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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
    <link><![CDATA[http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/letters-from-the-week-of-november-25/Content?oid=2200844&show=comments#3151347]]></link>

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    <author><![CDATA[Guiseppi Gedaci]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[This is Guiseppi Gedaci's interpretation, through poetry, of Monet’s painting. It is at the Nelson.
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          Guiseppi Gedaci]]>
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    <pubDate>Mon, 18 Feb 2013 15:11:34 -0600</pubDate>
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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
    <link><![CDATA[http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/letters-from-the-week-of-november-25/Content?oid=2200844&show=comments#3113663]]></link>

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    <author><![CDATA[concerned]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[I don't know whats gotton into me but lately I have been more concerned with the militarization of our local police departments. I know every police dept. in America goes to the same conventions which gets them on the same thought wave for training, equipment and whatever can be bought.
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          concerned]]>
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    <pubDate>Wed, 09 Jan 2013 10:55:00 -0600</pubDate>
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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
    <link><![CDATA[http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/letters-from-the-week-of-november-25/Content?oid=2200844&show=comments#3100325]]></link>

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    <author><![CDATA[Tom Zart]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[POETS ARE THE BELL RINGERS of THE SOUL<br>
<br>
<br>
Poets as a rule are high on adventure<br>
Like wondering bards or prophets today.<br>
Embracing hearts and minds with wisdom<br>
Casting through verse their visions at play.<br>
<br>
Poets have their dreams and their nightmares<br>
Of love, life, death, faith and war.<br>
They feel the pain and tragedy of others<br>
Even those they’ve never met before.<br>
<br>
They fan the flames of human compassion<br>
With their stories of the failings of man.<br>
Professing to follow a higher power<br>
As they recruit whomever they can.<br>
<br>
Poets are the bell ringers of the soul<br>
As they depict the past, the present and beyond.<br>
They sound their alarm of what lies ahead<br>
As the missteps of man live on.<br>
<br>
<br>
POETS AND POEMS<br>
<br>
<br>
Poetry blossomed long before Shakespeare, Milton or Poe.<br>
It thrived prior to Solomon and the languages of old.<br>
Poetry today offers itself more often in the form of music<br>
Then in sonnets and poems as the legends of life unfold.<br>
<br>
Man has his fear of loneliness, death and the hereafter<br>
As authors compose his doom, desperation and glory.<br>
All hear the words of both good and evil<br>
With too many that fall for the wrong story.<br>
<br>
The falsehoods of life find it hard to hide<br>
From the word of God’s poets and poems.<br>
Sharing their joy, frustration and sorrow<br>
By voice, Internet, radio, or books, in our homes.<br>
<br>
Poets and poems help man become more human<br>
As the storms of life proliferate their toll.<br>
Poets and poems were put here for a reason<br>
To help tame the savage that dwells in our soul.<br>
<br>
<br>
GOD’S MOST HUMBLE POET<br>
<br>
<br>
I’m God’s most humble poet<br>
Whose poems have meter and rhyme.<br>
Stories of love, faith, hate, honor and duty,<br>
Obedience, war, heroes, history and crime.<br>
<br>
I’ve performed my gift on T.V. and radio<br>
Before millions I’ve never met.<br>
Preached my praise of God and country<br>
With 481 poems on the net.<br>
<br>
Satan’s soldiers, shepherds and bards<br>
Spew forth their foulness and grief.<br>
They attack the joy and goodness of man<br>
Dishonoring life, family, country and belief.<br>
<br>
Prospering through work, love and conviction<br>
Enables us to remain whole and how we should be.<br>
Fortifying our soul with fulfillment of faith<br>
Lets our worst tribulations be shouldered by Thee.<br>
<br>
Moses, Samson, David, Solomon and Jonah<br>
All failed God in their own human way.<br>
He chose to forgive them and bless their powers<br>
So they might dwell in hearts of man today.<br>
<br>
Without God’s grace, wisdom and glorious domain<br>
There’s no doubt all would soon cease to survive.<br>
Through purpose, morals and Christian conviction<br>
We are able to transform and keep hope alive.<br>
<br>
<br>
EDGAR ALLAN POE<br>
<br>
<br>
One of America’s most famous writers<br>
Was born in Boston, January of 1809.<br>
Both his parents were failing actors<br>
And his father was drunk most the time.<br>
<br>
In 1810 Edgar’s dad disappeared<br>
His mother died soon after.<br>
A childless couple took him in<br>
Raising him with love and laughter.<br>
<br>
Edgar had a Negro nurse<br>
Who brought him to her quarters.<br>
There he listened to ghost stories<br>
Far beyond Earthly borders.<br>
<br>
The strange tales he later wrote<br>
May have come from her inspiration.<br>
The words she used to describe death<br>
Gave Poe his taste for sensation.<br>
<br>
The Allan’s moved to England<br>
Where Poe attended boarding schools.<br>
There’s no doubt his time spent there<br>
Sharpened his skills as tools.<br>
<br>
Returning to Richmond and back in school<br>
He began to compose new verse.<br>
Heavy debts forced him to leave college<br>
As his life took a turn for the worse.<br>
<br>
Poe caught a ride on a coal barge to Boston<br>
Where he was unable to find employment.<br>
A young printer agreed to publish his poems<br>
Giving him hope and enjoyment.<br>
<br>
Penniless, Poe enlisted in the army<br>
And was accepted to West Point in 29.<br>
Poe couldn’t stand not being a writer<br>
Self-imposing his dismissal from The Line.<br>
<br>
Afterward he became an editor and critic<br>
And married his cousin who was thirteen.<br>
Six years latter he discovered she was dying<br>
Suffering once more the unforeseen.<br>
<br>
He went through periods of insanity<br>
Caused by grieving and functional fall.<br>
He smoked opium and drank too much<br>
Till at his doorstep death would call.<br>
<br>
Edgar Allan Poe the master of verse<br>
Still lives in our hearts today<br>
Famous for The Raven and other great works<br>
May his soul rest in peace we pray.<br>
<br>
<br>
GOD’S POETS<br>
<br>
<br>
The prize jewels of any nation<br>
Are the philosophers of the heart.<br>
How they think is universal<br>
For it’s God who makes them so smart.<br>
<br>
Most poets tell the truth of life <br>
Though they may wrap it in beauty.<br>
It's their passion, not their purpose<br>
To compose is but their duty.<br>
<br>
Poets have no reason to lie<br>
When the truth is always so clear.<br>
All that others say and do<br>
Is but food for the poet's ear.<br>
<br>
One merit of a poet's work<br>
Which most cannot deny.<br>
They say more and in fewer words<br>
To illuminate you and I.<br>
<br>
God sent His poets down to Earth<br>
With words of wisdom and of worth.<br>
That they might touch the souls of men<br>
And bring them back to Him again.<br>
<br>
<br>
A GOOD POEM<br>
<br>
<br>
A good poem paints a picture<br>
For both your heart and brain.<br>
It doesn't need a second chance<br>
To make its meaning plain.<br>
<br>
A good poem is like the flower<br>
The lily or the rose.<br>
God plants it in a poet's brain<br>
And there its beauty grows.<br>
<br>
A good poem like a cardinal<br>
Is pregnant with song<br>
You can’t help but hear its message<br>
As it sings what's right or wrong.<br>
<br>
A good poem helps us remember<br>
What the joys of life are for<br>
It makes us want to love someone<br>
Till death comes knocking at our door.<br>
<br>
<br>
POETRY<br>
<br>
<br>
God has always had his poets<br>
Who He watches with love from space.<br>
But Satan has his poets too<br>
Who try to lead us from our grace.<br>
<br>
King Solomon was a poet<br>
Who spoke of love, life, death and war.<br>
That lips were like threads of scarlet<br>
And that breasts were roses and more.<br>
<br>
The wild birds sing and flowers bloom<br>
As clouds form figures in the sky.<br>
But only humans will write poems<br>
That shall last long after they die.<br>
<br>
The eldest sister of all arts<br>
Which some have called the Devils wine.<br>
Poetry is but pure passion<br>
To stimulate the heart and mind.<br>
<br>
<br>
POET'S WIFE<br>
<br>
<br>
My reciting seemed to delight her<br>
Though for me it was love at first sight.<br>
When she found out I was a poet<br>
She asked, what kind do you write?<br>
<br>
Love poems, mostly, I told her<br>
While we walked alone in the park<br>
Love's fever became even warmer<br>
As two shadows embraced in the dark<br>
<br>
I'll always remember when first we met<br>
I whispered a poem in her ear.<br>
Ever since then how happy I've been<br>
And other women I've no need to be near.<br>
<br>
They say that poets are divine<br>
Though my wife would argue, that’s not true!<br>
For, whenever I lose my direction<br>
It’s she who tells me what to do.<br>
<br>
Where the city ends and the suburbs begin<br>
We've built our home beneath the sky.<br>
We’ll raise our babies with truth and love<br>
Till one or both of us die.<br>
<br>
A verse a day, I always say<br>
Helps keep lawyers from my door<br>
For when I'm paid for what I write<br>
My wife loves me a little more.<br>
<br>
<br>
ALL POETS SERVE A MASTER<br>
<br>
<br>
Most poets have a bit of Solomon<br>
Shakespeare and Poe within.<br>
Constantly eager to share their visions<br>
Of love, life, joy and sin.<br>
<br>
Some guzzle whiskey<br>
Some sip wine<br>
Some prefer cola<br>
And feel just fine.<br>
<br>
Some smoke pot<br>
Or suck cigarettes<br>
Some abuse drugs<br>
With lifetime regrets.<br>
<br>
Some attend church<br>
And sing of God<br>
While others make fun<br>
And call them odd.<br>
<br>
All have a purpose<br>
Which drives them to compose.<br>
All serve a master<br>
Who by free will, they chose.<br>
<br>
<br>
DIVINE INTERVENTION<br>
<br>
<br>
I never write a poem<br>
That doesn’t write itself.<br>
I catch a buzz and come alive<br>
Like a puppet off it’s shelf.<br>
<br>
Hearing many voices<br>
Whose words are never mine.<br>
My pen becomes a painter’s brush<br>
Forming visions on a line.<br>
<br>
I seem to be a better person<br>
When it’s time to sit down and write.<br>
A higher power guides my hand<br>
Sharing wisdom by day and night.<br>
<br>
People born to create<br>
Have no choice but to perform.<br>
It’s the rush of sharing their gift<br>
That elevates them from the norm.<br>
<br>
What would our world become<br>
Without intervention from above?<br>
Angry beings in a revolving cage<br>
With no sense of passion or love.<br>
<br>
<br>
THE POWER of POETRY<br>
<br>
<br>
Poetry is the lighthouse of life<br>
Guiding the lost from a stormy sea.<br>
Without it’s presence darkness prevails<br>
Keeping us from all we can be.<br>
<br>
Poems are used to convey passion<br>
By poets of both good and evil mood.<br>
Some are hateful others loving<br>
Sharing thoughts to be consumed as food.<br>
<br>
Verse can lead us to glory or doom<br>
As we partake with others within.<br>
Depicting our past, present and future<br>
With words of man’s grace or sin.<br>
<br>
People write poetry because they have no choice<br>
Answering to the call of their gift.<br>
Where some tend to pull their readers down<br>
Others compose to give them a lift.<br>
<br>
Always remember the power of poetry<br>
Is used by both Heaven and hell.<br>
It’s up to us to choose our pleasure<br>
As poetry remains alive and well.<br>
<br>
<br>
WHISPERS<br>
<br>
<br>
Poetry consumed is where wisdom begins<br>
As we heed to the whispers of the heart.<br>
It’s easy to blame others for our dismay<br>
When from ignorance we refuse to part.<br>
<br>
Verse is a beacon of hope in the darkness<br>
To help us navigate the pitfalls of life.<br>
Far more tend to write it, than read it<br>
That’s why there’s endless conflict and strife.<br>
<br>
I write poems to help fuel the light<br>
By sharing what God has given me.<br>
With stories of love, life, war and more<br>
Where heroes pray on bended knee.<br>
<br>
<br>
MASTERS of VERSE<br>
<br>
<br>
Poetry is one of man’s oldest arts<br>
Practiced long before words of print.<br>
Every race had its masters of verse<br>
In caves, huts, cabins or tent.<br>
<br>
Stories in verse were handed down<br>
From one generation to another.<br>
The first told of love, war and more<br>
And how to survive each other.<br>
<br>
As man became more civilized<br>
He could not help but wonder within.<br>
Verse then took on a deeper meaning<br>
With stories of faith, superstition and sin.<br>
<br>
The act of reciting became in demand<br>
As verse began to advance<br>
Every tribe, city, town and village<br>
Had someone who gave words romance.<br>
<br>
Today’s poets are on the World Wide Web<br>
Though many seem spiritually ill.<br>
Thank Heaven for all who still have God’s gift<br>
To compose, teach, comfort and fulfill.<br>
<br>
<br>
MY FAVORITE POET<br>
<br>
<br>
My favorite poet is “God”<br>
Who gives Earth its rhythm and rhyme.<br>
Not pied pipers of misguided souls<br>
Who promote distrust, hatred and crime.<br>
<br>
Poetry is nature serenading in song<br>
The peaceful roar of the oceans waves.<br>
The wind through the trees and over the hills<br>
And the flowers in the fields by the graves.<br>
<br>
The sound of rain as it waters the thirsty<br>
The songs of children at play in the park.<br>
The far off rumble of trains or thunder<br>
As they pass through the night in the dark.<br>
<br>
The joy of our babies first words and steps<br>
The passion of life with its heroes and clowns.<br>
The on going struggle to survive our sins<br>
As we proliferate in hamlets and towns.<br>
<br>
My favorite poet is our Father of above<br>
Who was first to know us before birth.<br>
His poetry prolongs everything we love<br>
As His deliverance gives life its worth.<br>
<br>
<br>
THE POWER of WORDS<br>
<br>
<br>
Words are the most powerful tools used by man<br>
As hearts and souls reach for one another.<br>
Sharing feelings of fear, wisdom and joy<br>
Or our love for a significant other.<br>
<br>
Where would we be without words<br>
Which inspire, unite and motivate.<br>
Songs, poems, stories, blogs, books<br>
Wars, religion, love, lust and hate.<br>
<br>
Jesus preached words to the multitudes<br>
And nourish their hunger within.<br>
The stories we tell portray our spirit<br>
As examples of weakness, triumph or sin.<br>
<br>
When we fail to control the rage of our thoughts<br>
What is easy to say becomes hard to forgive.<br>
Words are visions which portray our intent<br>
The better we communicate, the better we live.<br>
<br>
<br>
AMERICAN SOLDIER POEM<br>
<br>
<br>
It’s not a priest that gives us our freedom of religion<br>
And it’s not a reporter that gives us our freedom of voice.<br>
It’s not any judge, lawyer, politician, or teacher<br>
But the blood of a soldier that has sacrificed by choice.<br>
<br>
Our soldiers line up to be remembered <br>
As the best of the best at their job. <br>
They wish to be needed and depended on <br>
To save all we love from the mob.
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          <a href="http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/Profile?oid=3082504">Tom Zart</a>]]>
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    <pubDate>Tue, 25 Dec 2012 07:18:03 -0600</pubDate>
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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
    <link><![CDATA[http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/letters-from-the-week-of-november-25/Content?oid=2200844&show=comments#2911204]]></link>

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    <author><![CDATA[Bob Cutler]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[I want to put the word out (Around KC especially) that Im looking for the main part of that EV/Tapco catalina series mixing board that I had at the Outhouse (Ive got the 8-channel expander part) I think the main board was 12 channels.<br>
Its kind of a cool old board, but not really worth anything, Id just like to have it back....you know, cause i dont have enough stuff in my garage. I'd be willing to pay a LITTLE something for it.
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          <a href="http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/Profile?oid=2661059">Bob Cutler</a>]]>
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    <pubDate>Thu, 14 Jun 2012 19:42:03 -0500</pubDate>
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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
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    <author><![CDATA[Mick Bradford]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[I like everything about the pitch except what is printed. its like the menu at Wendy's except Wendy's has better fish and better mayo
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          <a href="http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/Profile?oid=2752758">Mick Bradford</a>]]>
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    <pubDate>Fri, 20 Jan 2012 22:18:21 -0600</pubDate>
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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
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    <author><![CDATA[Severin]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[Wow...
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          <a href="http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/Profile?oid=2618815">Severin</a>]]>
    </description>
    <pubDate>Thu, 15 Sep 2011 14:46:34 -0500</pubDate>
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    <title><![CDATA[Re: Letters from the week of November 25]]></title>

    
    <link><![CDATA[http://www.pitch.com/kansascity/letters-from-the-week-of-november-25/Content?oid=2200844&show=comments#2579220]]></link>

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    <author><![CDATA[Ronald F. Dowell]]></author>
    <description>
      
      <![CDATA[Death to the Republic, long live the democracy. Face it, the rich made this problem and they should be held accountable, <br>
to repay what they have stolen.
        
        <br />
        Posted by 
        
          Ronald F. Dowell]]>
    </description>
    <pubDate>Sun, 07 Aug 2011 19:59:21 -0500</pubDate>
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