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travis-wagner
American I'm new to this.
What would the elders think about their home? Stone edifices claw the earth they’d known. These mortar-crusted bellies are sustained By humans living lost and self-contained. My jaundiced leaves cry out against the wind Yet my unheard laments instill chagrin. The soil beneath, an arid, grimy bed, The air surrounding, acrid fumes instead. O, Mother, we forsaken sons desire A Nat’ral renaissance You may inspire! Reverse the spell upon the human mass, And set them free from terra cotta caste. Reveal Your pow’r; rock the very ground The buildings claim as theirs and let resound Their crumbling corpses shattered by your might, And pleasing may it be within Your sight. My prayer concludes, but still, the hellish ‘scape encroaches with the goal of global **** And ‘til great Eden’s comeback I do see, I’m powerless: a sickly city tree.
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Jul 10, 2013
Jul 10, 2013 at 2:47 PM UTC
Urban Dirge
The view from my window is static as stone. Four high rises mechanically probe the grey skyline, their scale-like, cemented   girth obscuring the world within eyeshot. Sickly city trees weep and mourn, but cannot be heard through double paned glass and eggshell white prison walls, which house by solitary confinement. Lives are lived hermetically sealed. Humans reside in spaces better suited for use as fishbowls.                                                                                    Who longs for the ocean? We hide away, smothering our vibrant-hued colors we once let each other see.                                                                                     Go and make rainbows, please.
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Jul 10, 2013
Jul 10, 2013 at 2:39 PM UTC
City Skyline
If you were to ask me, i'd Laugh it off, saying Of course i do, sweetie. why Verify? three words Each day suffice, so You know, right?                 no, wrong. Only, ever, always: you. Uncontrollably, hopelessly, totally, i do.
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Feb 6, 2010
Feb 6, 2010 at 3:06 PM UTC
i do
my sunny days were spent cooking plastic spaghetti noodles over a wrinkled sticker depicting an oven eye while kate shuffled through invisible mail and tended to our adopted stuffed animals imitating her mother’s affection. my sunny days were spent building lego castles on the cool screen-in porch while the radio played mellow weezer that was suddenly replaced by sparks and foul smoke because of billy’s antics with the hissing water hose. my sunny days were spent drawing tattered pirate maps on jelly-smudged napkins that guided us—the brave hardened rapscallions—to the attic to horde stores of gold and to battle foes in the dusty shadows with our swords made of cardboard. my sunny days were spent hiding and seeking until mom’s heels clicked up the hot asphalt driveway where she would chastise me for the mess i had made of myself in cuts scrapes and grass stains worn by me as medals of honor.
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Feb 6, 2010
Feb 6, 2010 at 2:59 PM UTC
in memoriam
If I summed you up I’d abstain from strained refrain, from those mushy lines that read like a hike through a swamp. An inkwell tipped, they pour from trite lips and taint a masterpiece. But you were not made to bathe in black cliché; you: the product of Someone’s fantastic oration; spoken to life, left in my sight. And I, but the by-chance observer, who only knows what not to say.
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Feb 6, 2010
Feb 6, 2010 at 2:45 PM UTC
Loss for Words