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dylan-james
dylan-james
American
In our morning read love across ashy skies. Read contentment in our small clinging and sighs. In our body speaks a language so new, no, not new, read forgotten. Read lost and found within the confines of lust and its way of blinding us. A voice burned into our silence asks only for light, for one day to pour through the thin parts of our hearts as we breathe in and out, in and out.
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Jul 22, 2013
Jul 22, 2013 at 1:00 PM UTC
Thin Parts
That chewy rumble and chunk blues guitar heartbeat that questions the note between the chord between the gallop hum of electrical sulphur reactions. You question the truth hidden in matches, the heroism of every background character crisscrossing the periphery.
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Mar 28, 2013
Mar 28, 2013 at 12:30 PM UTC
Rx in E flat, or Blues
The first rule of the open door is someone must walk through it. Someone has to slide off that bench and find a new seat, lean their head against the cool glass and sleep across time zones and hillsides, rows of corn running alongside. I dreamt of that place, I shouldn't say again because I don't count myself a liar. But the table was set, wine poured and that dog wouldn't hunt. The sidewalks ran with the moonlight of one thousand doorknobs, teeth of hungry doorways calling to be filled, to be necessary. All the orange flowers covered my grave that night. Branches shuddered with the blackness of one hundred crows, the moon just slivers of leftover cheesecake crumbling down into the spines of hotel bibels and ****** veins of the orchard's nectarines. And the clouds beat their knuckles against the coming night until their passion bled out onto the bleached white sheets on their chests, all purple and red and blue and bruised. A colossal stillness hushed its way across the swaying seashore.
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Mar 27, 2013
Mar 27, 2013 at 5:02 PM UTC
I Don't Count Myself A Liar
I was born in a story you wouldn't believe. I was born in the back of a minivan sitting on the rails of a one track mind. I was born out of a need for gluttony. My father couldn't handle my beauty and committed himself to 50 years of tilting shining self destruction. I was born atop a mountain that was once a molehill. No one could see the rising sun for all the jutting inconsistencies of the heaving throne beneath me. I was born in and out of a wave violently caressing the coast of a chiming belltower, tulip and rose blooms ripped from their stems.
0
Mar 7, 2013
Mar 7, 2013 at 7:08 PM UTC
A Question of Heaven
At six in the morning when the inches of snow are still holding the sunshine off with their vacant swelling hills and troughs, I hear the passing traffic a block east. Will the traffic stop? When I say traffic, I mean the rumble of coal cars two miles distant. I mean garbage trucks full of yawning men I don't know and garbage I've known for a week. I mean the women leaving hospitals bound for sunbathed sleep habits and more long days of night. When I say traffic, I mean the adolescent fox foraging through the Baptist churchyard. I mean the line of metal carriages trailing from checkout line 10. I mean the blood racing to my arm after we spent the night holding each other. When I say blood racing I mean the multiplying and dividing of cells, beats in a symphony built up, crumbling down by an ancient arithmetic pulling us in, broken gravity we fight by holding onto it, clutching it to our hearts as we step into the earth. When I say blood racing, I mean the tiny blind lives bustling under flesh overpasses, blood cells commuting perpetually even after years of smoking cigarettes, lungs an oil spill butterfly resting in the chest. When I say six in the morning, I mean the dark hour, my second wind, when I rise to clear our tables and stack the dishes in the sink. I mean the hour you finally went to bed after we fell asleep on the couch, again. I mean the hour I crept into the hall to take out the trash, tight hand-rolled cigarette patient on my lip. When I say six in the morning, I mean the time between the milk man and the sunrise, I mean the minutes falling around the decaying beauty of gold and scarlet leaves prostrate on cold sidewalks. When I say decaying beauty, I mean the wizened grey tree, standing naked, no, stooping over the fence by your road. When I say stooping, I mean the man draped in a scarlet vest and goldenrod button-down wincing himself upright on the stool, unconcerned with the dark pub behind him or the faces bent through his glass in the dim refractions of the Open sign, faces bent over mostly empty glasses, empty faces.
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Mar 2, 2012
Mar 2, 2012 at 3:06 PM UTC
Blinding the Eye of the Storm
At six in the morning when the inches of snow are still holding the sunshine off with their vacant swelling hills and troughs, I hear the passing traffic a block east. Will the traffic stop? When I say traffic, I mean the rumble of coal cars two miles distant. I mean garbage trucks full of yawning men I don't know and garbage I've known for a week. I mean the women leaving hospitals bound for sunbathed sleep habits and more long days of night. When I say traffic, I mean the adolescent fox foraging through the Baptist churchyard. I mean the line of metal carriages trailing from checkout line 10. I mean the blood racing to my arm after we spent the night holding each other. When I say blood racing I mean the multiplying and dividing of cells, beats in a symphony built up, crumbling down by an ancient arithmetic pulling us in, broken gravity we fight by holding onto it, clutching it to our hearts as we step into the earth. When I say blood racing, I mean the tiny blind lives bustling under flesh overpasses, blood cells commuting perpetually even after years of smoking cigarettes, lungs an oil spill butterfly resting in the chest. When I say six in the morning, I mean the dark hour, my second wind, when I rise to clear our tables and stack the dishes in the sink. I mean the hour you finally went to bed after we fell asleep on the couch, again. I mean the hour I crept into the hall to take out the trash, tight hand-rolled cigarette patient on my lip. When I say six in the morning, I mean the time between the milk man and the sunrise, I mean the minutes falling around the decaying beauty of gold and scarlet leaves prostrate on cold sidewalks. When I say decaying beauty, I mean the wizened grey tree, standing naked, no, stooping over the fence by your road. When I say stooping, I mean the man draped in a scarlet vest and goldenrod button-down wincing himself upright on the stool, unconcerned with the dark pub behind him or the faces bent through his glass in the dim refractions of the Open sign, faces bent over mostly empty glasses, empty faces.
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51
Today was thick and warm, swelling like a marshmallow held over our summer campfire. We slipped down the narrow, curving creek, a run-on sentence near the page's waist in the book you left lying open, face down, on the night table. The banks yawned up over our heads, and sunflowers lined the cusp of the ridge watching us, a silent yellow audience of earth bound stars. The paddle breaking the surface of the water was the only sound, amplified by the miniature valley we were conversing with.
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Apr 26, 2011
Apr 26, 2011 at 7:40 PM UTC
A Version