Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
kelsey-bowen
kelsey-bowen
20/F/memphis
you stood when you saw me with a smile that made me giggle then i can smell you and i am drunk you hug me and you linger you say my name and lick you lips i say yours and taste the sweetness and im hungry we sit you look in my eyes and im floating we talk each breath pulls us closer to each other lights dim and voices hush you offer yourself as a pillow and im drifting you whisper your day in my hair and i tell jokes in your shirt and im perfect there then a screen lights up and a movie plays and im realizing im sitting cold in my own seat aware of how far you are from me the last of your name melts in my mouth and im hurting we try not to make eye contact then the movie is over and you dont say my name again and you dont look in my eyes and you go home to another and im sitting cold in my own seat aware of how far you are from me and im aching
0
Aug 8, 2017
Aug 8, 2017 at 11:59 PM UTC
movie date
i wrote a song for you the violins used my spine as a bow the organs shook with the thunder of my voice the flutes whistled through my bones the choir stole the breath from my lungs and my heartbeat keeps time
0
Jul 26, 2017
Jul 26, 2017 at 8:17 PM UTC
songwriter
i can't fill the Sistine Chapel's ceiling with a mural of my love the dusty paint bottles in my closet are not the colors i dedicate to you my hard and broken brushes won't show how i fell for you but i can write you sonnets on napkins on why your smile outshines the sun i can fill pads of paper just about the green of your eye only in novels can i tell you of how i reach for you every morning i can never show the world the hair that falls in your eye when you get angry but i can write sonnets on napkins
0
May 27, 2017
May 27, 2017 at 11:39 AM UTC
to the man who made his home an art exhibit
i like the color red your eyes turn and how it just slightly different from the red of your face i like the way you slur your words "i'm drunk off you, you know" i like the way my accent thickens  so you have to pull me close to your face to understand me i like the way you fumble to grab my hand and then press my fingers to your lips  i like the awful way you try to growl your 'r's  "i'm french like you, oui oui" i like the way you look when you can't find your lighter and the slight disappointment in your eyes when i light your cigarette for you i like the way you quote poetry like it was written for you to mutter drunkly i like the way you appreciate things "the stars, why don't we always look at them?" i like the way you look when you're trying to concentrate on the conversation i like the way you look when you catch me staring at you "it's like i see you for the first time all over again, your stare is so cold but so inviting" i like the way you're drunk
0
May 11, 2017
May 11, 2017 at 1:28 AM UTC
i like the way you’re drunk
my parents never knew they never knew that the wooden door of the room they always shut me out of  when they wanted to "have an adult conversation" wasn't as good at absorbing the venom they spit at each other as they thought it was and I heard every word they screamed and tasted every drop of hate that seeped between the cracks in their voices and I never told my parents I never told them  that I liked the way hate tasted I liked the way it stung my lips kind of how they liked the way it burned each other's hearts and corroded the memory of the love they once had  and I let these malicious words tumble around in my head, breathed them in and blew them off my lips  like a kiss of death and that day you were yelling it was the same way my mother cursed at my father and as a broken family's lonely daughter I did the first thing I thought of I listed off the vicious vocabulary my parent's never meant to teach me and I knew that  if this was a test, I'd made an A plus as I watched the friendship between us  crash to the ground and I just stood there because that's what my father always does  and everyone says that we're just the same the two of us with tears in your eyes, I watched you  turn away and I swear to god I had deja vu  because you looked just like my mother did the day she  filed for  a divorce and ripped our family away from me and that same day your mother found you at the bottom of the stairs with a still heart and a fixed stare and that same day I realized that words spoken in such a way could not only end a marriage but a life I mean stop a beating heart  and that same day I promised myself  that I would never again yell, never curse at anyone the way my parents taught me and that is the reason why I am quiet in a crowded room not because I am intimidated or shy I'm just trying to swallow  the snake my parent's fed me long ago
0
May 10, 2017
May 10, 2017 at 1:45 AM UTC
a promise
my parents never knew they never knew that the wooden door of the room they always shut me out of  when they wanted to "have an adult conversation" wasn't as good at absorbing the venom they spit at each other as they thought it was and I heard every word they screamed and tasted every drop of hate that seeped between the cracks in their voices and I never told my parents I never told them  that I liked the way hate tasted I liked the way it stung my lips kind of how they liked the way it burned each other's hearts and corroded the memory of the love they once had  and I let these malicious words tumble around in my head, breathed them in and blew them off my lips  like a kiss of death and that day you were yelling it was the same way my mother cursed at my father and as a broken family's lonely daughter I did the first thing I thought of I listed off the vicious vocabulary my parent's never meant to teach me and I knew that  if this was a test, I'd made an A plus as I watched the friendship between us  crash to the ground and I just stood there because that's what my father always does  and everyone says that we're just the same the two of us with tears in your eyes, I watched you  turn away and I swear to god I had deja vu  because you looked just like my mother did the day she  filed for  a divorce and ripped our family away from me and that same day your mother found you at the bottom of the stairs with a still heart and a fixed stare and that same day I realized that words spoken in such a way could not only end a marriage but a life I mean stop a beating heart  and that same day I promised myself  that I would never again yell, never curse at anyone the way my parents taught me and that is the reason why I am quiet in a crowded room not because I am intimidated or shy I'm just trying to swallow  the snake my parent's fed me long ago
Continue reading...
44
i met my soul mate last night he introduced himself as the perfect mix of drunk and high a crumpled cigarette hung loosely between his lips  as he intoxicatedly fingered his lighter i gently replaced his hands with my own lighting the cigarette with the flick of my thumb "a beautiful girl who lights my cigarettes?  they said death would come slow   but they didn't say it would come  with you."
0
May 10, 2017
May 10, 2017 at 1:40 AM UTC
what they said about death
there is a moment after papers are signed and speeches are given and soldiers exchange their guns for beers and plane tickets home and where mother’s tears landed fields of flowers begin to grow and man climbs off his bloodied knees, finding balance again and letters are no longer written as wills and the growls of bombs that shook the world stay their thunderous breath and the earth swallows what man has let fall and mountains sprout where battlefields lay there is a moment of stillness a quiet lull where man sees himself and the mess he has made
0
May 6, 2017
May 6, 2017 at 2:05 PM UTC
the end of a war
the way the sunlight comes in through the kitchen window is my favorite shade of yellow i saw it when mémé sat me in her sink and we ate raspberries i shoved them on the tips of my fingers and stained them red for a week i could catch the yellow in my hand i saw it when mémé shook her head because tes madeleines sont pas assez cuit and i rolled my eyes and assured her i was not going to be a housewife anyway i could feel it warm my arm i saw it when mémé giggled as she snuck me a bottle of wine i cut my hand trying to open it and hid it in a shoebox under my bed i could feel the glimmer on my cheek i saw it when mémé cried as she held my chin in her hand she said being fearless and daring are a bad mix and it also runs in the family and i could feel the rays reach across my collar i see it when i think of mémé i am no housewife i struggle open a bottle of wine and i have a bad mix of hereditary characteristics mes madeleines sont toujours pas assez cuit i can catch the yellow in my hand
0
May 3, 2017
May 3, 2017 at 12:18 PM UTC
mémé and the way the sunlight comes in through the kitchen window
my father is a fortified man  with dark, verdant eyes  that shame the forest moss that burn harsh and cold seeing through deception  honest, stern, but fair my mother is a gentle woman with soft, cerulean eyes  that transcend the clearest sea that glow bright and warm  always saying the right thing  tolerant, caring, but unwavering  and I was born with that azure gaze  though mine is not same  on half my left eye a drop of my father's jade  and so I see the world  as an even balance  through both my parents eyes
0
May 3, 2017
May 3, 2017 at 8:27 AM UTC
heterochromia
lay your beads across your chest as willows sprout where you lay catch their long tears with your fingers in your stomach your cypress blooms each breath catches around her petals skies drown in seas of every hue the pale moon begins to shine crickets continue the bird’s song lower your eyelids to die with the sun
0
May 3, 2017
May 3, 2017 at 8:25 AM UTC
eve