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poetwithnoface
poetwithnoface
I'm an engineer with a passion for poetry and literary theory. Find more at: / / https://medium.com/@poetwithnoface / https://www.instagram.com/thepoetwithnoface/ / https://twitter.com/poetwithnoface / https://www.poetwithnoface.com/
Melted glass that bubbles, pops, and cracks like a laugh, or the slide of shining skin on porcelain in the bath — you rise and splash —  you settle and relax, you sigh and glisten. The smoothness of a thigh like pink petals: fragrant silk just like the heart of a rose. Grey moth-eyes of fluttering fog that falls, fading into the night — why are you closed? I should have known better. You should have known. Even honey sours and petals drift like snow. But there’s a place where love still grows, row on row, a quiet garden. Be quick —  before our hearts are hardened, we’ll go and find the snoring bees, where time has conquered time.
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Apr 23, 2018
Apr 23, 2018 at 9:44 AM UTC
The Rose Garden
We stopped to eat at a McDonald’s after —  I’m sure the counter-girl could smell the plastic-clean of stitches and nurses’ gloves and medication hanging over him while we ordered fries and burgers to fill our guts before we made the long drive home. And when we found a seat I thought that things were fine. We sat there talking about the family, until he spilled his drink and lost his **** real bad this time, and he stood and said: “I was alive when Carpenter’s was still the biggest bus maker around — your grandpa lived in Tunnelton and drove to work across the cliff to crank them out. He smelled like oil and the dusty river all the time, and he used to never let your mother out at night, because he thought that cougars were thick around his farm. You bring her back before the frogs are calling, he’d say, you bring her back before the cats get at her face — my daughter there’s worth more than your life —  she’s a queen and that’s a real queen’s face.” He paused to **** a piece of ice and smiled, and then he looked at all the busy people bent up over their plastic dinner trays looking at him, and he bit the ice and laughed. “I never saw a cat like that. It was the cliff that got her, and he should have watched the river, driving by it all the time the way he did to go and build those buses — lots of things were rusting in the river, and I guess the busses rusted, too. I didn’t see a killer cat around the farm, but I saw a thing or two that’s worse. I saw the light they lit over her grave — you were too young but you saw it, too: a propane thing we filled together. You can’t buy one like that today —  today it’s all electric and plastic stakes, and you never have to see the grave again after you’ve planted one of those solar lights. It stays for good. Those lamps outlast their names —  as long as the sun remembers to pay respects. But I remember liting the little flame. I remember how your grandpa’s face lit up like a ghost’s, and I could see the scar something large carved in his cheek one night when he was hunting raccoons by the riverbank out near the mouth of the Tunnel. It’s all gone now — even the river’s lost the way it used to smell like pines from on up north, and only ghosts walk through the Tunnel — gone. All of it. All gone. I guess he should have watched the cliff, because it’s all gone now. All of it. Even the buses rusted away, and there’s no flame to mark the ghosts that’s left to stay —  all we’ve got are lights that last forever.”
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Apr 18, 2018
Apr 18, 2018 at 9:10 AM UTC
Transmission No18: Holy Fires
We stopped to eat at a McDonald’s after —  I’m sure the counter-girl could smell the plastic-clean of stitches and nurses’ gloves and medication hanging over him while we ordered fries and burgers to fill our guts before we made the long drive home. And when we found a seat I thought that things were fine. We sat there talking about the family, until he spilled his drink and lost his **** real bad this time, and he stood and said: “I was alive when Carpenter’s was still the biggest bus maker around — your grandpa lived in Tunnelton and drove to work across the cliff to crank them out. He smelled like oil and the dusty river all the time, and he used to never let your mother out at night, because he thought that cougars were thick around his farm. You bring her back before the frogs are calling, he’d say, you bring her back before the cats get at her face — my daughter there’s worth more than your life —  she’s a queen and that’s a real queen’s face.” He paused to **** a piece of ice and smiled, and then he looked at all the busy people bent up over their plastic dinner trays looking at him, and he bit the ice and laughed. “I never saw a cat like that. It was the cliff that got her, and he should have watched the river, driving by it all the time the way he did to go and build those buses — lots of things were rusting in the river, and I guess the busses rusted, too. I didn’t see a killer cat around the farm, but I saw a thing or two that’s worse. I saw the light they lit over her grave — you were too young but you saw it, too: a propane thing we filled together. You can’t buy one like that today —  today it’s all electric and plastic stakes, and you never have to see the grave again after you’ve planted one of those solar lights. It stays for good. Those lamps outlast their names —  as long as the sun remembers to pay respects. But I remember liting the little flame. I remember how your grandpa’s face lit up like a ghost’s, and I could see the scar something large carved in his cheek one night when he was hunting raccoons by the riverbank out near the mouth of the Tunnel. It’s all gone now — even the river’s lost the way it used to smell like pines from on up north, and only ghosts walk through the Tunnel — gone. All of it. All gone. I guess he should have watched the cliff, because it’s all gone now. All of it. Even the buses rusted away, and there’s no flame to mark the ghosts that’s left to stay —  all we’ve got are lights that last forever.”
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A pile of rotten maple leaves looks like a granite mountain after the fluttering confusion of confetti-cut whirling snow but do you remember when your lemon-scented hair was plastered across the icy sleeve of my coat like the leaves around my porch?
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Mar 8, 2018
Mar 8, 2018 at 9:22 AM UTC
Parity No12: Eroding Mountains
I read some beautiful poetry, and I thought that I would write a poem as if I was making an axe handle I could use to free the feelings stirred like termites in the roots of my chest, which is to say my ribs — even though that’s not quite exactly what I meant to say. What I really wanted to say was something more elaborate like, “all the birds sing spring, they don’t sing for the spring — they make it suddenly spring by singing.” But then I got selfish. And I decided not to write a poem. You don’t get to know what I felt, and what a joy it is to keep these feelings to myself.
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Mar 5, 2018
Mar 5, 2018 at 8:15 AM UTC
An Unfinished Axe
You see where the city trucks sprayed all the roads with salt this morning? It was supposed to snow. The news said we would be snowed in, but then— you see these lines of salt? It's not like they're doing much to keep us moving.
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Feb 26, 2018
Feb 26, 2018 at 8:20 AM UTC
Poetry for the Snow That Never Came
**** and fire. The smells of food and drink: desire. Small handprints on the rocky womb mark where we began to want — to think —  before we left our ignorant stone tombs, tossing rocks behind us, where thoughts arose. Memories awoke to chide us. Confide in me: who was the third, the thornless rose, you held between your teeth? Don’t try to hide from me. There are some things the blind can see, and I have known them all — and told them all. Flowers grows where tears flow like a stream, and soon, if you don’t speak, these vines will fall across your eyes. I recall a stolen kiss: tasting the words before you could confess.
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Feb 23, 2018
Feb 23, 2018 at 9:11 AM UTC
Tiresias
The snow has let go of the leaves it held mached with ice beside the western stairs of my back porch like-half forgotten valentines it tried to mail before the sun cooked the corpse of our Christmas tree, releasing all those mint-sapped scents like the presents I forgot you gave me.
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Feb 21, 2018
Feb 21, 2018 at 10:29 AM UTC
After Tossing Out Our Christmas Tree
It wasn’t the stirring songs of night-bound birds, which hid in the blooming apple tree to rest — or the mellow drums and bronzed music we heard, or the cloudy-red aroma your roses left. ❀ It wasn’t the dancing, the soft-stepped unfurling — the twirling or the gold champagne after, swirling in our cups, or when I said, “Your girl’s so tired. Your girl’s all ready to go,” and you laughed at my bluntness, or at the way I tripped and fell through the swinging silver-boned glass doors. ❀ It wasn’t the way you picked me up, or the swell of your arms as we pulled apart — or how you snored. ❀ But when the church bells cried midnight, I sighed in surrender to a surreal host of lives.
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Feb 15, 2018
Feb 15, 2018 at 10:09 AM UTC
The Last Bell
The difficult thing about a love poem is that it doesn’t want to be one. You see! I’ve already let the meter go wherever it wants to roam, for the sake of fun, and to make my point. It’s sort of like the way our feet get tangled when we sleep, and we trip into each other’s dreams. Poetry can’t contain how gently you kissed me — even when I was sick. This type of love requires an honesty that poetry can’t express. A careful glance, chocolates, red wine and all the rest can’t capture the drunk-in-love ways we’ve danced —  or the magic of long plants. But who’ll blame me for trying to count the ways that I adore you?                                                          —and in fourteen lines, no less.
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Feb 14, 2018
Feb 14, 2018 at 10:58 AM UTC
The Difficult Thing About a Love Poem
We slept on rocks, chased pink flowers and brushed our teeth with ***** fingers while hitchhiking back in time on a pile of your stuffed animals: the next time we find each other let’s be children again, eating strawberries and chocolate kisses —  not these half-slurred hateful words.
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Feb 7, 2018
Feb 7, 2018 at 9:31 AM UTC
Parity No. 9: Lotus-Eaters