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Home Poetry Culture

‘Hypnosis’ by Judy Koren

November 7, 2021
in Culture, Pantoum, Poetry
A A
6

.

Hypnosis

Come over here, then, and sit in this chair,
Gaze at this candle-flame, empty your mind,
No need to worry, no need to beware—
I am so patient, so caring and kind.

Gaze at this candle-flame, empty your mind
Watch the flame flicker entrancing your soul,
I am so patient, so caring and kind:
You will obey me now, I’m in control.

Watch the flame flicker, entrancing your soul:
No need to worry, no need to beware.
You will obey me, now I’m in control—
Come over here then and sit in this chair.

.

.

Judy Koren, from Haifa, Israel, has a degree in English literature and spent most of her career as a freelance information analyst. Her poems have appeared in literary magazines in Israel and abroad, including The Deronda Review, the Voices Israel Anthology, Better Than Starbucks; Blue Unicorn; Grand Little Things; Lighten Up Online; The Orchards Poetry Journal; The Road Not Taken and The Taj Mahal Review. She is currently President of the Israeli English-language poetry society, Voices Israel.

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Comments 6

  1. Joe Tessitore says:
    4 years ago

    Yet another chilling description of the world we live in and our malevolent, Mesmerizing powers that be.
    Very well done.

    Reply
  2. Joseph S. Salemi says:
    4 years ago

    Charles Poyen, who first introduced Mesmerism to the United States in the 1830s, was open about its potential to govern the masses. As Clare Coffey writes in a review of a book about the subject, Poyen “proposed that credulity could be used in controlling America’s burgeoning factory worker population.”

    Today, with a totally partisan Mainstream Media, mega-corporate censorship, a largely leftist academia, and Orwellian Groupthink, they’ve gone far beyond hypnotism.

    All of this is a way to keep despised subject populations under the boot of a self-appointed meritocratic elite.

    Reply
  3. Julian D. Woodruff says:
    4 years ago

    Good and creepy, Ms Koren.
    A question that’s ever enduring
    Where mass management is the goal:
    Why is this so much more alluring
    Than summoning some self-control?

    Reply
  4. C.B. Anderson says:
    4 years ago

    I’m not quite sure why, but I loved this venture into fluid metrics. But for one thing, The initial “Come over … and sit in this chair” was creepy enough, but the repetition of the sentence in the final line sealed the deal. This was a very well put together poem, and as a contributor to The Deronda Review, you must already know how exacting the editors there are.

    Reply
  5. Paul Freeman says:
    4 years ago

    I’m sure I can see that candle.

    The Mesmerising power of poetry.

    Reply
  6. Susan Jarvis Bryant says:
    4 years ago

    Judy, I love a pantoum, and the subject matter fits the form perfectly… and you’ve pulled it off magnificently. Thank you!

    Reply

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