Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
sam-irons
American
think about this day outside offices nearly your toes might cauterize in tough, rotten dirt science like every publication prints no madness, straight-faced out to harden.
0
Aug 27, 2015
Aug 27, 2015 at 7:24 AM UTC
the city and the sky will taste of us
I was feeling really ****** and low, coming to from an affair that bored me. Frankly, I was rut down in a mind that all ladies had bored me, and I happened into this woman with a large brain covered in a drunken and sly confidence mixed beer, shots, smokes, violins and billiard ***** We flirted a while in such an unusual mansion owned by a millionaire racist who we all later came to adore and drank his Polish ***** in welcomed shots by the dozens as I (feeling ****** and low) was coming out of my rut that women are a bore, I watched her shoot pool trying to relax my wanton urges and the thing that really helped was this very long silence between flirts while we traded the stick and I could plan my next geometric move as haphazard as the geometry of my brains. We were clever, so clever, and cool, that we didn't know we didn't know and hardly knew that we didn't know that in a few short hours we'd be hopelessly desperately undying linked in a nicely confusing and endlessly evolving affair of our own that would go on for years-- offending her younger brother at parties running drunken through the streets of Denver rocking to sleep in a boat in San Diego staring at geysers in Iceland and mumbling Viking songs in Stockholm-- so much so that everyone turned lovers around us and it goes on and on and the years passed and it all seemed like a match strike so quick and delicate but so emblazoned and fierce that the wood might snap or the sulfur degrade or the flame stabilize and flicker but the lighting fluid seems endless too and she's still evolving to burn even hotter and I stopped believing that women are boring or at least there's hope for the rest of them.
0
Aug 27, 2015
Aug 27, 2015 at 7:22 AM UTC
#11
I was feeling really ****** and low, coming to from an affair that bored me. Frankly, I was rut down in a mind that all ladies had bored me, and I happened into this woman with a large brain covered in a drunken and sly confidence mixed beer, shots, smokes, violins and billiard ***** We flirted a while in such an unusual mansion owned by a millionaire racist who we all later came to adore and drank his Polish ***** in welcomed shots by the dozens as I (feeling ****** and low) was coming out of my rut that women are a bore, I watched her shoot pool trying to relax my wanton urges and the thing that really helped was this very long silence between flirts while we traded the stick and I could plan my next geometric move as haphazard as the geometry of my brains. We were clever, so clever, and cool, that we didn't know we didn't know and hardly knew that we didn't know that in a few short hours we'd be hopelessly desperately undying linked in a nicely confusing and endlessly evolving affair of our own that would go on for years-- offending her younger brother at parties running drunken through the streets of Denver rocking to sleep in a boat in San Diego staring at geysers in Iceland and mumbling Viking songs in Stockholm-- so much so that everyone turned lovers around us and it goes on and on and the years passed and it all seemed like a match strike so quick and delicate but so emblazoned and fierce that the wood might snap or the sulfur degrade or the flame stabilize and flicker but the lighting fluid seems endless too and she's still evolving to burn even hotter and I stopped believing that women are boring or at least there's hope for the rest of them.
Continue reading...
50
"Some say calamity and some catastrophe is beauty." Some think rolling hills, hay, joints– madness in the head, in bed, on paper and canvas– soothes our souls but our soles wander and we're trainers following the egos of Hollywood and Penguin, Netflix and Dover. I say your beauty, encompassing calamity and catastrophe, and never letting less beget sad days, sends me out, spurs me to transact, create, build, fail, love. I think running alongside your stride, fingers down your back, scripts about our language, reigns me in, slows my transience, comforts me to breathe, decompress, heal, care. We, the ebb of calamity, the flow of catastrophe, are bound.
0
Aug 27, 2015
Aug 27, 2015 at 7:14 AM UTC
#10
Pull me into you. Let your waves crash over me – your currents push me deeper. Grip my by my thighs and let me wade into you. **** my fluids with your salt tongue. Let me float inside your cove and sleep next to the roll of your shoreline. Let your spray permeate my beard, so I smell you everywhere, taste you when I lick my lips and yearn for me when you meet rockier tides. I am land, locked and solid. And, you are my ocean.
0
Jul 14, 2015
Jul 14, 2015 at 6:05 AM UTC
#9
The college kids still pump out poems; my heroes haven't published a book in years. The academics are moving to visual arts kerning letters on the page, adding artist statements. Fuego en juventud. Sabiduría en viejo. Passion fades with age, I suppose. A symptom of the cult of happiness. And I love to read poems from twenty-somethings who just want to get ****** I picture my red pen exciting them as I destroy their fine-tuned metaphors, all muddled with conflicting allusion, as if juxtaposition alone adds meaning. In school, it was all Cezanne and hydrogen jukebox birdsongs, and equally interesting but useless adjective strings. The academics are doing the same, but with form. It bores us, don't they know? Fuego en juventud. Sabiduría en viejo. **** these kids for having such easy means to publication. I read their journals, their magazines, their "editions" online, vivid, vomiting color and opinion. I long for publishing classified ads and scribbled chalk portraits of the women I loved and the twenty-somethings who just wanted to get ****** and reflections of how I never mastered either craft. I long to rub the ink off newsprint in my fingers, smudge the words on the page and ***** my hands, watch the chalk run into the red brick during ten-minute monsoons, smell the library's adobe, light a cigarette and remember that the stacks are filled with ages of greater work than these ******* kids... and these ******* academics. Greater than me.
0
Jul 14, 2015
Jul 14, 2015 at 5:04 AM UTC
Rookies
You exist in this world and your sheer impossibility is comfort. On this speck of dust, you move and shake me. If the potential to rearrange a hundred books is greater than there are atoms in the universe, how lucky are we that you find your way into my bed, that I kiss you while we talk to trees, that you love me and I love you? And no manner of oceans – little blue streaks on a teensy blue marble on the edge of tiny spinning cloud – can squelch us. In a world where you are possible, my love, nothing can go wrong for us.
0
Jun 2, 2015
Jun 2, 2015 at 11:52 AM UTC
#8
We are possibility. Nothing undone: the red key swung, the pins aligned. Spite and Malice - you won in Burque; in Buffalo, in April, I'll be writing in coffee shops. Cage made fake acrostics and clamoured more than us. He watered himself in blenders tacked his piano like stigmata. But really, he just put the right letter on the correct line (if he ever wrote a line), but our house was a mess of books and skulls and everywhere you looked too perfect a nest, so we tore ourselves apart. Why don't we stop? Someone will spend graduate school anthologizing our correspondence, analyzing the details we missed, et al., hic et nunc. The girls dancing in Budapest and the guys making passes at you in the snow reduce us to baser instincts by counting how we could, might, tentatively hurt again on our second-class driver's test. Fortunately, I am with you when you look at computer screens and you're with me at the bar when television commercials show off their bras and the beer hits harder than libretto and snus drips down the candle wax making arcs like the Scott Monument. The imperfection is bliss, the knots loosen and move up our spines. We'll soak the tub and swell our glands with menthe and tumble further down the mud, until we either love or **** what makes us whole.
0
Feb 4, 2015
Feb 4, 2015 at 8:35 AM UTC
#7
Check out all the books on the shelves and remember me to your mother. Or sell a few back cheap to some spindly haughty clerk at the shop. He might remind you of me when we first slid books to each other and our fingers kissed. If you find yourself in tall stacks, hiding, spend a moment to remember my lips on your stomach and how our hot breath mixed when we read aloud. Under the covers. When you cross bars, carry your knife, for fuck's sake. Go on snapping mussels and water flows, the particles that clog our veins; and, publish a thing or two, so I can know you're alive, while I fester my own wounds. If you cut your hair, keep it blonde and I'll know you read this. Or dye it black and I'll stop writing to you on snowy days, prefer to walk between the aspens and sleep forever under the stars. Smell the pages of your armchair fiction and make a mental note to clean your sheets. The world is filled up with writers, and lovers. Shove the new release pile over, label it "read later" and get back into the shop to find another volume louder and more raucus than mine. And throw your journals into boxes, ship 'em to your cousins'. When we're gray, you can think back to pool cues and pillow talk. And I'll cry when you bin me again.
0
Jan 14, 2015
Jan 14, 2015 at 8:04 AM UTC
#6
The mountain that roared at midnight, It never heard us. The mountain that roared, covered up by the oven falling, smothered by the hard mess of Norway, and plane tickets, and lonely hearts. You roared. And I fell asleep knowing too much or just enough to get the sense that the mountains aren't high enough here. Folly from all, this was such a sweet summer for lovers, if only it were so sweet for us. But the mountain roared. And this time I couldn't bang the pans loud enough or shake the slam the door hard enough or put you into sweat gleaned sleep. This time you listened. And from the distance I saw our graves. All the ***** in Scotland, the smoke in Netherlands, the gin and dance of Denmark, the glacier water in Ålesund, or the high wire act of our travels, all that couldn't stop the mountain. It roared and you listened, putting me valleys below, seeking new tops for just a glimpse of how to drown it out again.
0
Nov 12, 2014
Nov 12, 2014 at 12:31 PM UTC
#5
It's my humble opinion that humility will **** you. You're trapped in a cult of positivity, kid; and, there ain't no end in sight there. If people were meant to be happy all the time, the chemistry of our brains would done figured that for us. And in that, there's something to be said about being sad. The only way to beat your demons is to out perform them. Hell, the whole of human literature hints at that. And, it's my humble opinion that baking humble pie is a death march for the destitute. It's times like these you gotta get cocky. Besides, women like that sort of man. "Find the things you love and let them **** you." Ol' Hank was right when he said that. Taken further, you gotta seek out the things you hate, and be prepared to duel until one of you expires. You gotta outrank, outfile and outcast thems that drags you down. No more saying "hi" to the bees to let 'em know you ain't scared. The bees you're fighting sure as **** don't care. You once told me: "when you've had enough of getting the **** kicked out of you well, then it was time to start kicking some **** You better lace up them boots, boy. Or, you'll have more trouble than you can bargain. The easy outs ain't so easy, the older we get. Self reliance makes a joke out of playing fair - it simply out preforms it. And, that isn't selfish when you remember that the world won't always bend down and hug you. Most of the time, it just punches your guts in.
0
Jun 10, 2014
Jun 10, 2014 at 12:41 AM UTC
#4