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j-wallace-larwood
A backward look in reparation. The train that leaves the evening station. Lights are dimmed in lengthening carriages. Lives constrained by awkward marriages. Destinations part concealed, Neutered weapons, broken shields. Birth and death and separation It's hard this act of conscious diction Diplomacy, avoiding friction Dying brothers, sullen daughters Unmapped shores beyond these waters For now, the tears the shallow laughter The second bottle, morning after A culling of the truth from fiction The crooked finger writes, entices Deals the cards and roll the dice Explains, expunges, makes it better Credits payments to the debtors Far beyond the horn is calling Mist is rising, drizzle falling The party's over. Life suffices
0
Oct 20, 2015
Oct 20, 2015 at 1:11 PM UTC
The Train
She'd walked to work at sundown When the blue dissolved to evening Past the roadside vendors cooking fires, Not yet bright enough for deepening The outline of the factory-house Where night-time shifts were gathering 'Round the early evening cooking scents, Boiled rice, and bread and lentils Carried on the twilight breezes with A light refrain that mentioned The hunger in her mid-riff And the mild persistent headache At the urgent anxious anger that Her fears and hopes resembled. And the nagging hopeless worry That the money wouldn't stretch. Treading lightly, sandals slapping In a rhythm never blindly To be misconstrued as anything But a walk to work, and quietly. One hand clutching at her sari, Coughing mutely through her head-shawl Barely breathing through the mocking Of the jeering tuk-tuk drivers Past the dust cloud covered concrete With the reek of sun-soaked diesel And the mouthing finger-thrusting And humiliating cat-calls That permeate her modesty And her sense of self-retrieval With a fierce determination That the future must be faced She'd felt the first forced tremble In the walls and floors beneath her And the slowly sliding shifting Of her sewing, soiled machine As it cannoned past the T-shirts Through the carefully folded blouses And toppled from the table top To smash against the floorboards When the building crumpled inwards And the chaos and the screaming Chased the panic to the exits Down the staircase to the ground. Then the ceiling at the center of the Wide, high whitened work room Caved in with crash and cursing As the lighting dimmed and died Now, far above she hears the cadence Through the gauze of dimming clarity Fire truck sirens moan hysteria Within the tinnitus of silence Tumbled past the dust caked boulders Of the colorless construction Prostrated down below In the humid darkened stillness. Trapped and jammed into the spaces Where the falling floors had forced her. Where the grinding groaning echoes Of the debris and the torture Close her throat to swells of panic For her mother and her daughter In the two-roomed cardboard shanty Miles above and hours away Barely conscious, breathing lightly Through the dust and reek of faeces Thinking of her crowded back-room Where she'd bathed her infant daughter In the tin-roofed cardboard shanty By the stinking standing water And where her husband’s insobriety Nightly terminates in snoring After shouting and the swearing And occasional forbearance When her mother’s stifled terror Terminates in tempers risings And the all pervading violence That resolves in resignation And completes the shaming sequence By the act of copulation In the wreckage work continues Where the rescue teams are scrabbling In the arms of their dilemma To keep searching or accepting That the paradox of seeing and then again Believing in the hopeless expectations That some persons can be found Far below and hours away The burning thirst has found her Past the pain of her right shoulder And the numbness in her legs. The acrid smoke that holds her Transfixed in shallow coughing While the sari starts to smolder To the agony of breathing As she hoarsely tries to scream In a conference room in London In the tautly tensioned Aerons Women smooth their sculpted short skirts As the slicked-down young supplier Holds a T-shirt for inspection To the murmured confirmation Of the busy buoyant buyers That the pricing must be right. Miles above and hours away Six degree's of separation Form a loosely joined connection Out of mind and out of sight. One by one the vendor cooking fires Turn to embers and to ashes While miles below and far away Comes the dying of the light.
0
Mar 12, 2015
Mar 12, 2015 at 7:38 AM UTC
Miles Above And Hours Away (Rana Plaza Revisited)
She'd walked to work at sundown When the blue dissolved to evening Past the roadside vendors cooking fires, Not yet bright enough for deepening The outline of the factory-house Where night-time shifts were gathering 'Round the early evening cooking scents, Boiled rice, and bread and lentils Carried on the twilight breezes with A light refrain that mentioned The hunger in her mid-riff And the mild persistent headache At the urgent anxious anger that Her fears and hopes resembled. And the nagging hopeless worry That the money wouldn't stretch. Treading lightly, sandals slapping In a rhythm never blindly To be misconstrued as anything But a walk to work, and quietly. One hand clutching at her sari, Coughing mutely through her head-shawl Barely breathing through the mocking Of the jeering tuk-tuk drivers Past the dust cloud covered concrete With the reek of sun-soaked diesel And the mouthing finger-thrusting And humiliating cat-calls That permeate her modesty And her sense of self-retrieval With a fierce determination That the future must be faced She'd felt the first forced tremble In the walls and floors beneath her And the slowly sliding shifting Of her sewing, soiled machine As it cannoned past the T-shirts Through the carefully folded blouses And toppled from the table top To smash against the floorboards When the building crumpled inwards And the chaos and the screaming Chased the panic to the exits Down the staircase to the ground. Then the ceiling at the center of the Wide, high whitened work room Caved in with crash and cursing As the lighting dimmed and died Now, far above she hears the cadence Through the gauze of dimming clarity Fire truck sirens moan hysteria Within the tinnitus of silence Tumbled past the dust caked boulders Of the colorless construction Prostrated down below In the humid darkened stillness. Trapped and jammed into the spaces Where the falling floors had forced her. Where the grinding groaning echoes Of the debris and the torture Close her throat to swells of panic For her mother and her daughter In the two-roomed cardboard shanty Miles above and hours away Barely conscious, breathing lightly Through the dust and reek of faeces Thinking of her crowded back-room Where she'd bathed her infant daughter In the tin-roofed cardboard shanty By the stinking standing water And where her husband’s insobriety Nightly terminates in snoring After shouting and the swearing And occasional forbearance When her mother’s stifled terror Terminates in tempers risings And the all pervading violence That resolves in resignation And completes the shaming sequence By the act of copulation In the wreckage work continues Where the rescue teams are scrabbling In the arms of their dilemma To keep searching or accepting That the paradox of seeing and then again Believing in the hopeless expectations That some persons can be found Far below and hours away The burning thirst has found her Past the pain of her right shoulder And the numbness in her legs. The acrid smoke that holds her Transfixed in shallow coughing While the sari starts to smolder To the agony of breathing As she hoarsely tries to scream In a conference room in London In the tautly tensioned Aerons Women smooth their sculpted short skirts As the slicked-down young supplier Holds a T-shirt for inspection To the murmured confirmation Of the busy buoyant buyers That the pricing must be right. Miles above and hours away Six degree's of separation Form a loosely joined connection Out of mind and out of sight. One by one the vendor cooking fires Turn to embers and to ashes While miles below and far away Comes the dying of the light.
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112
The point of no return was reached Some years ago, the dividend was earned And spent without regard And now at last, the fire burns So low that smoking unseen odors, Mask slight glimmers in the hard Unyielding quarter of his life not lived Contempt, he comprehends at last Is only in the gift of the receiver To endure. And to the giver is awarded The right of last refusal. The obscure acceptance Of tithes and times, the phrase that rhymes Rings hard upon the river stones And echoes through the empty rooms. This is the Threshold then; the door ahead Firm shut against the choices. The lifeless Voices in his frontal planes, more real in turn Than all the living may confirm, and in their Spheres and whispers of coincidence. There are few options after all Above the hooded altars in the stars.
0
Mar 12, 2015
Mar 12, 2015 at 5:35 AM UTC
The Right of Last Refusal
He had lost her attention As the time together bridged A span of competing but uneven years And made no mention of their wear and tear, Of their original contention and intent. The child that came invited, much loved and as one Who excited such invention in privilege and  tokens Said and done. The strings and threads that gently pulled The girl who grew as people do, from state to altered state And who when lulled and woken, revised their wry affection Who promised to return when time was due, from school Addressing such defection. And then was gone again To live her life, as people do who grow and move away. To live as one. Or more than one once more and say Who knows? Who lives to fight another day. That they will never see. But now; the prospect of two adult lives Rejoined in close convention. From three to two. And who, when in-junctioned to review the synapses                                                     And strands of all the memories, near collapses, half failures Are faced with choices, the acid flavors and such truths that The voices in their ears and eyes have shown. The tacit doubts And sanctions. Nothing soothes the self perception Or inaction of two frightened people, inwardly reviewing Each to each the dessicated droughts of life alone. To fill the vacuum. To atone. To shout. To bear again in later-years The self-respect and mutuality that in the best of times and places Shored up, sustained the complete totality of a life once shared. Rediscover, reinvent within the spaces of a glacier so deep Some magma of original notion that keeps the home fires burning. And so to bed and the laying on of hands, the swift caress, good night. Lips brushing hair in mild devotion. As the ocean of their solitude expands. And in the evenings when the summer nights Grow shorter; they watch tv and wonder if the silent peals of girlish laughter In the listening echoes of the rooms just down the hall                                 Sound hollow, if not small. Had their time together then been judiciously spent Without conditions? Without direction that presumed assent And her right to leave, or follow her own stars? And when Suzanne                         Took them down to her place by the river, they could spend the night Forever, at the altar where it all began, and does she suspect that in the rap Of their quick footsteps lies affection and assumptions that never, Ever would they falter? She takes their hands and shows them where to look Among the garbage and the flowers. The paradox of maps and rhyme As the caravan of hours slips irrevocably southward in the race against Their silent blocks of time. These are children in the morning, They are leaning out for love and they will lean that way forever, Unseen. The harvest is all in, the seeds are sown. The empty room confirms the errant teen The final painful portent. And the bird has flown.
0
Jul 4, 2013
Jul 4, 2013 at 5:13 AM UTC
Altered States
He had lost her attention As the time together bridged A span of competing but uneven years And made no mention of their wear and tear, Of their original contention and intent. The child that came invited, much loved and as one Who excited such invention in privilege and  tokens Said and done. The strings and threads that gently pulled The girl who grew as people do, from state to altered state And who when lulled and woken, revised their wry affection Who promised to return when time was due, from school Addressing such defection. And then was gone again To live her life, as people do who grow and move away. To live as one. Or more than one once more and say Who knows? Who lives to fight another day. That they will never see. But now; the prospect of two adult lives Rejoined in close convention. From three to two. And who, when in-junctioned to review the synapses                                                     And strands of all the memories, near collapses, half failures Are faced with choices, the acid flavors and such truths that The voices in their ears and eyes have shown. The tacit doubts And sanctions. Nothing soothes the self perception Or inaction of two frightened people, inwardly reviewing Each to each the dessicated droughts of life alone. To fill the vacuum. To atone. To shout. To bear again in later-years The self-respect and mutuality that in the best of times and places Shored up, sustained the complete totality of a life once shared. Rediscover, reinvent within the spaces of a glacier so deep Some magma of original notion that keeps the home fires burning. And so to bed and the laying on of hands, the swift caress, good night. Lips brushing hair in mild devotion. As the ocean of their solitude expands. And in the evenings when the summer nights Grow shorter; they watch tv and wonder if the silent peals of girlish laughter In the listening echoes of the rooms just down the hall                                 Sound hollow, if not small. Had their time together then been judiciously spent Without conditions? Without direction that presumed assent And her right to leave, or follow her own stars? And when Suzanne                         Took them down to her place by the river, they could spend the night Forever, at the altar where it all began, and does she suspect that in the rap Of their quick footsteps lies affection and assumptions that never, Ever would they falter? She takes their hands and shows them where to look Among the garbage and the flowers. The paradox of maps and rhyme As the caravan of hours slips irrevocably southward in the race against Their silent blocks of time. These are children in the morning, They are leaning out for love and they will lean that way forever, Unseen. The harvest is all in, the seeds are sown. The empty room confirms the errant teen The final painful portent. And the bird has flown.
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48
He touched our hands But unconcernedly this famous man And would not look us in the eye For fear of contact or what might be worse, connection And we could hardly blame him, for after all He had each day been singled out for close inspection By ones like us, in awe of his celebrity Circled in the shade of his perfection Hoping for the star-dust sprinkle of acuity Or sparkling eyes, admission to his inner cult and clan He wore blue jeans And scuffed sneakers as a badge of proof Of his coolness and unconcern While we his audience with concealed attention Enviously eyed his hairy confidence, unconsciously Imitating in each phrase that low convention Made small adjustments to our store-bought suits and ties And nodded several times in bright pretension Made small amendments to our smiles and lies Flicked photo-phones in pursuit of custom and routine He gave a speech A flippant interview, this famous creature A well tossed phrase, a rounded cliche Poured forth like brandy in a glass, convivial Or apple cider-ed vinegar in pewter mugs A sardonically French-accented phrase habitual Well humored, heavy lidded with testosterone At interlocutor women with the pens and pads Delivered in a low and purring monotone For all the world as lovers, each to each He stretched a smile A modulated shift of teeth and beard "Genius? Not I"  with deprecation "My shallow intellect, so poor and so ephemeral" Delivered in a tone that mocked inclusion While we assumed an elegance, unintentional A nonchalance that shields the wide charades Unmoving in our breathless, but conventional Genuflection to the the notion that pervades                                                       Our addictive appetite now sated. For a while.                                                                                                                                  He kissed their cheeks And stroked their arms, with sensuous ambivalence But absently, as if he cared so little In his farewell. 'A bientot' he said and 'Au revoir' And slipped away amongst the moving Milan crowds Creative and creator, irredeemably a star With, in his wake the smiling scriveners staring At his retreating back in Stark excitement In the middle of the circling and squaring, at The alpha-wolfic effigy. The Shepherd and his sheep.
0
May 6, 2013
May 6, 2013 at 6:46 AM UTC
This Famous Creature
He touched our hands But unconcernedly this famous man And would not look us in the eye For fear of contact or what might be worse, connection And we could hardly blame him, for after all He had each day been singled out for close inspection By ones like us, in awe of his celebrity Circled in the shade of his perfection Hoping for the star-dust sprinkle of acuity Or sparkling eyes, admission to his inner cult and clan He wore blue jeans And scuffed sneakers as a badge of proof Of his coolness and unconcern While we his audience with concealed attention Enviously eyed his hairy confidence, unconsciously Imitating in each phrase that low convention Made small adjustments to our store-bought suits and ties And nodded several times in bright pretension Made small amendments to our smiles and lies Flicked photo-phones in pursuit of custom and routine He gave a speech A flippant interview, this famous creature A well tossed phrase, a rounded cliche Poured forth like brandy in a glass, convivial Or apple cider-ed vinegar in pewter mugs A sardonically French-accented phrase habitual Well humored, heavy lidded with testosterone At interlocutor women with the pens and pads Delivered in a low and purring monotone For all the world as lovers, each to each He stretched a smile A modulated shift of teeth and beard "Genius? Not I"  with deprecation "My shallow intellect, so poor and so ephemeral" Delivered in a tone that mocked inclusion While we assumed an elegance, unintentional A nonchalance that shields the wide charades Unmoving in our breathless, but conventional Genuflection to the the notion that pervades                                                       Our addictive appetite now sated. For a while.                                                                                                                                  He kissed their cheeks And stroked their arms, with sensuous ambivalence But absently, as if he cared so little In his farewell. 'A bientot' he said and 'Au revoir' And slipped away amongst the moving Milan crowds Creative and creator, irredeemably a star With, in his wake the smiling scriveners staring At his retreating back in Stark excitement In the middle of the circling and squaring, at The alpha-wolfic effigy. The Shepherd and his sheep.
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50
Regrets, they come in waves and break around his feet And he begins to wonder who he might have been Had roads diverged in different woods and fields Not yellow or yet any colour still unseen But clearer now by day than windless nights Still nearer than the objects of his dreams It'd rained late into the evening, and when the lights were shaded Around the pool outside and with the windows shuttered He'd thrown on loose clothes, flicked open an umbrella While high outside the stars the lightning flashes muttered Pulled open doors that led to the veranda And moved outside once more with all his thoughts unuttered The smoke, from fires on Java lies heavy on his senses An omen of the time of year and of the past condition He shrugs, ***** in the acidic nighttime odors Reviving lives not lived but revealing his admission That time beyond the present that mirrors every movement Within, without, and yet again, the flicker of suspicion. The pistol in his pocket, illegal not unloaded A symbol of his state of mind and by  his sole discretion He kneels beside the water, deep-set and in the shadows Lips forming wordlessly around the last confession Images of where and what and who and why and whether A portent of that final action, sensing and impression The smoke from fires on Java lies heavy on the water The reek of cordite mixing with the smell of burning grasses Indignant birds protest the crack of one small set expulsion The echo round the swimming pool reverberates and passes Nothing more and nothing less and time and space and matter Slick red upon the treacherous tiles, the shattered bloodied glasses.
0
Apr 23, 2013
Apr 23, 2013 at 6:19 AM UTC
Fires On Java
Regrets, they come in waves and break around his feet And he begins to wonder who he might have been Had roads diverged in different woods and fields Not yellow or yet any colour still unseen But clearer now by day than windless nights Still nearer than the objects of his dreams It'd rained late into the evening, and when the lights were shaded Around the pool outside and with the windows shuttered He'd thrown on loose clothes, flicked open an umbrella While high outside the stars the lightning flashes muttered Pulled open doors that led to the veranda And moved outside once more with all his thoughts unuttered The smoke, from fires on Java lies heavy on his senses An omen of the time of year and of the past condition He shrugs, ***** in the acidic nighttime odors Reviving lives not lived but revealing his admission That time beyond the present that mirrors every movement Within, without, and yet again, the flicker of suspicion. The pistol in his pocket, illegal not unloaded A symbol of his state of mind and by  his sole discretion He kneels beside the water, deep-set and in the shadows Lips forming wordlessly around the last confession Images of where and what and who and why and whether A portent of that final action, sensing and impression The smoke from fires on Java lies heavy on the water The reek of cordite mixing with the smell of burning grasses Indignant birds protest the crack of one small set expulsion The echo round the swimming pool reverberates and passes Nothing more and nothing less and time and space and matter Slick red upon the treacherous tiles, the shattered bloodied glasses.
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30
Ina's pregnant, I am bored Grace and Eric mute behind me On the street two floors below us Standing water, hissing tyres. Two more hours of this, I'm thankful. Endless meetings, glassy eyes Homeward bound on lighted transport Rain-streaked windows, dark outside. Weekend coming, confused feelings Clean the flat and iron the shirts Talk to no-one, poolside vigil TV meal and early night. Is this it? The final curtain Did I know this at that time? Regardless of the closing sentence No repeating, only rhyme.
0
Apr 23, 2013
Apr 23, 2013 at 6:18 AM UTC
Denouement Revisited
There's a girl I think about, sometimes On wet afternoons, and when I'm on my own Well, she's an older woman now but still a first affection With a family, grown to middle age And a dead husband in her past, somewhere. We knew each other forty years ago, perhaps In an army town; or was it slightly later? We were never intimately joined In those prophylactic, pre-pill times And the frowning fathers, narrow-eyed on the fringes She could drive, and had her mothers car that day We slunk out to a field, to dispose of her virginity But, the military fuzz they quickly found us And took us in to the local station Heart thumping, testosterone levels tumbling That was the last time that we met, I think. We corresponded fitfully, and for a short time after But somehow shame and not a little guilt At what I'd done and left undone, sputtered the phrases and Quite soon the letters stopped arriving. Unconsummated but never quite forgotten, last week A Facebook message in my in-box, unbidden From a name unfamiliar to me, and suspicious "Dear Sir" it read, and proceeded to announce itself Auspicious, as my former lovers son. Can this be you? the lovers son enquired politely My mothers friend that we talked about at Christmas? Triumphant, there mother! I have found him Far across the years and using now's technology Across a lifetime of separateness I sensed in her a broad reluctance, despite the introduction From her child, who's person never was a factor To connect with me again, this different person Risking the diminution of that dimmed image, the remnant Of who we had been that time And why not? Why confuse the layers and the generations? The forewarned spectacle of our sad reunion Uncomfortably eye-ing each other with little left in common Awkward unsaid phrases hanging out to dry In the flag-fluttering breezes of our allusions. But, in fact, there had been another reason I admit For shame that final hour that final day When I had been revealed in all my nakedness as wanting Tongue tied and mumbling my excuses to the sky Youth I was, weak, poor and unconvincing The police were brusque and thoroughly impersonal Growled deep-throated at my love and I. And I; I discarded my affection for security and left her there Disconsolate and disbelieving in the police station More worried about the facing of my father And so we left it then last week with little left unsaid Knowing both it was too late and too unknown For reintroductions as the people we had been Unconvincing in our bright and sharpened protestations Preferring poor relations in a foreign country
0
Apr 23, 2013
Apr 23, 2013 at 6:16 AM UTC
Guilt Reminded
There's a girl I think about, sometimes On wet afternoons, and when I'm on my own Well, she's an older woman now but still a first affection With a family, grown to middle age And a dead husband in her past, somewhere. We knew each other forty years ago, perhaps In an army town; or was it slightly later? We were never intimately joined In those prophylactic, pre-pill times And the frowning fathers, narrow-eyed on the fringes She could drive, and had her mothers car that day We slunk out to a field, to dispose of her virginity But, the military fuzz they quickly found us And took us in to the local station Heart thumping, testosterone levels tumbling That was the last time that we met, I think. We corresponded fitfully, and for a short time after But somehow shame and not a little guilt At what I'd done and left undone, sputtered the phrases and Quite soon the letters stopped arriving. Unconsummated but never quite forgotten, last week A Facebook message in my in-box, unbidden From a name unfamiliar to me, and suspicious "Dear Sir" it read, and proceeded to announce itself Auspicious, as my former lovers son. Can this be you? the lovers son enquired politely My mothers friend that we talked about at Christmas? Triumphant, there mother! I have found him Far across the years and using now's technology Across a lifetime of separateness I sensed in her a broad reluctance, despite the introduction From her child, who's person never was a factor To connect with me again, this different person Risking the diminution of that dimmed image, the remnant Of who we had been that time And why not? Why confuse the layers and the generations? The forewarned spectacle of our sad reunion Uncomfortably eye-ing each other with little left in common Awkward unsaid phrases hanging out to dry In the flag-fluttering breezes of our allusions. But, in fact, there had been another reason I admit For shame that final hour that final day When I had been revealed in all my nakedness as wanting Tongue tied and mumbling my excuses to the sky Youth I was, weak, poor and unconvincing The police were brusque and thoroughly impersonal Growled deep-throated at my love and I. And I; I discarded my affection for security and left her there Disconsolate and disbelieving in the police station More worried about the facing of my father And so we left it then last week with little left unsaid Knowing both it was too late and too unknown For reintroductions as the people we had been Unconvincing in our bright and sharpened protestations Preferring poor relations in a foreign country
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55
Moist and monochrome, clouds are gathering On a Sunday afternoon. Look up idly from my browsing, at the building 'cross the pool Winds picks up, the monsoon breezes Lick at the curtains twelve floors up On the terrace, woman standing Arms outstretched, grasp the rail Legs stressed back, footloose in sandal Lightly muscled, slightly formed Kimono slips from lighted shoulder, designer ****** strawberry brown Fabric glides across the hip-line Revealing all to me below Wearing nothing on the landing Hint of shadow, ***** mound. From the sliding doors behind her Steps a man not quite unseen Waist encircled in one movement, undergarment stripped away Rigid stillness then the thrusting Tension mounting at the breath Woman gasps the O shape forming Through her silent, varnished lips Mahler moaning on the ITunes Waves are forming, silent sound Thrusting, busting, flexing, ******* arching back crescendo reached Sun comes out, just at that moment Roads diverging in the wood Disconnecting, and uncoupling Might and maybe, aught and should Trembling  fingers, taught in temper Blink the eye and pop the top Shaking hands that hold the taper, to the unformed smoking spliff **** the wreaths in, breathe the thought out Bottle clinks across the teeth Unbelieving, unconcealing Unrelieving, unreleased
0
Apr 23, 2013
Apr 23, 2013 at 6:15 AM UTC
Not Quite Unseen
A generation ago in the hope of redemption I would look into the mirror, and shave through the steam Reflected in dim disapproval I'd see Half the face of my father, the contempt that is me Looking back in the hope of connection. He's now younger than I am, since he died before time And I no longer feel cowed at the tone in his voice But this morning reach up to the root of the deed Expressed in a context, and now finally succeed To move through past the bones of dejection. I straighten my shoulders and grin to the past **** in my stomach, raise my hands to my face Breathe deeply and uncouple a loud cry to the air A little in sorrow, really not in despair And draw back from the arms of the boatman
0
Apr 23, 2013
Apr 23, 2013 at 6:14 AM UTC
Taking The Weight Off