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eve-redwater
eve-redwater
English My name is Eve Redwater. / I write poetry and prose. / / With a pen in one hand, and a cup of coffee in the other, constantly strive to unearth the less obvious. / / I write in a mixture of themes and styles, to the macabre to the pleasant, and enjoy nothing more than drawing influence from the little details that other / people may never see. / / You can find out more about me at my poetry blog: http://everedwater.wordpress.com/ / / Or discover more about me on my micro-site: / http://www.wix.com/everedwater/redwater
Fixing loose-curl auburn lockets, the pins embed And turn again. Step, and forward sway the hipbone, Thirty, forty, a flight of granite looming forward, Front and back, past my skirt tail – laden laced, pearly Quiet go the foot pads, front illuminations rest forgotten, Past the small mouse scuffling four-paw: zigging, zagging Along the stair stage. Past the morning call in woodpecker Tongue, squalls and loudly names the dawning. Softly, I ascend the cold rough stairwell; careful Not to spend courage whole. Wring the rusty thoughts of amorphous dreaming, eat the Bad thought before the stairwell – ******* orts and morsels thin Of single tipped barbs, and doubted quenching alas Before they mean too much. Wave with white hands a fare-thee-well, the apparition That pauses; portentously grinding its nothing on the wall Seemingly real the whitewash of nothing, he is voided But lives existent in that other-world well, Singing, and that much better for it. Twitch the dreaming skull-bone loose, and question not, As I mask my tooth-grin with knuckled fingers; He spots me slinking past the wound in time and calls me closer, So that I may meet him.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:46 AM UTC
Upstairs, Ghosts Talk.
On what day did the Seeker, that foul-shaped gangly Figure, weep and belly-crawl toward me Forward winding? In craven eaves, in parsley fields, I wrinkled sleeves, running, running, A bare-foot straw sock stuck fast and wide While crows were nodding, nodding, nodding. The mansion breaks the parsley skirting; my mouth Is panting, low, unsightly. A butter cloud of moths Were dancing, and caught my cheeks with tender tags Of sickly salt-pan glister. With baked stone walls I Pushed the tail-bone, and time was wailing fast before Me, it scratched my back into a cup of clawing, Chasing fingers. He seeks me still in wooden boxing, under sweating Hands are shaking; time atop my crush of raven Swings a hefty, dullsome, tune. Knees were pulled far Up and rounded, domed and white, and jade, and black, Stuck and stinking fragrantly, the skiddish slums of slime Betrayed me- sleeves were ***** hot, and green. With backbone slinking down the body, the clock Grows loud with muffled strumming. In front, the crack, The door before me, small enough to wholesome hold Me, blanks the mansion's putty light. Arms that longly ***** The run trail, scoop a crackle from the door frame; Ones that pester, hound and perish With longing, longing, longing.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:45 AM UTC
The Boy in the Clock
Apart from my misery The stony hole, the wilting flower, Earth took a bud and shaking membrane, Past the lobe a striking pick Bending backwards a loping, Breasted mound. The earth is shallow. As I bring clay to cheeks and Whisper, unto him my ****** water, In boyish legs, spreading between them It grins a tepid, milky space As pick I do at tufts of hair. Biting lamps out down the walkway And into the zone of paper grass; Digging a gloomy bruise with fingernails And spits of wood That blood, a brightened slip, A fattened pathway, Rests, in part, in that Alley, Apart from my misery.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:45 AM UTC
Blood and the Alley
O'er stone paths the roses grow still as a ditty, When light lamps are paling the ripe summer oil; With a noise that the left ear blocks rushed in a hurry, The hawthorns are fierce, till the black thorns are pretty. Where the mind is at once full of peace, full of pieces, In shrubs there are stubs made from wagtails and hen, Tin, copper, unfathomed: a marvellous city, In comfort the day loses its din as it ceases. Skimming at milk with the tightest lipped marrow, Left hands, right lobes singed, as it curdles to putty; The bones of the fair-folk are lost in the morrow, And our hands meet the roses, so we'll grasp them in pity. Our four feet go kicking, at that hard wall we're sitting; But the hawthorns are wet, and the hawthorns are sticky.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:43 AM UTC
But The Hawthorns Are Sticky
I see that one old woman Struggling with her plastic shopping bags, Every single Monday morning. She climbs the steps to her front door, Sets down her bags, and brews the tea. Setting the table out for two. Her beloved smiles across from her, In a mottled picture frame.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:40 AM UTC
Single
Your impish, oily, freckled faces were bright that night on Milton Road. Where you made the cats claw doors in a careless wailing stupor, Of fear. Yes, the men in camper vans rode in like the silvery knights, just like the silver-fish that eat the floor- the ones that chew and reproduce, The parasites. The one's where society has no qualms, decisions, answers; and they sit in their bleak evenings: a little turret, waiting for anything, To break down barriers. Like the doors, Large holes in walls are not enough. Not large enough to house a bird, with sticks and bones instead of tongues, but, in their nests their children pinned, Down are my legs and long arms kept. Where road and rocks they turned to flint, as the morning siren soared. But by my sides, my arms stood still. Nor did the Neighbours wail.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 6:07 AM UTC
No Answer
How long the day, Delivering letters to friends, And cranky, bald dog feeders. Home Is forward, past those poplars. Always I’ve been in love with Their almond scent, just as I catch Past, dragging feet and who knows How many heartfelt "Thank-you's". Home is... where the wife is sitting. She's not keen on laundry, but, I’m an exception. Always are my blue shirts blue, She likes to make sure. Just in case I meet With him; that carrion shaker, Mr. Reaper. “Hello.” I'd say, and tip my cap, Along my silent nightly rounds; Perhaps he'd humour me, if he could See me. He's searching. For me? No. That’s not right. The lamps are thickest In the dark, and that's just how he likes it. Even if I tip-toe, tip-toe, tip-toe around Him, he'll still turn his hood toward me. A courteous, creaking greeting. That chill I get. Matches only the fear From losing fingers, as I push envelopes, Catalogues, and restless dreams Through many metal slats. But even I, can't quite see, When the sky turns milky-grey... That perching, questioning hand Placed gently on my shoulder; Pushing down as I bend my back, Kicking over milk-bottles, sometimes accidentally. I shake it off. Get to bed! I say to myself, mostly Always, to myself. Slap on some cream And Get to bed.
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Jan 15, 2012
Jan 15, 2012 at 5:56 AM UTC
Postman