Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
winslow-bigby
American Chronic philosopher and psychoanalyst. Does *not* see writing as a beautiful form of art. Ideas are beautiful; the language required to convey them is, if anything, a necessary burden.
It is a Summer of goodbyes to songs of the heart from moments past, crying melodies of old hallelujahs. My new friends, you hold before you a Wayfarer no longer as young as could be, left painted by the sighing brushstrokes of many starry nights and many starry eyes now in fresh alignment. My friends, I do not fit neatly into arms. I do not fit neatly into places. I do not take kindly to the lapping waters of sleep. I am a creature in revolt. Let me close enough to you to rest my hands on your breast, and I shall in time rip away the necklace you wear, because I see greater in you than heirlooms. And you will hate me. And I will be faring on my way, and I will let my hair fall over my eyes and ever dream that I might have been the ghost you might have loved.
0
Jul 24, 2014
Jul 24, 2014 at 11:05 PM UTC
Untitled
Reason, my sweet, I've woken to find you warming my bed once again. Again, every moment seems to have its place, and the arc of a poet's life once again seems in the proper shape. I know I won't have gotten far before you're off again, having your men, I suppose, but, for these moments of Harmony, when the hounds in my lower chambers seem to be quelled, or else off my trail; when I am finally certain my breathing is in time with Destiny; when love of myself is enough, and I am still enough to hear the Melody and match the key; thank you. I will carry them with me always.
0
Jan 11, 2013
Jan 11, 2013 at 1:00 PM UTC
Symbiosis
I had a son, but some ****** ****** him off and turned him queer. No father ever thinks it's his boy that will be taken away. He'll never come back; he says that he wants to; he thinks he can.
0
Nov 16, 2012
Nov 16, 2012 at 3:44 PM UTC
A Father's Self-Defeat
Is it better to run from feelings that inhibit one's flourishing as a person or to live entirely truly? Artists seem to have agreed that the confusion of the latter is well worth it, and it certainly seems to be putting bread on their tables. So am I an artist? Shall I suffer for the good of suffering, the study of it? Or are the spiritual men the ones to ask?
0
Nov 11, 2012
Nov 11, 2012 at 9:55 PM UTC
Musings on the Value of Love
It's a little monkey's birthday,      and he's off in his own world. There's a bear, always watching the sky,     off in his own world. Our little piggy friend is studying love. Now, it's time to buckle down and decide      who's worth it.
0
Oct 19, 2012
Oct 19, 2012 at 6:40 PM UTC
Poem From a Dream About Growing Up
In an effort to make this brief                         (because self-pitying satire is the                          least pitiable of all writings): On the sidewalks, I hear collegiates laughing. In my most intimate memories (you know the ones),         I hear bones rattling. I have a trained ear, and the symphony of the human race         sounds like cash registers and death bells tolling. It's so hard to find quiet, or even anything calm,         like your breathing.
0
Apr 2, 2012
Apr 2, 2012 at 11:27 PM UTC
Dignified Self-Pity (I Love You)
Take heart, my protégé. Your pain is only mine from the past, though you make it real again                         (Nietzsche was right). Nietzsche has taught you insensitivity     and that you are a ghost. But Einstein taught me about light     and that gravity is a coincidence. I am here, and Nietzsche cannot undo me. I wish that I could bring you out of the smoke, but I have only my company and my smile,     and that seems at least to keep the light from         passing through you. I can know nothing of the future                         (of which you and I are exquisite evidence), but I am here, and Nietzsche has, in fact,     condemned me:             To you, I am light,     and, to me, you are gravity.
0
Mar 23, 2012
Mar 23, 2012 at 4:04 PM UTC
Paternal Words of Assurance
Don't bother looking at me. I'm just the old man who missed his stop. I've obviously made a mistake, because, after all, who knows more of human purpose than the economist? Those of us not wise enough to step off the train just sit around waiting, don't we? Take a minute to look at the vastness you're ignoring, you small-minded ****
0
Feb 24, 2012
Feb 24, 2012 at 6:13 PM UTC
How Unwise the Free-Spirited