The Book Of Counted Sorrows
A collection of Poetry From Macros's Favorite book, The Book Of Counted Sorrows which is a collection of poetry from another plain, possibly meckanis, the author is known only as Dean Koonts
The Poetry within is in allot of places morbid and scary but this only depicts Macros's world as he see's it in his life as he tries to conform and be accepted within the world as a good honest person despite his demonic heritage, Macros's Adamite strength hope in the possibility of a bright future is represented in a few of the less cynical poems.
Life is a gift that must be given
back
-Book of counted sorrows-
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THE BOOK OF COUNTED SORROWS

Poetry By Dean.R Koonts
*
All of us are
travelers lost,
our tickets arranged at a cost
unknown but beyond our
means.
This odd itinerary of scenes
--enigmatic, strange,
unreal--
leaves us unsure how to feel.
No postmortem journey is
rife
with more mystery than life.
*
Tremulous skeins of destiny
flutter so ethereally
around
me--but then I feel
its embrace is that of steel.
*
On
the road that I have taken,
one day, walking, I awaken,
amazed to see
where I have come,
where I'm going, where I'm from.
This is not the path I thought.
This is not the place I
sought.
This is not the dream I bought,
just a fever of fate I've
caught.
I'll change highways in a while,
at the crossroads, one
more mile.
My path is lit by my own fire.
I'm going only where I
desire.
On the road that I have taken,
one day, walking, I
awaken.
One day, walking, I awaken,
on the road that I have taken.
*
The
sky is deep, the sky is dark,
The light of stars is so damn stark.
When I
look up, I fill with fear.
If all we have is what lies here,
this lonely
world, this troubled place,
then cold dead stars and empty space...
Well,
I see no reason to persevere,
no reason to laugh or shed a tear,
no reason
to sleep or ever to wake,
no promises to keep, and none to make.
And so at
night I still raise my eyes
to study the clear but mysterious skies--
that
arch above us, as cold as stone.
Are you there, God? Are we alone?
*
Under the winter moon's pale light,
across the cold and starry
night,
from snowy mountains soaring high
to ocean shores echoes the
cry.
From barren sands to verdant fields,
from city street to lonely
wealds,
cries the tortured human heart,
seeking solace, wisdom, a
chart
by which to understand its plight
under the winter moon's pale
light.
Dawn is unable to fade the night.
Must we live ever in the
blight
under the winter moon's cold light,
lost in loneliness, hate, and
fright,
last night, tonight, tomorrow night
under the winter moon's bleak
light?
*
Hope is the destination that we seek.
Love is the road that
leads to hope.
Courage is the motor that drives us.
We travel out of
darkness into faith.
*
At the point where hope and reason part,
lies the spot where
madness gets a start.
Hope to make the world kinder and free--
but flowers
of hope root in reality.
No peaceful bed exists for lamb or lion,
unless on some
world out beyond Orion.
Do not instruct the owls to spare the mice.
Owls
acting as owls must is not a vice.
Storms do not respond to heartless pleas.
All the words
of men can't calm the seas.
Nature--always beneficial and
cruel--
won't change for a wise man or a fool.
Mankind shares all Nature's imperfections,
clearly
visible to casual inspections.
Resisting betterment is the human
trait.
The ideal of utopia is our tragic fate.
*
Winter that year was strange and gray.
The damp wind smelled
of Apocalypse,
and morning skies had a peculiar way
of slipping cat-quick
into midnight.
*
Those who would banish the sin of greed
embrace the sin of
envy as their creed.
Those who seek to banish envy as well,
only draw
elaborate new maps of hell.
Those with passion to change the world,
look on
themselves as saints, as pearls,
and by the launching of noble
endeavor,
flee dreaded introspection forever.
*
Rush headlong and hard at life
Or just sit at home and
wait.
All things good and all the wrong
Will come right to you: it's
fate.
Hear the music, dance if you can.
Dress in rags or wear
your jewels.
Drink your choice, nurse your fear
In this old honkytonk of
fools.
*
Living in the modern age,
death for virtue is the wage.
So
it seems in darker hours.
Evil wins, kindness cowers.
Ruled by violence and vice
we all stand upon thin
ice.
Are we brave or are we mice,
here upon such thin, thin ice?
Dare we linger, dare we skate?
Dare we laugh or
celebrate,
knowing we may strain the ice?
Preserve the ice at any
price?
*
When tempest-tossed,
embrace chaos.
*
Faraway in China,
the people sometimes say,
life is often
bitter
and all too seldom gray.
Bitter as dragon tears,
great cascades
of sorrow
flood down all the years,
drowning our tomorrows.
Faraway in China,
the people always say,
life is
sometimes joyous
if all too often gray.
Although life is seasoned
with
bitter dragon tears,
seasoning is just a spice
within our brew of
years.
Bad times are only rice,
tears are one more flavor,
that gives
us sustenance
sometimes we can savor.
*
In
the fields of life, a harvest
sometimes comes far out of season,
when we
thought the earth was old
and could see no earthly reason
to rise for work
at break of dawn,
and put our muscles to the test.
With winter here and
autumn gone,
it just seems best to rest, to rest.
But under winter fields
so cold,
wait the dormant seeds of seasons
unborn, and so the heart does
hold
hope that heals all bitter lesions.
In the fields of life, a
harvest.
*
Life is a gift that must be given
back
and joy should arise from its possession.
It's too damned short, and
that's a fact.
Hard to accept, this earthly procession
to final darkness
is a journey done,
circle completed, work of art sublime,
a sweet melodic
rhyme, a battle won.
*
Death is no fearsome mystery.
He is well known to thee and
me.
He hath no secrets he can keep
to trouble any good man's sleep.
Turn not thy face from Death away.
Care not he takes
our breath away.
Fear him not, he's not thy master,
rushing at thee
faster, faster.
Not thy master but servant to
the Maker of thee, what or
Who
created Death, created thee
--and is the only mystery.
*
Every eye sees its own special vision;
every ear hears a most
different song.
In each man's troubled heart, an incision
would reveal a
unique, shameful wrong.
Stranger fiends hide here in human guise
than reside in
the valleys of Hell.
But goodness, kindness and love arise
in the heart of
the poor beast, as well.
*
Where eerie figures caper
to some midnight music
that only
they can hear.
*
Nowhere can a secret keep
always secret, dark and
deep,
half so well as in the past,
buried deep to last, to last.
Keep it in your own dark heart,
otherwise the rumors
start.
After many years have buried
secrets over which you
worried,
no confidant can then betray
all the words you didn't
say.
Only you can then exhume
secrets safe within the
tomb
of memory, of memory,
within the tomb of memory.
*
In
the real world
as in dreams,
nothing is quite
what it seems.
*
Vibrations in a wire.
Ice crystals
in a beating
heart.
Cold fire.
A mind's frigidity:
frozen steel,
dark rage,
morbidity.
Cold fire.
Defense against
a cruel life
death and
strife:
Cold fire.
*
Life without meaning
cannot be borne.
We find a
mission
to which we're sworn
--or answer the call
of Death's dark
horn.
Without a gleaning
of purpose in life,
we have no vision,
we
live in strife,
--or let blood fall
on a suicide knife.
*
Night has patterns that can be read
less by the living than by
the dead.
*
A
gasp of breath,
a sudden death:
the tale begun.
*
To
know the darkness is to love the light,
to welcome dawn and fear the coming
night.
*
Night can be sweet as a kiss,
though not a night like
this.
*
Pestilence, disease, and war
haunt this sorry place.
And
nothing lasts forever;
that's a truth we have to face.
We spend vast energy and time
plotting death for one
another.
No one, nowhere, is ever safe.
Not father, child, or
mother.
*
Is
the end of the world a-coming?
Is that the devil they hear humming?
Are
those doomsday bells a-ringing?
Is that the Devil they hear singing?
Or are their dark fears exaggerated?
Are these
doom-criers addlepated?
Those who fear the coming of all Hells
are those who
should be feared themselves.
*
There's no escape
From death's embrace,
though you lead it
on
a merry chase.
The dogs of death
enjoy the chase.
Just see the
smile
on each hound's face.
The chase can't last;
the dogs must feed.
It will
come to pass
with terrifying speed.
*
The
hounds, the hounds
come baying at his heels.
The hounds! The
hounds!
The breath of death he feels.
*
Is
there some meaning to this life?
What purpose lies behind the
strife?
Whence do we come, where are we bound?
These cold questions echo
and resound
through each day, each lonely night.
We long to find the
splendid light
that will cast a revelatory beam
upon the meaning of the
human dream.
*
Courage, love, friendship,
compassion, and empathy
lift us
above the simple beasts
and define humanity.
*
Something moves within the night
that is not good and is not
right.
*
The
whisper of the dusk
is night shedding its husk.
*
Holy men tell us life is a mytery.
They embrace that concept
happily.
But some mysteries bite and bark
and come to get you in the
dark.
*
A rain of shadows, a storm, a squall!
Daylight retreats; night
swallows all.
If good is bright, if evil is gloom,
high evil walls the
world entombs.
Now comes the end, the drear, Darkfall.
*
Darkness devours every shining
day.
Darkness demands and always has its way.
Darkness listens, watches,
waits.
Darkness claims the day and celebrates.
Sometimes in silence
darkness comes.
Sometimes with a gleeful banging of drums.
*
We can embrace love; it's not too
late.
Why do we sleep, instead, with hate?
Belief requires no
suspension
to see that Hell is our invention.
We make Hell real; we stoke
its fires.
And in its flames our hope expires.
Heaven, too, is merely our
creation.
We can grant ourselves out own salvation.
All that's required is
imagination.
*
Evil is a faceless
stranger,
living in a distant neighborhood.
Evil has a wholesome, hometown
face,
with merry eyes and an open smile.
Evil walks among us, wearing a
mask
which looks like all our faces.