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Mister_Moribund
49/M
Let us ****** the world together You and I While there's still So much time Together we could put out the sun, Spread a blanket on the precipice And say a quick prayer For no particular reason at all Together We could finally enjoy the silence That was for so long Denied us all While the cities slowly crumble Together We could write love poems in the dark for this dying earth One last toast to the dregs For oblivion Before the stars go out And our eyes close forever As if to say We were our own lights anyway Yeah We could ****** the world together And give birth To a universe of our own making Before the stars finally go out One last time Like drawing circles in the sea's sand Or growling in the shadows At tossed meat And random phrases Or one last beer For the meaningless excellence Of it all Yeah We could do all of that Anyway While the cities slowly burn out And the sea's stars crumble Before the world that would be murdered Murders itself Anyway While we make the only toast That ever mattered Anyway We, our own lights, anyway As if to say That birth and death were the same thing Anyway
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 9:02 PM UTC
Let Us ****** The World Together
O People of time’s salutations, my love is gathering seashells by that hilled windy gathering place the sea (like dim worlds vexed with sound in the stuck conch, to undo this day the scaly wrongs that scuttle in the soul’s sea); for gull-winged griefs that drop their vowels on spat hills of light, my love is gathering portents like sea-made money for the truths found there in untruth, and hearing them there, I see them there: Summer folk that come from cold to these great gathering hills and find one breasted ounce of ocean silver to keep like crying know that taut pants cringing came, the color of kisses, scattered on the sand grains like arms and legs. O People of time’s salutations, this shell and ear will bray there for the weeped hills that leaving love labored. Folk of autumn come from fear, wracked by youth, grow old there where the hills recede — gather dust of water to glow the sun over with knowing that came too late. Sad gone days lean to and fro in the salutating tide that tugs the land for lack of care. O People of time’s salutations, this conch and ear will hear them scratch as the days go out to sea. The morning folk that come from shadow gather wand watered proverbs in the still light. Great hills for these mad people who froth like waves for the sayings of ages. O People of time’s salutations, though eternities implode like new suns in their slow gatherings, shell and breath can not blow them out beyond sound’s ill reach where the sea goes endlessly rocking and mocking their finitudes. The folk of evening come from labor, their wasted souls on hill and sullied waves dropped like shells in wrong places. Muscles matted on sanddollar days yield no virtue’s wages. Work is a shark’s tooth for the weary. O People of time’s salutations, shell and ear will hear them breathe though the sun going down can not. Shell and ear for these splay sounds that daunt and dabble (by a sea of hilly days go on). But to pity and praise this great endeavour, my love is seashell gathering by that same great sea while the waves go pithily out on this hill and moneyed water like thoughts and implications. O People of time’s salutations, this conch and ear will trumpet eternities in the long-winded tides that walk there.
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 8:42 PM UTC
O People Of Time's Salutations
O People of time’s salutations, my love is gathering seashells by that hilled windy gathering place the sea (like dim worlds vexed with sound in the stuck conch, to undo this day the scaly wrongs that scuttle in the soul’s sea); for gull-winged griefs that drop their vowels on spat hills of light, my love is gathering portents like sea-made money for the truths found there in untruth, and hearing them there, I see them there: Summer folk that come from cold to these great gathering hills and find one breasted ounce of ocean silver to keep like crying know that taut pants cringing came, the color of kisses, scattered on the sand grains like arms and legs. O People of time’s salutations, this shell and ear will bray there for the weeped hills that leaving love labored. Folk of autumn come from fear, wracked by youth, grow old there where the hills recede — gather dust of water to glow the sun over with knowing that came too late. Sad gone days lean to and fro in the salutating tide that tugs the land for lack of care. O People of time’s salutations, this conch and ear will hear them scratch as the days go out to sea. The morning folk that come from shadow gather wand watered proverbs in the still light. Great hills for these mad people who froth like waves for the sayings of ages. O People of time’s salutations, though eternities implode like new suns in their slow gatherings, shell and breath can not blow them out beyond sound’s ill reach where the sea goes endlessly rocking and mocking their finitudes. The folk of evening come from labor, their wasted souls on hill and sullied waves dropped like shells in wrong places. Muscles matted on sanddollar days yield no virtue’s wages. Work is a shark’s tooth for the weary. O People of time’s salutations, shell and ear will hear them breathe though the sun going down can not. Shell and ear for these splay sounds that daunt and dabble (by a sea of hilly days go on). But to pity and praise this great endeavour, my love is seashell gathering by that same great sea while the waves go pithily out on this hill and moneyed water like thoughts and implications. O People of time’s salutations, this conch and ear will trumpet eternities in the long-winded tides that walk there.
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6
The snow is piling higher now on the garden that was young when pretty boys they gave me flowers that I planted, one by one; But the years flew by like summer birds bound elsewhere, like the youth I knew - now there's a pretty flower there for every pretty boy I knew when I was young. It doesn't matter now that all the memories are buried and none of them remember how to save me from the one I married. Winter scratches at the door with frosty fingers. All the pretty boys are gone - but the snow it lingers.
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 8:38 PM UTC
Megan's Lament
Once I thought to myself that Frost was right, that free verse was like playing tennis without a net. But sometimes reading Bukowski is like looking into Chapman's Homer for the first time and I think of writing as an organic process like cum-stained thank you notes and Spanish bones. I think I enjoy poetry the most when I'm not thinking about it at all, the way the deep sea makes a sound that can't be heard but we all see the rain and feel the cold on our skin. It's just something that happens like an ****** or a suicide or a ****** like weeping in a pillow when no one is looking.
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 8:15 PM UTC
Bukowski
Cupping candles on the open landscape, marching to the heartbeat of the earth, head hung low I hold the empty plate that carries my last meal, the vanished mirth I knew before the terrible black promise of days that have been too long in the night. I know I will not see the fabled summit. A phosphorous reminder of the light, Solemn-eyed the moon proclaims my doom, my quiet song on this unhappy moor, as I who move from chaos into gloom light candles and bring darkness to the world. If I could find within this grave omission the fortitude of strength to stay the hand that trembles with an urge to amputation on the backdoor of tomorrow where I stand How I would walk then as the need arises and before the looming mountain make my plea as far away the sun it blithely rises, but I do not think that it will rise for me. I do not think that it will rise for me.
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 8:09 PM UTC
Lines
Where have all the writers gone? Where are all the poets? Where is our Sandberg with his easy lines, our Jeffers with his discontent, our Frost playing tennis without a net or with a net it doesn't matter? Where is the greatness that defines us? Where is our crying Ginsberg our Bukowski with his rough blackbirds and our Cohen of the Modern Miracle (we're still waiting)? Where is the voice of the internet age? It'd better come soon. Because it's lonely here with no one to read, no modern sage to turn to and I wonder how many people today turn away from their windows to their keyboards, like me, and type this in.
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 4:36 PM UTC
Where Have All The Writers Gone
Gone are the seas of daffodils. Gone the sunny green, the plains. Gone are the green gored hilly hills And gone the blue sea's blurry stains. Gone everything, the curtain drawn, The dream of yesterday's fond fears Abruptly brought to what's beyond The final "triumph" of our years. All is dark where once was hue And wet with slime, the years' long trace, The stones they bare mute witness to The death of this burned rock in space And though they did not see the fall And though they can not voice our pain They will never disregard at all The sad, still wetness of the rain.
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Aug 6, 2018
Aug 6, 2018 at 2:50 PM UTC
The Wetness Of The Rain
The condo's not the same now that she's gone. The dolls and toys they, strewn across the floor, Seem lifeless now. Their absent voices sound On the walls that are quieter than before But toys are quiet anyway. The dust Of doors that slam won't echo in this pall Nor the pitter patter of her little feet Nor the cries of "Daddy! Daddy!" in the hall That rang like joy of birds that have not yet Grown wings enough to take into the skies. The kitten that has grown does not forget Her fairy voice nor the swift time that flies. Every time I see her she grows tall. While the world at large is spinning like a ball.
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Aug 3, 2018
Aug 3, 2018 at 6:24 PM UTC
Sonnet On The Occasion Of My Daughter's Absence