Laughter, Love & Lust
Those Whom the Gods
What Is a Poem?
To Raise a Child
Ship of Life
Apology
Arise, My Muse
Where Is It Written?
Too Proud to Weep
Englightenment
Evolution
Old Wounds
Serenity
Footprints
Life: A Play
Puffs of Smoke
What Is Wrong
A Rondeau 
   for John Doe
Sacrifice
When
Senescence
You, You, You
Socrates on Trial
Variations on a
   Common Theme
Modern Verse
Travelers
Twitching Curtains
Schariar's Soliloquy
Advice to Damsels
On Your Wedding Day
Nightlife
When I Drink
The Ballad of
   Panhandler Joe




SCHARIAR'S SOLILOQUY
by John T. Baker
A thousand nights of love, now I'm alone, Awaiting once again this sorceress Who weaves about my sanguinary throne Her tapestry of oral artfulness. The tales she tells the stars stoop down to hear; The soaring larks in awe suspend their song; Afflictions flee, vexations disappear The while her magic doth the spell prolong. How oft I've sworn to take her life, and yet Each time I am diverted from my vow; Some day I'll hurl her from the parapet - But hark . . . she comes . . . I cannot do it now. For how can I aspire to be a god In Samarkand without Scheherezade!

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