PEOPLE!
    
    People, why stifle the storms in your hearts?
    You were never destined
    To be crushed by the weight of tyranny.
    Free yourselves from age-old chains,
    Demand your right to leading roles
    On the stage of life,
    In the drama of history.
    
    Who will recompense
    The blood you've shed?
    who will return your tears?
    Hold your tongues no more,
    Don't resign yourselves to fate
    Or weary of the struggle,
    But strive for victory
    And end the senseless repetition
    Of dramas played
    By a mere handful of stars.
    Triumph that you may dry your tears,
    That you may win the stage
    And hold it for People yet unborn.
    
    People, now is time to ring down
    The curtain on this gaudy play
    In which the actors have always been
    Flashy fellows with wealth and reputation:
    Generals rattling their sabers,
    Veteran statesmen planning intrigues.
    People, now is time to stand
    In the footlights and take the lead;
    Now is time to dance, to leap
    With heads held high -- to launch
    A new pageant of history.
    
    People, remember
    You are the only reality;
    Without you the world is but a shadow.
    Don't forget, our age waits eagerly
    For a movement led by the People,
    Led by you!
    
    People, remember
    You are a boundless sea absorbing all.
    People, remember
    You are the blast furnace, the crucible,
    In which everyone is purified
    And disciplined for the new creation.
    
    People, remember
    You alone are the measure 
    Of what is true and what is false.
    Science and philosophy,
    All the arts and religion as well,
    Must mole themselves to you.
    Science is callous
    Unless it works for the People;
    Philosophy is sterile
    Unless it speaks for the People;
    The arts are empty
    Unless they speak for the People;
    Religion is pitiless
    Unless it works for the People.
    
    Trample under foot
    Those who scorn the People;
    Flee from those who coldly analyze
    And judge the People;
    Spurn those who loathe
    The People's earthy scent.
    Their sturdy bodies bathed in sweat,
    The People toil in silence;
    And still I hear the hopeful throbbing
    Hidden in their hearts.
    
    I pour out my life for that hope.
    Though I may seem at times 
    To walk a private way,
    I glofy in my commitment
    To rise to any challenge, to work
    Always and only for the People.
    
    I fight for the People,
    For those who struggle till weathered fists
    Tire and tremble.
    I shall toil until all the People
    Reap such joy in living that
    Pure ecstasy beams across
    Each ordinary face.
    
    People, I fight for you.
    I struggle daily, advancing step by step
    To reach you wherever you may be.
    You must take arms with me.
    
T.RTitleUserPersonal
Name
DateLines
249.1MOIRA::FAIMANlight upon the figured leafFri Oct 21 1988 14:3811
    Once there was THE PEOPLE.  Terror gave it birth.
    Once there was THE PEOPLE, and it made a Hell of Earth.
    The Earth arose and crushed it.  Listen, all you slain:
    Once there was THE PEOPLE.  It shall never be again.
    
    			Rudyard Kipling
    
    (Reproduced from memory, so the punctuation is probably wrong, and I
    think it's the end of a longer poem whose title I don't remember.)
    
    	-Neil
249.2RANCHO::HOLTRobert Holt, UltrixAppsGp@UCOSun Oct 23 1988 00:268
                                                         
    re .0
    
    Bathed in sweat...?
    
    It was a trifle long and overblown.
    
    Of course, I'm hardly a critic, let alone literate...
249.3DID LENIN WRITE THIS?MILRAT::RYANDaydreaming is my best subjectTue Oct 25 1988 13:016
    I'm not a literary critic, but I know what I like and I don't like
    this poem.  Sounds like it was written by an anarchist or by someone
    like Lenin.  Don't like the call to battle tone at the end of it
    either.  Much more could be accomplished in this world with loving
    unity, not anarchy/battling.
      
249.4Wonderful poem!WELBY::MURRAYTue Oct 25 1988 13:164
    RE: .3 Loving unity is in the heart of the beholder. Maybe I read
    the poem wrong, but what came through to me was the incredible power
    of the human spirit, and how nothing can violate it. Needless to
    say, I liked the poem. For the same reason I like Ferron.
249.5CHUCKM::MURRAYChuck MurrayTue Oct 25 1988 18:2318
Just so there's no confusion... I'm not the WELBY::MURRAY in .4 (:-).

And for the record... As a literary piece, it's awful -- far too
blunt and obvious; lacks the depth, complexity, and imaginative use
of language I look for in good poetry.

As a political piece, it's naive and simplistic, and basically wrong
about who "the people" are and what they want. When most political
ideologues invoke "the people" ["Who do you represent?" "The American
people."], they really mean "Us people" or "People who think like me."
In fact, the poem seems to reflect a love-hate dichotomy in the speaker
toward "the people": they're of course wonderful, but he/she also seems
to want to knock their heads for not being sufficiently aware and
militant. 

So now, all you folks who like the poem can say: 

    "Chuck, you're no WELBY::MURRAY!"
249.6engineers, too, I betDOODAH::RANDALLBonnie Randall SchutzmanWed Oct 26 1988 08:233
    I notice that the poem considers that intellectuals aren't people. 
    
    --bonnie
249.7One InterpretationPRYDE::HUTCHINSWed Oct 26 1988 09:2336
    The poem was written by a person who's very much a pacifist...and
    not at all a politician...or a professional poet.  I did not make
    reference to the author, because I did not want to color people's
    interpretations (i.e., if it was written by X type of person, then
    it must mean Y....)
    
    My understanding of the piece is that it is up to _each_ of us to
    look beyond "the norm" in our lives and not accept things for their
    face value.  To take a more active role, in whatever capacity we
    can, whether we're a CEO or a blue collar worker.  Values for the
    most part today are skewed, and I often wonder _what_ people value
    now.  Is it the acquisition of material goods, or internal values?
    
    The issues are far more complex than this, and there is no one answer.
    If one is to merely exist from day to day, without taking an active
    role, then that life is a hollow one.  To work toward a full life,
    to whatever degree possible, can only benefit society as a whole.
    
    No, I am not a socialist.  I believe that it is up to each of us
    to do our part to improve our lives.  I, for one, am not content
    to just sit back and let life go by.  I've seen too many people
    bitch and moan about their jobs, etc. and not do a thing about it,
    except to bitch and moan some more.  Yes, change is a risk, but
    there's usually _some_ way out of a situation.  That is up to the
    individual to choose.
    
    I don't expect people to agree with me, but that is how I view things.
    Yes, it's a generalization, but I wanted to express my overviews,
    for what they're worth.  It's up to each of us to decide how we
    want to live our lives, and yes, there will be obstacles along the
    way which we must deal with, to whatever degree possible.  Some
    can be easily side-stepped; others must be chipped away at, bit
    by bit over a period of time.
    
    Judi
    
249.8Another opinionAPEHUB::STHILAIREFood, Shelter & DiamondsWed Oct 26 1988 10:1415
    Re .0, I love poetry, and I'm afraid I have to agree with those
    who think this poem is rather badly written.

    I especially dislike the lines,
    
    "People, remember
     You are the only reality;
     Without you the world is but a shadow."
    
    There was a world long before there were people, and there may be
    a world long afterwards.   People can't survive without cooperating
    with the rest of the planet.
    
    Lorna
     
249.9We're just visiting...PRYDE::HUTCHINSWed Oct 26 1988 11:0121
    re .8
    
    Lorna, I agree that the planet will remain long after we've gone.
    
    Looking at the piece from a societal perspective, without a "healthy"
    society (open to individual definitions there), people are here
    to merely take up space and use up resources.
    
    Throughout history, there have been people who have advanced societies,
    and there have also been those who have abused their knowledge.
    Every society will go through cycles of success and struggle, and
    it is up to us as individuals to contribute to the success of the
    society, keeping in mind the elements of cause and effect.  
    
    Where do we look for role models today?  It seems that everywhere
    you look, someone's on the take.  We can no longer "follow the leader"
    with blind faith...there's no telling where s/he will lead us.
    
    We're here on the planet, and until that changes, we need to do
    what we can to improve our lot.  
    
249.10a poet's view of the peopleNOETIC::KOLBEThe dilettante debutanteFri Oct 28 1988 22:3425
       pity this busy monster,manunkind,

       not. Progress is a comfortable disease:
       your victim(death and life safely beyond)

       plays with the bigness of his littleness
       -electrons deify one razorblade
       into a mountainrange;lenses extend

       unwish through curving wherewhen till unwish
       returns on its unself.

			A world of made
       is not a world of born-pity poor flesh

       and trees,poor stars and stones,but never this
       fine specimen of hypermagical

       ultraomnipotence. We doctors know

       a hopeless caseif-listen:there's a hell
       of a good universe next door;let's go

						ee cummings
249.11The House of CardsLEZAH::BOBBITTpersistence of visionThu Jan 12 1989 14:5538
    I wrote this recently, and I just figured I'd enter it here - it's
    an analogy of sorts.  I welcome feedback and discussion...either
    in NOTES or MAIL.......
    				-Jody
    ------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    	The House of Cards
	------------------

	To live in a house of cards
	One cannot rush around corners
	Or slam doors in the face of startled visitors
	Or hurl things in righteous anger.	

	The foundation is brittle
	Walls barely braced, so new this structure
	Each day I am amazed it still stands
	And I am careful not to jar the walls in passing.

	It is not the house of cards I value
	But, rather, what it represents
	It is my dream to make it more solid
	To cement the junctures with coherent caulk -

	So the ties that will bind the walls will bend
	But will not break if I should choose
	To stamp or slam or simmer silently
	It will be safe from strangers' storms.

	In this society - being a woman among men
	The cards are sometimes stacked against me....
	We build our houses alone, carefully balanced
	But only by connecting them can they stand strong.

	-jb - 1/9/88


249.12Strong Images!TUT::SMITHIs Fifty Fun?Thu Jan 12 1989 20:2510
    I find your imagery very powerful!
    Very personal until you generalize it in the last 4 lines.
    Until then I felt it represented one specific relationship, either
    a new one, or one in jeopardy.  In any case, I could really see,
    and feel the fragile cards around me!  If it is more an
    all-men/all-woman kind of thing, I'll want to mull that one over
    a bit more -- I think the imagery is still there, but it came as
    an unexpected ending!
    
    Nancy