Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you.
hic sunt dracones - 1. hic sunt dracones
hic sunt dracones
– Here be Dragons –
---
A Loving Tribute
by his GA Friends
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I. Prose Section
SkinnyDraGon
When do I think about Skinnydragon, you ask me? I think about Skinny a lot. Especially when I go to church with my daughter. You have to know, I'm not christened, my husband's family is Protestant, our kids go to Bible Study in school and sometimes I go with them to church. Last week the church was cleaned by volunteers and a lot of spider webs were swept away from the high windows. I saw the initials S. D. G. on the top window and thought it means not only Soli Deo Gloria, it means also an occasion for me, when I can think of SkinnyDraGon. I hope, he has no pain and doesn't suffer. If I can say a prayer as a heathen, I'll always say a prayer for him. I hope, he knows, how many people love his stories and think regularly of him.
glitteryantlers
Dragon’s Flown Away
I’ve heard it say people come into our lives for a reason, for a season, or for life. The dragon did all these. He came to cheer us up. To share his wit and talent with us. To make our lives a bit brighter. And that’s enough of a reason for me.
The season he spent with us was short; truncated by a silent, killer without remorse. But the season he spent with us was more than winter, spring, summer, or fall. It was all of them rolled together. His stories gave us the cold of winter and the rebirth of spring. The warmth of summer and the loneliness of fall.
I’ll forever wonder what could have been. What could have been had he lived long enough to stay with us longer. Then I realize he’ll be with me, and the rest of us who came to know him, for life. The flame may have been extinguished but its brightness will remain with us.
Long live the Dragon!
Carlos Hazday
In the GA community, what are we but ships passing in the night? Often times, especially in communities like GA, there are interactions that leave one with more of an impression above others. That is David.
A story told, when handled with the utmost care and dedication, is something intimate to the writer. It becomes something special when the author is able to invite others into the worlds of their creation, and the reader feels the same intimate connection as the one who crafted it. A truly good author can take you by the hand, put you right where they want you, and make you feel, and laugh, and weep—all on the same page. That is David.
A prolific author, David has the uncanny ability to bring a reader into his stories as one would invite another into his home. I've oft-felt myself reveling with his characters in times of accomplishment, and screaming in frustration at the situations they find themselves in. Ambitious. Kind. Encouraging. Talented. Four words I would never hesitate to use to describe him, and that is David.
Working on several serial stories at a time—forgive my alliteration—he also finds time to fill in as a beta reader, and to some, an editor. I can only speak to my experiences with him, but his critiques come highly valued, and several times I found that he was one of my biggest champions in supporting my own work. To him, I am extremely grateful for that. That is David.
I refuse to see him as a ghost of this community while his work survives, endures, and inspires. In sleep, be it slumbering tonight, or eternally, I sincerely hope he can find comfort in knowing that he is cared for, admired, missed, and loved. Above all, wherever he is, I hope that he finds peace and comfort. May his energy shine bright out there in the Universe, just as it has shone bright here, amongst us Earthlings.
Warmly, an admirer,
Anonymous
One thing that GA encourages readers to do is provide positive and constructive feedback to authors. Feedback is critically important to new writers, and it motivates and encourages even seasoned writers. Skinnydragon understands this, both as a reader and author. When I started posting my stories on GA last year, skinnydragon was one of the first readers to comment on my story. I began to look forward to his regular reviews. I also discovered how talented he was as a writer when I read his wonderful story, 18 Weeks of Twoey. We quickly became members of the Mutual Admiration Society. Skinnydragon represents what GA is all about. He takes the time to write, encourage and motivate other authors. At the same time, he provides readers with his wonderful and endearing tales.
Ronyx
(Ronny)
A Few Words for Skinny
I had no idea what I was going to write. I tried everything. Now, I’ve decided to simply say “Thank You.” SD was the one who took 18 Weeks and turned it into a lifetime of love. He transformed an Empty Year and made it the most influential and important year in a lifetime. I realized today as I was writing this: Although most of us will never meet each other in person, we are all part of this online family. We will always be here for our brothers and sisters whenever they need us to be, however they need us to be there. I love all of y’all. We might disagree sometimes, but I wouldn’t trade any of y’all for anything.
Love,
JayT
Some Thoughts on Skinnydragon
So, thinking back, I probably didn’t really interact with Skinny in any meaningful way until late 2015. I remember a post by him in craftingmom’s story Falling Apart, and I can’t even recall what it was, but I remember it made me laugh and I thought, this guy is funny and I want to pay attention to him.
He of course had been on the site and active in the forums and such for longer than that, longer than me, but I didn’t really run into him until he started posting Toph’s Empty Year. This was, by far, my absolute favorite of his stories. Skinny’s writing had this quality, it was all so creative, and his characters would draw you in. They were all so quirky and fascinating. Mental illness of one kind or another was a frequent theme in his stories, and it was easy to get caught up in the characters as they faced their demons and developed into (hopefully) fully-functioning people.
Like many authors on GA, you could see his evolution as a writer the more he wrote and posted, the better his stories got. He definitely learned the craft as he became more prolific. It was quite funny to read his words from his last Ask the Authors, where he said he wasn’t a writer. If Skinny wasn’t a writer, then I don’t know what a writer is.
What I most appreciated about my interaction with him, was his willingness and enthusiasm to engage with his audience. Any aspiring writers on GA could learn a lot from how to approach and build a readership. He always appreciated comments, and pretty much always responded. That is crucial. For me, as many on GA have probably figured out by now, I can get pretty enthusiastic in my reviews. If a writer touches on my emotions, I’ll let them know. If their characters piss me off, I’ll let them know that too.
Skinny’s most well-known story is probably 18 Weeks of Twoey, and I didn’t get into that until he’d posted quite a few chapters into what was a very extensive story. But once I started posting my opinions on his characters, I think that’s where my back-and-forth with him really got started.
One thing he always maintained when he’d take in comments, was that to him the characters were living, breathing people, and this is what they did. He never took credit for their actions, he simply let them do what they would do. If I thought they acted stupid, he’d usually agree. He never took the position that this was simply how he wrote it, or how he thought the characters should behave, but that this was just what they did.
So, if anyone has paid attention to reviews I’ve left, well I’ve been known to get “ranty” from time to time, and with 18 Weeks of Twoey it was no different. With all the characters acting like clueless yahoos constantly, they could get rather infuriating. And with every strong worded review I’d leave, Skinny always had a very enthusiastic response, and for me it became very fun to post my thoughts and to see his responses. I’d have plenty to smile and laugh about with each new chapter.
When he completed posting Toph’s empty year, we briefly discussed the story, and he told me that I could sometimes be brutal in my reviews, but that he loved that. It stuck with me. I like to think he had as much fun in the back-and-forth we shared as I did. He got it. He appreciated what I was saying, and he took it in the sprit with which it was written. I enjoyed his writing, and I tried to be as encouraging as possible to keep him posting.
Just to wrap it up, December 2016 was the month from Hell for me for several personal reasons. Battling illness, insomnia, high levels of stress at work, and even higher levels of stress from online school that I’m going through. About halfway through the month, I saw a blog post from Skinny with the most heartbreaking news imaginable. I was surprised by how hard I took that news. Not because I’m callous and didn’t care. But simply because, I don’t actually know Skinny on a personal level.
It was surprising by how much his writing, and vibrant, creative personality had touched me. And if he could touch a relative stranger over the internet with online interaction, how much of an impact did he leave on those closest to him? I can only imagine their pain in dealing with that. It goes without saying, cancer sucks, and losing those we care about is awful. I wish his family only the best possible wishes. His life was cut way too short. I love Skinny, and I cherish the gifts he shared with us on GA, and the friendship he shared as well.
spikey582
My dear Dave,
I am truly honoured to have been asked to write something that will be included in a collection for you.
What to write?
I am neither an author nor a poet.
I can, however, tell you how much I have enjoyed your stories, and that you are one of my favourite authors.
I can tell you how your stories will live on forever.
I can tell you how sorely you will be missed.
My fervent wish for you is that yours will be a gentle, peaceful passing, surrounded by love.
Goodnight dear SkinnyD...miracles DO happen!
Love,
Coral
(Coastguard)
Water has mystical qualities. Water in motion, that is – I’m thinking of rivers, lakes and oceans that are constantly moving, shifting, crashing
against rocks or quietly smoothing out a stretch of sand. Watching the flow of a river that is undulating over hidden rocks, twisting down a
narrow ravine or simply making its steady way to the ocean can have a wonderfully calming effect. Stopping by deep pools in a forest stream,
or floating in a small boat being hypnotized by a shaft of sunlight angling down through a lake making patterns like a moving curtain or a
water-bound aurora, these can restore balance in a mind that has been buffeted by the events that affront us daily.
The characters in Skinny’s stories know this. Many inhabitants of Skinnyland understand that time spent beside a lake or on a beach by
the ocean is restorative, even medicinal. When the going gets tough they head for the park by the lake or decamp to a beach at the ocean. Better still to find yourself on a sailboat knifing through the waves on a perfect day, worldly cares left behind as your subconscious works out the shifting vectors of wind and water.
Skinny’s own feelings about water come through clearly in his stories and he once told me that he strongly believed that everyone should have their own personal lake, a spot to retreat to when life overwhelms us. Wherever you are, Skinny, and whatever befalls, I hope that there is a lake close by and that you can continue to find that enjoyment you have always felt down by the lake.
Jesse
(jess30519)
A dragon-shaped, empty space in my heart
Skinnydragon may have left GA forever, but his legacy lives on. The fact his name has hovered at the top of the Popular Contributors list on the new improved GA site bears testimony to how much we treasure the clever comments he has left on our stories in recent years.
Like anyone who knew Skinnydragon, I read his last blog entry with tears in my eyes, wondering what to say. But I'm grateful for the opportunity to tell the GA community how important this wonderful, colorful dragon was, and how lucky I feel to have known him.
He participated in every aspect of GA and delighted us with his stories, making us laugh and cry and rant. That legacy will be with us always, and we shall tell future GA members to make the acquaintance of Toph, David, Twoey and the rest.
His wit and kindness were beautiful flames of joy which warmed my heart. I shall treasure his story comments and topic posts with a fond thought forever. And I’ll imagine Skinnydragon resting in the embrace of the most beautiful loving guy, being cared for and cherished as he deserves.
With love from Denmark,
Tim
(Timothy M.)
‘Would you know my name
If I saw you in heaven?
Would you be the same
If I saw you in heaven?’
From Tears in Heaven by Eric Clapton
Though we never met, you impacted my life. Though we never spoke, I felt I heard your voice.
In your stories, you wrote a lot about parks and ponds and rivers – sitting and people watching, drawing these people, creating background stories for these strangers.
Like David, Donny, and Toph, I can picture you sitting alone by a pond in the park, pondering about life. Like David, you would have a serious discussion with the bird, Sigmund Freud, but then, like Toph, you would take your sketchpad out like the true artist you are, and draw stunning pictures, later to be put on a canvas and painted in beautiful colors.
You weren’t a member of GA long, but you made a lasting impression on me, and I’m sure I’m not the only one. I know this world has lost a wonderful soul, but heaven has gained a beautiful angel. Now you can be at peace, watching the other angels by the pond. I miss you every day, David.
Lisa
The Skinnydragon Effect
After he left, Anders walked over and threw his arm over my shoulders. “You’re good for him, Toph. When he first got here, I thought I had made a huge mistake. He was, to put it nicely, an egotistical prick. He slowly softened, but since you’ve arrived Gary has turned into a pretty decent human being. I give you a lot of the credit.”
“Me? I hardly see him or talk to him.”
“I know. It’s killing him."
Toph’s Empty Year, Chapter 3
By Skinnydragon
Counselor Deanna Troi: Have you ever heard Data define friendship?
Commander William T. Riker: No.
Counselor Deanna Troi: How did he put it? "As I experience certain sensory input patterns, my mental pathways become accustomed to them. The inputs eventually are anticipated and even missed when absent."
Star Trek: The Next Generation –
Time’s Arrow: Part 1, 1992
I love stories that present interesting ideas. For example, what is the nature of love in the brain? How do humans chemically and electrically register the markers about how others make us feel good, cause our toes to curl, get us purring, and provide us with peace? These ideas fascinate me and when a writer poses an interesting scenario, it makes my engine hum.
There is an interesting idea embedded into Skinnydragon’s story “Toph’s Empty Year”. This notion proposes there are people we don’t even really know who make us feel good. I think it’s safe to assume many of us have met others whose presence and attention make things seem better. This isn’t a unique scenario. Many works of art propose ‘love at first sight’ or ‘soul mates’ or even ‘brothers from a different mother’ and other such responses.
We experience affinity toward others, at times, without having established a previous relationship. This isn’t a unique idea, however, it posed a dilemma which intrigued me.
Skinnydragon presented a storyline with characters who not only introduced this ‘predestined’ idea of love, but additionally, one of established affection. Also in ‘Toph’s Empty Year’, we have Toph begin a journey of renewal. In this journey, he attempts to completely alienate himself from his past, his family, and ultimately his personal history. At first, Toph is thrilled and self-obsessed with his sojourn from himself. The cracks begin to show as he learns a roommate, Gary, likes him. Gary is the one who makes him start questioning his alienation.
Toph begins painting his brother, his best friend, his former lover, and we begin to see how he can’t really escape his history, his past. They are embedded in him. Skinnydragon creates a scene and situation which portray the creative process: the representation of those we love, and from which we can’t escape. In fact, he begins to realize he doesn’t want to abandon those parts of himself. He realizes as the story unfolds how he divorced everyone when he only needed to cut out parts and not the whole.
Just as Toph continues to relive his family and his friends through art, another person begins to grow into his life. This person wasn’t fused organically into his life, but has emerged as an explosion and epiphany. Gary is this catalyst, though others also seem to permeate and cause change as well.
So, Skinnydragon presents us with two very different ideas, which are actually two questions for the reader to ponder. Is love something we develop through time and practice, or is love something there innate and bursts forth like a bloom in the spring? Humanity has pondered this for millennia. Yet, we are presented with this scenario in a unique and challenging way, which brings me to my second quotation.
Perhaps there are two different kinds of pathways in the brain. One is as "Star Trek: The Next Generation" proposes. Data, the robot, experiences friendship and love as a series of newly established roads through the brain and it becomes more stable and easier as time passes. Maybe we have other pathways which are carefully groomed by our experiences. Through time and nurture, we establish needs for these people and their presence in our lives. They are Commander Data’s “inputs”, which are “missed when absent.” In other words, we develop some needs based on history and other needs which are inherent to us.
However, let’s consider Skinnydragon’s idea in this context. Maybe there are pathways groomed for people we need. These avenues are ready for use and when we meet certain people, we are open to them. Perhaps we have some pathways in our brains open for traffic before we ever know them.
Certainly, we can’t eliminate one or the other possibility, so maybe both are true. I know I’ve met people who seemed to make my neurons fire more smoothly from the get go. I’ve also grown to love some people over time, and losing their presence in my life would make the pathways in my brain ache with the loss. It makes me wonder and ponder.
Regardless, I find the exercise of considering these ideas both enjoyable and energizing. Is it within our nature to long for a specific person? Do we nurture the kind of person we need to fulfill parts of our lives? Again, we come upon the ancient, yet entirely unsettled, question. Only a special kind of writer can get us thinking about these things in such a profound way.
Like any good philosopher, Skinnydragon has led us to the water’s edge, gestured with a head nod, and then stepped aside allowing us to drink. As we consider the possibilities of what he’s suggested, it further opens other possible ideas. With each swallow, more ideas begin to take shape in our mind’s eye. His labors illuminate other ways to view the world. He merely whets our thirst for understanding.
That’s why Skinnydragon’s writing is so vital to the site. He’s contributed so much with his questioning, his presentations, and his ideas, boldly and courageously offered, and for that I thank Skinnydragon for all he’s given us. With a prayer for grace, his words will continue to flow to us and make us consider life and its meanings.
And that, my friends, is the Skinnydragon Effect.
Cole Matthews
A message for Skinny
Hope for the best, they say.
Depends on what you think is for the best.
Prepare for the worst, they say.
Depends on what you think the worst is.
Whatever your hope or preparations…
Know that our prayers and best wishes are with you and your family…
And will be for as long as they are needed and beyond.
Carol Pedroso
(AKA Caz)
II. Poetry Section
No fear, no fears
If I could say
If I could feel
If I had words instead of tears
If I could promise
No fear, no fears
If I might tell you just one truth
If I could know
If I were sure
If you will leave, float free from here
If I knew that
No fear, no fears
If I could stop, my heart is broken
If there were words
If they were spoken
If little things, a touch, a thought
If you are there
No fear, no fears
If my strong arms could hold you tight
If my far voice
If silent sound
If it might reach you in the night
If you hear me
No fear, no fears
William King
Dragon's Heaven
Perched upon a lighthouse,
Dragon gazed upon his realm.
A realm of land and sea.
A realm beneath a clear blue sky.
Waves followed waves, crashing
Against the hardness of the shore.
The evergreens stood guard,
Bowing, slightly, before the wind.
Everything was perfect
For Dragon to take to the sky.
He spread his great wings
And leapt into the clear blue sky.
Feeling the wind rush by his wings,
Dragon let out a roar of joy.
For he could finally
Live here forever.
Drew Espinosa[1]
It’s cold, the air is crisp and clear,
And snow hides all the flowerbeds,
his warm breath spawns a daylight ghost,
a flask with soap firm in his hand.
It’s winter still, but spring is near,
first tips of green dot crusty white,
the lips are pursed, a rush of air,
soon iridescent spheres dance wild.
They catch the sun, a dozen colors,
merged with reflections as they rise,
the updraft takes them into blue
as endlessness is what they crave.
But then one settles in a branch,
it lingers, and withstands the wind,
which tears and prods to no avail,
this one just does not want to leave.
Frost helps and keeps it for a while,
its surface cover snowy crystals,
a glistening, fragile piece of art,
too delicate to stay for long.
Just a short moment time stands still,
As to admire a rare wonder,
Fast forward now, and it is gone,
to join its brothers in the sky.
aditus
In Peace
In peace,
I stand on the first stone
Of the path to forever.
The sun warms my back
As I step onward into oblivion,
Assured.
Carl Holiday
Heart draped with thorns,
Yet it blooms and trances everyone with its charms.
Pride in its beauty,
Not enough to betray the destiny,
The graceful Rosé will inevitably dry and wither,
Though gracefully embraces its fate.
Endless sky is shrouded with stars,
Yet the recherché moon shines outright,
And illuminates the dark, scary night.
Delighted in its elegance,
A star still remembers,
That one day it will fall or just fade away.
A day witnesses,
Two brothers combat with grievous sway of their swords,
And a lover tries to woo his beloved with every trick of romance.
Caught in between a cat-fight,
The day will replete and eventually wound up.
Surpassing each agony and every anguish,
Their substance never crumbles,
Nor their enchantment ever wore off,
Never the nemesis of their existence impacts their immortality.
Such is this mysterious human life;
Never lost to its emphasis,
It's a pure act of love where one's legacy starts,
And finally ends with a pure magic how one closes his eyes,
To take his place again at God's golden abyss,
To start a new journey into a mother's womb.
Emi and Sacredlove
Visiting a Place Where You Were
There lies a field where the river comes to yield
near the shores of the inland sea;
spring just revealed, all the joyous flowers pealed
with the song of the zephyr free.
Once stood you here at the zenith of the year
under skies of a crystal blue;
gulls wheeling near over restless waters clear
told you tales of a mystic hue.
Now by the lake, with my heart about to break,
do I kneel on this selfsame ground;
watch as I quake for your gentle friendship's sake,
and the hint of a whispered sound
Lilting a tease and the answer to my pleas
to restore what misfortune stole:
voice on the breeze, yes, your laughter in the trees,
the desire of my grieving soul.
Parker Owens
leaf litter – I think I want to write
a poem about leaf litter pressing
down the 'old,'
compacting it
making it dense and heavy,
but do the sorrows
accumulating on top
give a care about the ones being
buried?
press
press
press
new on old, endlessly.
god. poor fucking Skinny; poor fucking us.
AC Benus
Our Father?
Don’t tell me he works in mysterious ways
He’s a liar, a cheat—a false witness
Why would you want so young a boy?
Whose talent and humour—just maturing?
I will not and cannot believe in such blarney
He don’t give us more than can be handled—ha!
There’s no gods and no justice, no reason or rhyme
Life’s a crap shoot—a monstrous carnival game
We fight to live, to create and survive
While somewhere are our judge is watching?
Give that one cancer, that other can starve
Take his job, her child and his mother
This world is an abomination—a horror
There’s none of us get through it unscathed
My heart is breaking for loss of a friend
And my nephew’s boyfriend’s mother
If you’re out there then damn you!
Damn you—come live in the hell you created,
No decent father would leave children like this
But maybe you’re rather like mine.
Mikiesboy
(Tim Landon)[2]
Paths crossing in time
Leaving imprints on our souls
As we meet by chance
Puppilull
It opened with everything and nothing
Tritely amusing, if banal
But time stretched out
A smaller duration into something
Much larger, much longer
Without a doubt, the strangest thing
Eye-witnessed was love
The paintbrush changed
Sometimes between colours
At times with every stroke
But the paintings were always
A sum much greater than
Those single gestures
As beautiful as they were
Individually
There were voices, many
Unique and varied
And heads and thoughts
That no one could truly know
Even though so often
We were allowed inside
For a moment
The depths of emotion
Can be hard to handle
When one does not
Have root to understand
The source
Yet they were raw, laid bare
And not
Disguised or left
Hidden behind the distance
Of untouched words
Separated from reality
We loved you, yes
Indeed we loved you
More than words could
Express with sincerity
Without you
How shall we sing thy song?
In a strange land,
Lost?
How shall we sing?
Lux Apollo
Dragon Flame
A dragon’s flame should be a beacon eternal,
Feared and admired by knights in shining armor
And damsels in distress,
Not doused by disease.
Most dragons hoard gold and shiny things,
Their fearsome fire reflected off the surfaces
Of baubles long forgotten
And shields of fallen warriors.
Our dragon hoarded words and was gracious enough
To share their power with those who dared to read them.
His flame lives on—a printed legacy
Never extinguished as long as there are those
Who acknowledge it.
Valkyrie
Too short
we think this thread
spun and woven by Fate
in to the grand fabric of our
shared being and yet it gives a
perfect hue and texture
to its portion
of life.
dughlas
Ghosts
I know you’re real as you type me your life
You’ve a name, and a shadow; very human
Alive as I am—you’re flesh and blood in your chair
But you are a ghost ex machina
We talk and laugh and share experiences
Pictures and words we spin together
In my head you are friend and confidant
You are a ghost inside the machine
One day one of us may just disappear
And we’ll worry and pray it's okay
Nary may a word come to us again
Now you’re a ghost of my heart
Mikiesboy
(Tim Landon)[3]
An Elegy
The wind blew you to me last night,
your elemental dust of life,
that stuff with which the world is rife,
slipped through my window casings tight.
The ashes that I chanced to find
once coalesced in body lithe,
companioned with a spirit blithe,
an active wit and supple mind.
To dinner you invited all,
and let us witness love's embrace;
with outward smile and inner grace,
you wrote your verses on the wall.
Such gentle dust, such charming grit,
and generous by friendship made,
with us a year or two was stayed,
but more did Chronos not permit.
Oh, fickle universe unjust,
I ask why love was so accursed
that this my friend was thus dispersed
to dwell again as primal dust?
If dust and ash is all there be
in all the starry cosmos vast,
where is the flame that burns so fast
it sent you to eternity?
Parker Owens
Time is fleeting. Life is unsure.
What matters is the impact we leave behind.
Darkness descends. Families mourn.
What matters is that we never forget.
Kitt
…pro defunctis…
I saw one of those wire racks
The drug stores used to hold their stacks,
When I was but a little child,
Of the tawdriest paperbacks.
The day was bright and on me smiled,
Calling me to the used books compiled
Lovingly in the little shop
To browse the titles they had aisled.
Straight back to the Poetry crop,
Quarantined as it were atop
The highest, loneliest shelf, where
Twix Plays and Art they always plop.
The drug store rack was loaded there
With artless ease and simple flare,
But not with pulp's raunchy fiction –
Flashed in covers of chests half-bare.
No, as if to flaunt tradition,
Softbacks of hard erudition
Stacked themselves four to five deep each
And offered me benediction.
My walled-off heart needed a breach,
For its beat had been robbed of speech
And silent with the recent news
A dear friend had come in Death's reach.
But here timeless works stood to choose:
Antigone; In Cold Blood – whose
Author ate rich at Tiffany's –
In Our Time; Red Pony peruse.
Madame Bovary's sure to please,
As Illusions with symmetries;
Vanity Fair and Twist infuse
Some laughter and conspiracies.
Chekhov and Mary Shelley muse,
While James Joyce and Steinbeck enthuse
On mankind and the tyrannies
Virgil and Gore Vidal excuse.
Lessons from Will and Sophocles
Vie with Oscar Wilde's litanies;
'Gainst racy Andros and Balzac,
But all offer epiphanies.
Though nothing special of a rack,
I saw David's work join the stack:
His Twoey, and his lovely Toph;
His Ian and Miles nothing lack.
For then my heart was filled with hope –
Though gone, I have no need to mope –
Each time I read him, he'll be back
With his undying love to help me cope.
AC Benus
Skinny
You gave me seagulls by an autumn lake;
a young and wounded adolescent heart,
a life which nearly stopped before the start,
whose steadfast love cut through the pain and ache.
You gave me independence from the fake,
and sun on Texas beaches, by your art,
or love between two souls who will not part
until the stars the very skies forsake.
But with the pleasure of your gifts I found
a hint of wry, ironic, laughter, too,
and if I listened keenly, then the sound
of humor, fear or sorrow filtered through
the satisfying slice of life profound
which only could have been portrayed by you.
Parker Owens
End of Days
I can’t imagine the pain you feel
Your bravery in the face of that wall
Inspires me, brings tears to my eyes
I pray that you never will fall
One day though it comes to us all
We slowly become part of the past
Tears fall on graves of thousands
Each generation remembers the last
Life is short, it’s always too fast
Time is a constant companion
Each passing day reminding us
That the end has already begun
But it’s what you do before the coffin
Between the beginning and end
Live each day with grace and joy
For it’s to oblivion we all must wend
Mikiesboy
(Tim Landon)[4]
Two Cinquains
Dinner:
rare characters
conversing at the table,
swapping delicious tales about their
maker;
like wine,
each successive vignette invites
another superb draft,
recalling their
stories.
Sublime
the starlit dust
made into mind and soul,
far greater than any product
or sum;
from you
timeless light flowed widely outwards,
image and substance of
flames burning to
ashes.
Parker Owens
There once was a dragon we wanted to love,
As special to us, as each day was long.
We thought him immortal, but we were wrong
As he haunted us here, now he does from above
We feel blessed and grateful he came our way
My friend, we hope always, your winds blow leeward
And that you’re now at peace and safely anchored
Free from pain and shielded from life’s fray
His wit was engaging but with sharp prickly corners
Oft times he’d say, a poet he was not
But his writing proved different with verse finely wrought
Those words now spoken and sung by his mourners
His poesy and stories were each so clever
Humour and charm oozed from each written word
Those magical green scales shone and glittered
And will n’er dim through his eternal slumber
Mikiesboy
(Tim Landon)[5]
…for the living…
On thick slices of homemade bread
I spread luscious strawberry jam,
adding whipping cream from a can
and slices of the red berries.
To my lips with thoughts of David,
I'll enjoy this humblest dessert,
knowing with his love in my life
I feast better than any king.
AC Benus
The Seagull
(a spoken-word poem)
I watch him cruise and dip – this seagull
Then he comes to a rest on the dock piling, in front of my kitchen window.
I am reminded of your David
how he sought solace
and found Sigmund at the lake.
The memory overwhelms and
I find myself wishing for just one more day
for a rewind
for an earlier time for you
for the answers to be not what they were.
And – time ticks away, but the seagull, he stands still.
The whisper of a breeze blows by flurrying his feathers – and
I let my thoughts weave a pattern
through your stories
our short conversations
your art
your sometimes snarky reviews
your poems
your passion
your nautical love
your dedication
your gracious spirit
the gift of your friendship
Each memory braided in bold hues
erasing the sadness and filling the empty spaces left behind by your absence
Though I’ve never seen it, I know
that your smile would be warmth and sunshine, and your eyes –
well, they would reflect your heart.
Time’s up – the seagull shifts – head cocked to the side
wings spread wide preparing to lift off
Tell him I miss him I say aloud and – immediately I feel foolish.
But, as I watch that gull glide away
I hope – I hope
that he heard it
that somehow you know.
Defiance19
(Def)
hic non dracones sunt
I grieve for the voice no longer heard
I grieve for the book that has no word
I grieve for the well that stopped flowing
I grieve for the coal that ended glowing
I grieve for the sentences that have an end
I grieve for the meaning I cannot comprehend
I grieve for the author’s unwritten page
I grieve for the actor who's left the stage
I grieve for the words I search for in vain
I grieve for the dragon so unfairly slain
Yet David and Twoey and Gary and Toph
as his immortal children are alive while I mourn.
We are the heirs of eternal words.
J.HunterDunn
(Peter)
~
[1] Dragon's Heaven by Drew Espinosa: This poem was inspired by the caption on this image: https://www.gayauthors.org/gallery/image/11835-gliding/
And the setting by this image: https://www.gayauthors.org/gallery/image/11838-off-maine/
[2] Our Father? by Mikiesboy was previously posted here: https://www.gayauthors.org/story/mikiesboy/timmysjournal/54
[3] Ghosts by Mikiesboy was previously posted here: https://www.gayauthors.org/story/mikiesboy/timmysjournal/53
[4] End of Days by Mikiesboy was previously posted here: https://www.gayauthors.org/story/mikiesboy/timmysjournal/54
[5] There once was a dragon we wanted to love by Mikiesboy: I wanted to write something for our friend Skinny Dragon—something to remember him. Remember his love of sailing, his references to his sharp scales. So often he’d say to me he was a terrible poet—he wasn’t. He said he couldn’t review poetry either, but his reviews were sweet and insightful and never failed to make me think. I hope this does him justice.
Miss you my friend …
https://www.gayauthors.org/blogs/entry/16575-skinnys-sorry/
If you would like to participate and add your own tribute piece to hic sunt dracones, please email or PM me. I suspect we will be posting another chapter (or more) as time goes by.
Thanks for reading.
- 18
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