Word Play

By SubVerse Writers

 

ωωω

 

 

Recycled Poetry

The Yes Party

Miss Tea

National Surrender Day

 

ωωω

 

 

Recycled Poetry
 
User’s Guide

 

1. Mix up the collection of words

2. Take out a small selection of about twenty words

3. Arrange the words in poetic order

4. Write your recycled verse in a special book

5. Continue until you run out of words

 

The Bottom Line

 

I               am              your               slave

Emotional              docile    servile     feminine

A                  naughty               delicate      rosebud

Let              small                    voices     burst

Aching               hurt          oozing             cry

Available              bottom           enter          bare

Kinky              blue            jewels          controllable

Tamed            service          French         pleasure

Wet                 responsive              make          display

 Jade         garden             yielding               flood

Trusting             sensitive              gentle                humbled

Abandoned            captivated                Peach       flower

Soft          pink             modesty                 hypnotised

Floating             in              peaceful              murmurs

Open             out             get                 up

Into        quiet              vulnerable              submission

With             warm                  loyal            respect

 

View from the Top

 

 You              are             my                   master

Sensuous              passionate            mature          playful

Manhood         cruel            and                   kind

Sacred              swollen            skilful            tool

Swallow              the              flesh             deep

Honey             girl            enchanted                         night

Romantic               top                thoughtful           friend

Moon             trip              Greek             monster

Secret             weapon            exquisite           piercing

Severe             rule             voluptuous                 boy

Strict             discipline              invading          force

Please           come               wild               end

Cherish             me             for                         joy

Powerful           experience           Potent         pain

Be           responsible            understand             Caring

Intelligent             masculine         strong          dominant

Give           grateful           generous            love

 

 

ωωω

 

 

Electoral Poetry on Behalf of the Yes Party

 

 

A Public Service Announcement

 

I know it’s a bit late for the 2001 general election but looking at the situation in a positive light (as we always endeavour to do, here at the Yes Party Headquarters) we have about another four years to develop a winning political campaign strategy. The current Yes Party candidate is elle finn, a submissive woman, librarian, mother and poetess who is open to many extremist and middle of the road ideas. If elected elle finn, as a Yes Party MP, hopes to further the interests of submissive people, their dominant counterparts and other consenting sado-masochists, as well as providing public support for other socially excluded groups within mainstream society (librarians, mothers, poets, etc).

 

 

The Yes Party Manifesto

 

Here at the yes party

We say yes to people

Yes to society

Yes to the world

To the universe

To our souls and to our humanity

 

We believe in saying yes

To the highest of the high

And the lowest of the low

We say yes to positivity

And negativity too

To our biggest hopes and our worst fears

 

Our policy

Is to say yes to everything

And everyone

Vote for us

And we’ll find a way

Of saying yes to you!

 

 

 

The Yes Party’s Stand on Sleaze

 

I know there have been public concerns about the amount of sleaze in British politics today. For anyone interested in discovering more about issues related to sleaze I recommend a visit to the SubVerse Poetry Tea Room at www.elle.finn.btinternet.co.uk/SubVerse.htm for a more in depth exploration of the poetry of surrender.

 

 

It’s Time for Tea and Poetry!

 

Act positively!

Say “Yes” to the Yes Party!

Vote for Yes today!

 

 

ωωω

 

 

Miss Tea’s Extreme Tea and Poetry

All selected tea can be taken with milk and sugar. Selected poetry can be taken in part or as a whole.

 

 

English Breakfast and Philip Larkin

 

Ingredients: The Whitsun Weddings by Philip Larkin, London, Faber and Faber, 1964, with “Ceylon” Tea from Twinings. “Days … are to be happy in, where can we live but days” (Days)

 

Traditional English Breakfast Tea. What better accompaniment for the poems of an English academic librarian writing about such quaint old traditional customs as “The Whitsun Weddings”? Actually this is Philip Larkin we’re talking about, not sweet old John Betjemen. Philip Larkin inhabits an altogether more brutal and jaded world of the late twentieth century. Some of Philip Larkin’s most memorable poetry highlights the futility and shabbiness of everyday life. The graffiti defacement of the laughing girl on the poster advertising “Sunny Prestatyn”, the poor anonymous soul carried through streets of strangers with but a passing selfish thought for their demise in “Ambulances” and the reading versus drinking debate being brought to an abrupt cynical conclusion in “A Study of Reading habits”. “Get stewed: books are a load of crap”. Very rich coming from a librarian! However one of my favourite poems is the sweet and simple “Days.” “Days are where we live … they are to be happy in, where can we live but days?”

 

Lady Grey and Sylvia Plath

 

Ingredients: Ariel by Sylvia Plath, London, Faber and Faber, 1965, with “Lady Grey” tea from Twinings. “Eternity bores me, I never wanted it” (Years)

 

Lady Grey is the more fragrant wife of that king of teas, Earl Grey. She seemed a natural choice for Sylvia Plath. Maybe I was thinking of her role as the bittersweet wife of Ted Hughes or maybe I was connecting Plath with the doomed nine-day queen Lady Jane Grey. “Ariel” has long been my favourite collection of poems. I was first attracted and seduced by Sylvia’s dark side as fulsomely displayed in such long, thin poems as the fiery “Lady Lazurus”, the wicked “Daddy”, the menacing “Death and co.” and the ominous “Edge”. Sylvia’s light side seemed to be a very well-guarded secret, so it was a surprise and a surprising delight to discover it. Her light side is best reflected in her wonderfully warm and complex mother and child poems. My favourite is “You’re”, which brings back all the mixed emotions I felt as a new mother. However it’s still Sylvia’s dark side that echoes most resonantly in my dreams. “Every woman adores a fascist, the boot in the face, the brute, brute heart of a brute like you”.

 

Lapsang Suchong and T. S. Eliot

 

Ingredients: The Waste Land and other poems by T. S. Eliot, London, Faber and Faber, 1972, with “Lapsang Suchong” Tea from Twinings. “The burnt-out ends of smoky days” (Preludes)

 

I chose Lapsang Suchong for T.S Eliot because it reminded me of “Ash Wednesday”. It reminds me of “the burnt-out ends of smoky days” from the “Preludes”, “Rhapsody on a Windy Night” and “the Wasteland”. I nearly bought “the Wasteland” but plumped for “Four Quartets” instead, most notably because it contains “Little Gidding”, which includes one of my favourite quotes. “We shall not cease from exploration, and the end of all our exploring, will be to arrive where we started, and know the place for the first time”. “The Four Quartets” are “Burnt Norton”, “East Coker”, “The Cry Salvages” and “Little Gidding”. The quartets are work you could drown in. They are very deep and I think require a full pot of Lapaang Suchong rather than the half-cups I have been devoting to them. Maybe “the Wasteland” is a bit easier.

 

Assam and Rumi

 

Ingredients: The Love Poems of Rumi, London, Rider, 1998, with “Assam” tea from Twinings. “I have become your sunshine and also your shadow” (Looking for your face)

 

Assam is strong and exotic, a suitable match for the passionate poetry of the thirteenth century Persian poet “Rumi. A mysterious man once suggested I explore Rumi’s love poetry as his work had much to say on the value of surrender. I was pleased to find a specially promoted publication called “the Love Poems of Rumi” in the Coco De Mer erotic shop. The Rumi influence seemed to be growing. I bought the book and discovered the joy of Rumi for myself. Rumi’s Love poems are deep and full of bittersweet longing. In Rumi’s world Love is the mixture of all the age old passions, intoxications and madness, agonies and ecstasies, life and death extremes, imprisonment and liberation as it ever was, is and will be. I think part of the attraction of Rumi’s simple love poems today is that their clarity and accessibility shed some light on the often misunderstood and hidden aspects of Middle Eastern Romance. “You dance inside my chest, where no one sees you, but sometimes I do and that sight becomes this art”.

 

 

ωωω

 

 

National Surrender Day (A SubVerse non-event!)

 

30th June is “National Surrender Day”, which, incidentally, coincides with SubVerse’s unofficial birthday. It is hoped that this day will provide the nation with a space for peace, passivity, receptivity and reflection. On this day, why not take the opportunity to accept something you don’t normally accept, forgive something you don’t usually forgive or surrender to something you often try to control. If your day of surrendering moves you to submissive verse, please feel free to donate your poetry of surrender to elle.finn@btinternet.com .

 

 

Unofficial Poem for National Surrender Day:

Reasons to surrender: Parts 1, 2, and 3

(Written in remembrance of Ian Dury by elle finn)

 

Reasons to surrender: part one

 

Parents, children, husbands, wives

A thousand deaths, a million lives

A universe, out of control

Sex and drugs and rock'n'roll

 

Reasons to surrender: part two

 

A people of peace in a world at war

Neighbours from hell and mothers-in-law

"Get your kicks, dial 666"

Lunatics hitting their rhythm sticks

 

Reasons to surrender: part three

 

Consumer culture, gifts from God

The everyday and the slightly odd

All we see, hear, smell, touch, taste

No Surrender? What a waste!

 

Reasons to surrender: one, two, three...

 

 

 

ωωω

 

 

The SubVerse Poetry Tea Room

http://www.elle.finn.btinternet.co.uk/SubVerse.htm

 

ωωω