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m-e-sills
m-e-sills
American M. E. Sills is a Californian at heart / Favorite things are literature and art / Knows too much about Kerouac / and doesn't write about the color black
O gloomy hazy heirs of Oakland, if it weren’t for your less-than 
     desirable height I might love you 
I spilled my Boston absurd imaginations into your night and got 
     nothing back but muffled vibrations
 Your ******* statues aren’t quite a turn-on to the starry-eyed mill- 
     ions who walk your streets each day 
Excess scores of madmen seep out of your unwashed pores
 Was it your love that kept me gazing at cloudy skies?
 Was it your hands that built the offices of unkempt loneliness?
 The vacant-eyed gargoyles won't stop staring at my book of angels
 where I keep my holy... Your dumb ears refuse to listen to that which is greater than my 
     childhood dreams
 Grand Ave. took me to the top of the 80 and I cried and shouted 
     obscenities of pure joy
 “Beautiful! Oh beautiful! People!” “Perfection! You crave perfection!” 
“Attention! Help me you beautiful people!”
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Feb 28, 2012
Feb 28, 2012 at 3:27 PM UTC
From the Square at City Hall
The Ocean whispered to me once as I hovered twenty feet above it The shore was frozen at the sand a blanket of white foam stuck in time Rivers turned into trees, their roots longing to return to the city The sunbathed mountains looked over and laughed.
0
Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:55 AM UTC
Flight
Airport shops are something peculiar selling everything useless except books and this little pen that fits in my pocket! Only in my boy jeans of course, but would you know the airport bookshop doesn’t even sell poetry? As if the only ones cultured enough to read it are those in the city who are smart enough to never leave. Or maybe they know that poets spent the last of their money on the flight ticket and can’t afford to buy from airport shops anyway.
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Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:53 AM UTC
Shops
There's a rainbow in the corner of my window it must be saying something. The clouds are gay! The lakes are gay! The trees are gay! The airplane is gay! The flight attendant is gay! Houses hidden in the hills below look up and wonder if I'm gay too. The sun hiding at the edge of a cloud tells me the ocean's gay didn't we know? She has a fluid sexuality and loses her temper sometimes we call it flooding. The sky declared itself androgynous and changes genders every twelve hours. The sunset is proudly bisexual and displays both pink and blue every evening as it heads to the club and the sky switches genders. The city of San Francisco is gay! and the rainbow disappears.
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Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:50 AM UTC
Rainbow
If I were to imagine what a drink feels like it would be the rain in Humboldt County. A blanket of cold falling upon me, eventually making its way to my ears never letting up, my vision is fog. Hazy, unrelenting until the glass becomes a mug of hot cider, releasing me from the reality of a stone-cold winter.
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Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:49 AM UTC
Release
I If I were a poet I would compose beautiful line breaks and elegant stanzas. Similes would be ******** scattered with alliteration like stars against a sunset sky. My tone would be of reason rather than innocence. I would refuse to analyze the meaning of death in literature. II Fortune cookies would be my mantra and life would be a wiggle instead of a struggle. I would pray five times a day to my journal most benevolent, ever-merciful. My poems would not be of peace of war or (you)nity or them here Amur'cans. III My form would be indifferent and probably never earn me awards or acceptance to grad school. Fondness of (parentheses) may get me compared to e.e. cummings or completely dismissed if I were a poet.
0
Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:49 AM UTC
If I Were A Poet
Approach the steps and the bus driver says "Thanks You," ignoring the reality he's driving a bunch of broke-ass adults whose only wish is to escape from the middle of nowhere. Pass the cows, the one steer in the dairy field stares at me, looking down once we've left. Eyes looked intelligent like he should've been reading T.S. Eliot while sipping green tea. The two-mile bay goes quickly, holding its breath as we wave goodbye. It acts like it never danced before. Onto another town the people can't wait to leave. A crying child enters and the family moves back, further back, to sit behind me as I'm writing this poem. I've never seen innocence so excited to ride the Greyhound. Innocence, why won't you shut up? Failure, please stop glaring at her like that. She's only a little girl. The smoke stacks have no comment. The truck driver keeps appearing next to us trying to tell us we're all angels. The trees around the lake agree. The horses agree, if only because we harness more horsepower. The redwoods on each side of the highway are blocking my view, but I don't mind we're headed toward the future. City lights are my future, fog is my future. The 101 South is my future. The woman two rows in front of me sounds like a man. (S)he is my future. **** Rio Dell, there's nothing to do there. Garberville isn't much better. The green algae pond says hello. "Will you save Richardson Grove?" it asks. I didn't answer. The winding roads are making me insane. If I didn't answer, would you notice? Ferlinghetti must be driving because he can't keep on track. Oh where will you take us tonight? I wake up to the mist on the water holding my attention. The Alcatraz of my mind saves me from myself.
0
Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:48 AM UTC
Thursday on the Greyhound
Approach the steps and the bus driver says "Thanks You," ignoring the reality he's driving a bunch of broke-ass adults whose only wish is to escape from the middle of nowhere. Pass the cows, the one steer in the dairy field stares at me, looking down once we've left. Eyes looked intelligent like he should've been reading T.S. Eliot while sipping green tea. The two-mile bay goes quickly, holding its breath as we wave goodbye. It acts like it never danced before. Onto another town the people can't wait to leave. A crying child enters and the family moves back, further back, to sit behind me as I'm writing this poem. I've never seen innocence so excited to ride the Greyhound. Innocence, why won't you shut up? Failure, please stop glaring at her like that. She's only a little girl. The smoke stacks have no comment. The truck driver keeps appearing next to us trying to tell us we're all angels. The trees around the lake agree. The horses agree, if only because we harness more horsepower. The redwoods on each side of the highway are blocking my view, but I don't mind we're headed toward the future. City lights are my future, fog is my future. The 101 South is my future. The woman two rows in front of me sounds like a man. (S)he is my future. **** Rio Dell, there's nothing to do there. Garberville isn't much better. The green algae pond says hello. "Will you save Richardson Grove?" it asks. I didn't answer. The winding roads are making me insane. If I didn't answer, would you notice? Ferlinghetti must be driving because he can't keep on track. Oh where will you take us tonight? I wake up to the mist on the water holding my attention. The Alcatraz of my mind saves me from myself.
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53
In San Francisco I had a dream that no one noticed when the trolleys ran the wrong way and completely missed the stop at Union Square. Instead of going to work people went home and chose to eat peas for dessert instead of cake. At the dinner table they spoke of the universe rather than politics and believed in themselves, settling for nothing less than perfect. I headed south to Oakland and everything seemed so alive for once. The people were the happiest I've ever seen. I woke up by your side the next morning and watched as your hands shone like silk in the sunlight coming through the room's only window. The dream resided in those hands, if only I could touch them without waking the dreamer.
0
Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:47 AM UTC
The Dreamer
I said love, but the world said hatred. I said comfort, but America charged and cried "money!" I said health, but the doctors told me sickness. Never had I spoken upon such deaf ears. I whispered everything, but the wind said nothing. I told the sky my secrets, but it didn't keep them quiet. I loved a cloud once, but it rained on my parade. Now I can't even trust myself. I babbled mama, but she said shhh. I mumbled peace, but the director spoke "oil." I screamed Honesty, but no one heard me.
0
Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:46 AM UTC
Capitol H
Our parents fell in love at the intersection of Greed and Corruption. "It was destined to never work out" they said, but we didn't believe them. We were told to live with our father, because he valued freedom and justice and though we had our rough times, it was fine until we turned two-hundred and thirty two. "I've had enough," he said, and abandoned all three-hundred million of us. We had no choice but to occupy the streets and hope our father changed for the better. It's been over a month now and he still shows no signs of allowing us to come back home. All we want is to sleep in our own beds, in our own houses and believe he is still the man who values freedom and justice.
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Nov 15, 2011
Nov 15, 2011 at 11:45 AM UTC
Children, Occupy