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edward-hawthorne
edward-hawthorne
I'm a writer. Poetry isn't exactly my forte, so I would love some feedback. I'm a nerd, introvert, Harry Potter fan and cinephile.
I remember when we were young, and the shark fin made by falling water droplets from the back-and-forth sway of windshield wipers on our car window would scare you Because you thought that the spaces we couldn’t reach would form monsters in their crevices, and I would laugh and roll my eyes, like big brothers did. And I remember how, on nights when we would sleep over at grandma’s, the pitter-patter of our puerile feet on hardware floors was the only sound to be heard. Shadows formed where the beam of my flashlight hit, adorned with fading Spiderman stickers and the like- and you would squeal under my whispered protests because of the unfurling octopus limbs that were the leaves of a potted plant. We grew older, and so did my suspicions, as you crept out of the realm of childish make-believe and into a world that even when showcased in daylight was a nightmare. Demons, from the deep fire that enflamed the world’s core tried to penetrate  the surface, according to you. But as their hands reached forth out of the earth’s skin, they curled in agony, the evil of the earth halting their conquest. They fossilized and shriveled in autumn’s wake,   gray and deadened fingertips just unassuming tree branches, the perennial reaches just fibrous spindles blurring in the sunlight. The world held prospects despite your macabre claims, And as we grew I distanced myself from your melancholic tune. Trees were trees, and bore fruit at summer’s twilight and the friends I made were all of the parts most sweet. I was content with the woman I met, she blonde-haired and lovely her free-falling locks sparkling gold in every light,   and her personality as rich and as glossy.   I was content with my life of looking away from spaces where our human hands couldn’t reach, demons out of eyesight in the beam of glass city buildings. But as the dusk of one day segued into the dawn of another, I grew weary, each routine just a part of this monotonous human noise to which I, too had voiced. And I found myself driving one day when thunder roared in the sky, rain once again pouring into its shark fin mold. Your voice came into my head, the demon hands that had had died trying to take us over with their evil but overwhelmed by our own brand of hellish wretchedness lined the freshly paved sidewalk, and with a twist of the wheel one unreachable space met another.
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May 3, 2013
May 3, 2013 at 10:49 PM UTC
Out of Reach
I remember when we were young, and the shark fin made by falling water droplets from the back-and-forth sway of windshield wipers on our car window would scare you Because you thought that the spaces we couldn’t reach would form monsters in their crevices, and I would laugh and roll my eyes, like big brothers did. And I remember how, on nights when we would sleep over at grandma’s, the pitter-patter of our puerile feet on hardware floors was the only sound to be heard. Shadows formed where the beam of my flashlight hit, adorned with fading Spiderman stickers and the like- and you would squeal under my whispered protests because of the unfurling octopus limbs that were the leaves of a potted plant. We grew older, and so did my suspicions, as you crept out of the realm of childish make-believe and into a world that even when showcased in daylight was a nightmare. Demons, from the deep fire that enflamed the world’s core tried to penetrate  the surface, according to you. But as their hands reached forth out of the earth’s skin, they curled in agony, the evil of the earth halting their conquest. They fossilized and shriveled in autumn’s wake,   gray and deadened fingertips just unassuming tree branches, the perennial reaches just fibrous spindles blurring in the sunlight. The world held prospects despite your macabre claims, And as we grew I distanced myself from your melancholic tune. Trees were trees, and bore fruit at summer’s twilight and the friends I made were all of the parts most sweet. I was content with the woman I met, she blonde-haired and lovely her free-falling locks sparkling gold in every light,   and her personality as rich and as glossy.   I was content with my life of looking away from spaces where our human hands couldn’t reach, demons out of eyesight in the beam of glass city buildings. But as the dusk of one day segued into the dawn of another, I grew weary, each routine just a part of this monotonous human noise to which I, too had voiced. And I found myself driving one day when thunder roared in the sky, rain once again pouring into its shark fin mold. Your voice came into my head, the demon hands that had had died trying to take us over with their evil but overwhelmed by our own brand of hellish wretchedness lined the freshly paved sidewalk, and with a twist of the wheel one unreachable space met another.
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All these children should ever know are streams of light in summer wheat flecks of sun between waves of grain and feather strokes on roaming hands. All these children should ever know are tails of clouds in opalescent skies whether sought after or decoded between pillows of grass in dandelion meadows. All these children should ever know are dreams of flight over moonlit cites of the scale to mountain peaks downed with moss and the spray of saltwater on dolphin-back swims. Never should these children see the look of fear on cadavers non-blinking the trail of blood on linoneum tiles freshly bleached or the glinting smile of a curved blade. Never should these children feel the tilt of a barrel upon their heads the chill of a stare from a face they can't see or the rumble of a cry within their throats. Never should these children long for days past sitting in empty playgrounds for moments spent dreaming without aim for the knowledge to come of what they did wrong.
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Mar 16, 2013
Mar 16, 2013 at 10:36 PM UTC
The Empty Playground
When she was but eight And the world was kind A winter struck world Was a Snow Queen palace. City buildings of crumbled brick Under the scowl of a cumulus gaze Were castles dusted with snowflakes Like in her fairy tale book. And the knot of **** choked by the rusted iron fence Was a magical beanstalk That towered into the sky Not impaled by cold gray metal Or stifled by flakes of iron rot Nor kneeled in a final prayer Or in the last cry of a hungered beggar. When she was but ten And the world was still kind She wore her hair in pigtails That boys pulled for as she ran. And she heard giggles As she put on her new glasses to read the board And wondered what the worth of sight meant As much as any ten year old could. But the cracked, ashen sidewalk Was still a cobbled walkway Leading to an enchanted forest of gumdrops Like in her fairytale book. When she was fourteen And the world was more strange She wore her mother’s makeup And the boy with dimples smiled at her. And she tucked her glasses into her bag Even though she couldn’t see Along with her book of fairy tales Because boys didn’t like girls who were smart. When she was sixteen The world grew cold And as was the instinct of lightning to strike Was the spark of her tongue. Crumpled papers slashed with red And threats of a future looming meant nothing Because of the boy next to her in the seat of his car And the promises his smile held But as the palm of his hand slid up her thigh And she felt the lust in his soul roll off him The beat of her heart spoke trepidation But his smile reassured her and she succumbed. When she was of twenty And the world was one bleak She held close to her chest the head of a babe And rocked him gently as they cried in unison. Papers scattered on a wooden table In a room flickering with dying light Asked for more than what they implied And for more than what she could give. And in the cold light of day snow fluttered past her window, Fermented teardrops singed and bitter The walkways on which they lay just broken sidewalks The castles upon their touch crumbling to dust.
0
Mar 16, 2013
Mar 16, 2013 at 9:48 PM UTC
The Snow Queen
When she was but eight And the world was kind A winter struck world Was a Snow Queen palace. City buildings of crumbled brick Under the scowl of a cumulus gaze Were castles dusted with snowflakes Like in her fairy tale book. And the knot of **** choked by the rusted iron fence Was a magical beanstalk That towered into the sky Not impaled by cold gray metal Or stifled by flakes of iron rot Nor kneeled in a final prayer Or in the last cry of a hungered beggar. When she was but ten And the world was still kind She wore her hair in pigtails That boys pulled for as she ran. And she heard giggles As she put on her new glasses to read the board And wondered what the worth of sight meant As much as any ten year old could. But the cracked, ashen sidewalk Was still a cobbled walkway Leading to an enchanted forest of gumdrops Like in her fairytale book. When she was fourteen And the world was more strange She wore her mother’s makeup And the boy with dimples smiled at her. And she tucked her glasses into her bag Even though she couldn’t see Along with her book of fairy tales Because boys didn’t like girls who were smart. When she was sixteen The world grew cold And as was the instinct of lightning to strike Was the spark of her tongue. Crumpled papers slashed with red And threats of a future looming meant nothing Because of the boy next to her in the seat of his car And the promises his smile held But as the palm of his hand slid up her thigh And she felt the lust in his soul roll off him The beat of her heart spoke trepidation But his smile reassured her and she succumbed. When she was of twenty And the world was one bleak She held close to her chest the head of a babe And rocked him gently as they cried in unison. Papers scattered on a wooden table In a room flickering with dying light Asked for more than what they implied And for more than what she could give. And in the cold light of day snow fluttered past her window, Fermented teardrops singed and bitter The walkways on which they lay just broken sidewalks The castles upon their touch crumbling to dust.
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