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Edward Coles Nov 2014
I do not want to talk about love today.
I do not want to mention
affectionate contact or semi-regular ***.
The newspapers are bringing forth
welcome divisions between mankind;
fault-lines of irreconcilable differences
to justify my half-hearted attempt at solitude.

I do not want to talk about sobriety today.
I do not want to bore you
with those nervous hours between cigarettes
and how I fill each moment spent inside myself.
******* offers a ladder of perfume and hair
for me to ascend to some anaerobic bliss,
towards an isolated unity between myself

and the woman stretched out on my astral bed.
I do not want to talk about much today.
I have over-thought all that is worth a mention.
c
Nov 2014 · 667
Advertising Space
Edward Coles Nov 2014
Tonight it is just me, Chopin,
and the fireworks flirting with
the treetops of my neighbour's garden.
Sounds of gunfire and torn wind
parade by the close-curtained window
as I give a college try for inner peace,
for outer space, or just about anywhere
besides these constant dreams of ***
and human touch.

I am setting up advertising space
for somebody to fill up my days,
to pollute my poems with contentment,
and all the other tedious adornments
that come through recounting happiness
to others. I have been at war with myself
for too long. The supplies are emptied,
the asylum; full. A trade must be made
from the written word, to a spoken voice

across the pillow, where 'goodnight'
can be heard.
c
Nov 2014 · 195
Untitled
Edward Coles Nov 2014
I want to hold her on the bed and
show her that not all men are mean.
c
Nov 2014 · 531
The Crest Of A Wave
Edward Coles Nov 2014
For once I have seen the moment in front of me.
I have given myself an unfaltering aim;
sober-eyed and away from Amnesia Haze.
The words came before the ability to speak,
and so I have been living as an empty barrel,
sleep-starved in the basement
and devoid of sunlight.

There is a wave of panic in the streets,
from ebola virus, to fulfilled prophecy.
Since my life slowed to a catatonic state,
the still waters came in a pill-drawn routine
of restless walks, and falling asleep in the day.
Once I had mapped out the cracks in the ceiling,
I stood up to look outside the window.

A voice appeared, to appease the silent word.
It is a fallacy to think
that a quiet voice should not be heard.
C
Nov 2014 · 866
It Takes One To Know One
Edward Coles Nov 2014
There are bags under your eyes
from where sleep haunts you,
or the lack of it, at least.

The gorgeous and the gruesome
always have trouble getting rest,
only the monotonous
and the sedated
escape to dreams with ease.

Where did your sobriety go?
Was it lost when you realised
even your parents were clueless,

or did you suspect that all along?
I would count you amongst
the gorgeous,
but with a gruesome turn of mind.
Whatever you do, do not drift away

if it means leaving your Self behind.
c
Nov 2014 · 566
The Market Town
Edward Coles Nov 2014
I was raised in a market town
with nothing to sell
but the notion of escape
to higher planes
and better times.

Landlocked,
the bars only serve
to bring you down
or to distract you with sports news
and the price of beer.

The drunk crowds assemble
in uniform fashion,
at a routine time
with cyclical conversation
and a lack of expression.

With no time for a future,
we focus on the past,
memories of fuller wallets,
of that potential lover,
now a passing glance.

Still we drink and we meet
to satisfy our days,
to turn our sorrow
into laughter,
and to keep loneliness at bay.
c
Nov 2014 · 971
Stolen Words
Edward Coles Nov 2014
Steal everything you have ever loved.
Set it to another verse
of borrowed phrases
and humble pie.
Somewhere in the spaces
between the song-writer's ohm
and the poet's demise,
others will form your stolen loot,
your dead-sea scrolls,
into the multitude of inspiration
that constitutes your Self.

The banks are running dry.
All freedom is restrained
to the ticking of a box
and the punching of a clock.
There is no shame in stealing
a resonant thought.
It is the way Revolution happens,
an idea projected, then repeated,
repeated, re-written and spoken
in one thousand tongues.
If your lover leaves you,
it is nothing special.

Yet if a stranger's words steal your breath,
stripped to a naked consciousness,
you have every right to pilfer their mind,
to bridge understanding,
to share in a longing,
to replicate a sentence
in which truth was left unconfined.
Nov 2014 · 1.2k
Hangover Cure
Edward Coles Nov 2014
A library of poetry
cannot articulate
what is found in
two minutes of Chopin.
c
Nov 2014 · 614
Hallowe'en
Edward Coles Nov 2014
The fireworks make me nervous this year.
I dream of aliens by the back door,
their lenses centred on my idiocy,
and the ghost of my father
is haunting my every mistake.
I wear hats indoors to feel like someone else,
a costume for my solitude,
to play the poet,
and hide my head from the night.
C
Oct 2014 · 1.3k
The Thoughts Of An Old Man
Edward Coles Oct 2014
The world is fast and reckless
like a stampede of beasts and
teenage ***.

It constantly reminds me
of my once mobile life,
before atrophy set like plaster
in my bones.

Everyone used to walk
to where they needed to be,
not because the roads were congested,
but because it was so.
It seems that excuse is just not good enough
anymore.

At times I think:
neither am I.

I still walk the streets
and browse the shop-fronts.
It takes me a little longer these days
to read the signs and labels,
the easy mating calls of the merchants
standing under bigger names
and brighter lights.

Nobody courts anymore.
Hands are held far too easily
and intimacy seems to have become
yet another commodity.

I remember my sweetheart
and the years we lived in absences,
sleeping with a lie
in a life of compromise.
Our eyes stared past the darkness of the room,
beyond to something, somewhere,
far from where we found our lives to be.

I remember her well
amongst the ruins of my years.
How desperate were the days
before we met,
exchanging platitudes for company
in our first loveless marriages.

How bitter I was,
bound within ever decreasing circles
of routine and passionless chains.
I exquisitely recall the day
I finally broke from them.

You and I
met over letters,
our eyes scanning and reciting
each other's loneliness
and fear of never finding a place.
The saliva of the stamp
brought us to a closeness
unbounded by geography.

These days,
nobody understands the thrill of a postbox
and the welcome mat
has become nothing more
than a place to wipe the **** from your shoes,
as the day nurse comes to visit,
kicking pizza leaflets
to the edges of the hallway.

There was excitement in the morning,
sleep thinned to prepare
for that slap of paper
and rattle of metal.

Presently my life feels little more
than an emptied school
in the endless weeks of summer;
a sugar paper lantern
left to bleach in the sun.

I lie in wait,
for the times you appear - a phantasm
in my day. A moment reserved
with the assumption you will be sitting there,
ageing with irrefutable brilliance,
in the chair you stubbornly frequented
ever since our retirement.

I’ll take the hit that comes with it.
I’ll accept the come-down
when I enter the room
and you are not there,
if it permits me a moment of belonging.

The air is cancerous
with the noises of the streets.
We used to stop and listen
to the busker by the bridge,
always pleading upon bended knee
for someone to validate his melody
and make his callouses worthwhile.

Now, I live on in near-silence.
It has been weeks since I spoke to someone
who did not rush me through my sentences.
I am trying to learn the patterns of today,
a way to bow my sad head
and pay up for my goods
in the blink of an eye,
in a way to defy that I am old and slow.

I avoid home mostly
and instead, I walk through
the same route each day,
hoping for a friend
or else never to be noticed.
Hunger will eventually deliver me,
confused at our door.

I turn the television on quickly
to **** the silence that forms
in the spaces you would have spoken in.

On the rare occasions
that I talk to someone,
my eyes blur with inexplicable tears,
a kind of tension grips me,
as if I have missed the last step on the stairs.

I swallow panic
like all of those pills that never work,
instead fogging my mind,
distorting all anchors
to a meaningful life.

The television shouts at me
across the room, patronising like
the cold-callers and politicians.
Everything seems to be an advert
and the news is getting uglier.
Sometimes I turn on the radio,
to give my eyes a rest,
but music isn’t music anymore.

We  never wasted our moments on kids,
but I have grown soft in old age,
and perhaps I would like
to have the comfort of your features
blurred with mine, bestowed upon
our trial-and-error attempt at a legacy.

The money will dry up.
I have started smoking again.
Though I still smoke on the doorstep,
because I know you never liked the smell.
These are just the thoughts of an old man,
some doctored flicker show
Where I can cut out all of the ugliness,
and leave just us.
This is a revised edition of an earlier piece:
http://hellopoetry.com/poem/402353/the-thoughts-of-an-old-man/

The words are mostly the same, but I cut out some of the waffle and tidied it up a little bit. Or made it worse. I guess you never know!

c
Oct 2014 · 427
A Four-Day Old Letter
Edward Coles Oct 2014
I felt the pull of poetry
in your elaborate handwriting.
Those delicately numbered pages
of concern and understanding;
well-tamed and thoroughly Christian.
You tended to your garden,
before spreading aid to the forest,
Joseph is doing well,
and there is happiness at last.
c
Oct 2014 · 334
drunk again
Edward Coles Oct 2014
I am drunk again
and wondering what happened
to my stable moods.
C
Oct 2014 · 561
Seismometer
Edward Coles Oct 2014
I've been drinking all the time,
I've been poisoning my wine,
take a pill to send me off to sleep.

And I've been spinning you a line,
whilst bawling out my eyes,
the grain is fast becoming
a desert-island heap.

There's a mantra in the ground,
lay your ear to the quick-sand crowd,

to hear all commonalities
expressed in forms of symmetry,

expressed in half-formal letters,
in aboriginal dance,
in the fated glance of
a bus-stop stranger;
a romance of happenstance.

Through a discourse with my loss,
I feel that finally I have won:
I just want to feel happiness for once.
c
Oct 2014 · 5.9k
Painting Seashells
Edward Coles Oct 2014
The old man paints seashells
for all of the women he has loved.
He takes his husky for walks
along the beach, returning with
a bag of **** and a collection
of spirals and fans, still pregnant
with the whispers of the ocean.

By the window, he licks his brush
and steadies his nervous hands.
He will share a steak with the dog,
and wonder when the best company
became inanimate or at most; unspeaking.
He had long turned his back on Dylan
and Cohen, in favour of empty sound

and the rain hitting the tarp
in the garden. He recalls Diane
and the green of life in her poetry.
Louise, the blue of her moods and the sea.
Each woman had coloured his life
in hopeful hues, oh, and what a mess
he was in their absence.
(even the dog wouldn't sleep beside him)

The old man drew his last breath
when the silence became deafening.
When he realised he could not reclaim
memories through art, or through
the patient analysis of nature.
There was no shape or colour
that had not been created before.
c
Oct 2014 · 1.2k
The Smiths
Edward Coles Oct 2014
I fell in love with The Smiths
before anything else.
Ever since,
all affection is met with
sheer inadequacy,
and a near insufferable sadness.
c
Oct 2014 · 529
Something New
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Let me destroy this glass of wine.
Take it to heart
like a recurring insult
from the men that once ruled our lives.
The soap operas are almost done,
and I doubt you will have any need
for me tonight.
There is no darling to address,
but if I whisper enough times
perhaps the wind
could pick up my voice
and carry it to more accepting ears.
Let me find a way to last the night.
A touch of youth
amongst all of this decay,
the way lovers pile up
like sad songs and ***** laundry
in the back alley of my mind.
Let me finish this glass of wine.
After that, I will try something new.
c
Oct 2014 · 493
An Intervention
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Don't drink in bed
and spill your wine
for the poet.

He will only leave you
for a better rhyme,
a more wholesome
desk to set his thoughts upon,
a chance to live beyond
four-walled extinction.

Don't let him satisfy
his need for a vice,
a wretched want
for wantonness;
to lay her down
in a bed of poverty.

The poet will capture
your fraught moments,
spinning a line
in smart formation,
and then reminding
you of pain ever since.

Don't sleep with the poet.
He will only wake you
in fear of cold and death.
c
Oct 2014 · 271
The Blues
Edward Coles Oct 2014
He tried to find it between her legs,
he tried to find it on the news,
he tried to find it in yoga poses,
but he found it with the blues.
c
Oct 2014 · 373
What You Lacked
Edward Coles Oct 2014
What you lacked in years
you made up for with pure intent
and a willingness to die
c
Oct 2014 · 514
After The Event
Edward Coles Oct 2014
For Blythe*

My friend, where did you go in such a hurry?
I was stood at the bar, reciting my order
as a preparatory mantra for an interaction
that was always difficult for the both of us.

Everyone is dropping like mayflies here.
A silent dive out of the hologram
and towards more indelible climbs.

I know you lived with an abusive secret;
poorly kept, yet rarely addressed in
your tectonic silences. Irretrievable fractures
that birthed the fault lines in your face.

Fate was donated into your hands.
Another kind soul torturing itself
for merely being human.

My friend, please tell me where to go.
Tell me, how soon will I follow?
Tears have collected in oceans for you.
As you knew that they would.

But even that could not stop you
once love had lost its flavour.
A very warm, good man took his own life today. I'm sorry I couldn't come up with something more substantial for you.
Edward Coles Oct 2014
I have not been well recently.
I have been waking from dreams of falling bombs,
lighting up the sky like a mourning sun.
Each time this happens,
I predict the comfort of a dark black void,
and in waiting for this moment to arrive,
oh brother, have you ever felt more alive?

They say the North-East is in ruins
without my careful footsteps over the ground,
without my drunken tears and absent sounds.
Everywhere I land
has become nothing more than a sea-foam scar,
a painless reminder of all I once had,
now lungs of tar, the birth of a deadbeat dad.

I have not been well recently.
I have been waiting for more persistent ***,
with opened legs and sunscreen on her chest.
The scars may return
in the false new light of a British summer,
I will endeavour to do better this year.

I will smile through the stoning,
and I will celebrate my fear.
c
Oct 2014 · 690
The Railings
Edward Coles Oct 2014
I am sorry sir,
we don't think there has been enough improvement.
It has been weeks since you wrote anything of note
and our ears on the ground tell us you are drinking again.

I wish you would try harder.
What? You don't want to hear about Lincoln again?
He ran a country through it all. You can't even make
your own bed. Why is that?

Your parents?
No. Come on now. You will have to do better than that.
Yes, you have told us about your cat. And your school.
There must be something more. Do you believe in G-d?

You're not sure?
That might be the problem. You are never sure of anything.
Neither North or South, East or West, a roof over your head
but an old mobile phone. I think you just need a title.

I have one lying around here somewhere.
But I don't think you will like it.
c
Oct 2014 · 358
The Witching Hour
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Warm beer and hot milk
to soothe the first breath
of head-cold. I felt it as
I walked the long, unfaltering
street back home,
and in the way my shadow
stalked me on the stairs.

I have taken to an illness
all summer,
so I am hoping for some
warmth in the winter,
some collarbone,
some heavy breath,
some coming together,
some bed I can rest.

We can lounge on the trestle-table,
or some other method of squalor,
so long as I make my chance at living,
so long as I live to write another.

You took me to the alley
and told me to
take it all in my chest,
you said I would feeling belonging
to an alien feeling,
a higher form of living
to all that has come before.

I have been taking pills
all summer,
so I am hoping for some
improvement in the winter,
some grave inspiration,
some great new idea,
some annual edition and
some kind of career.

We can dine on the breadcrumbs
left over from the feast,
we can toast to our freedom
from that untreated disease.
c
Oct 2014 · 2.9k
Four Months At Home
Edward Coles Oct 2014
The cats sleep on the rooftops,
an ambient beat from the shower radio
comes tone-deaf through the open window,
replacing the hum of lawn mowers
that had been harmonising
all Sunday afternoon.

We buried one in the garden,
an overlooked shrine within the deep grass,
child-like magic markers  with a simple turn of phrase;
yet all I can think about
as I look over her grave
are how the beetles are nesting in her brain.

I lost the knack for sympathy,
ever since they medicated my drink
and told me I was their patient.

I lost the will for empathy,
ever since I tried to hang myself
and still they told me to be patient.
c
Oct 2014 · 392
05/10/2014
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Looking out past the window,
looking out to the past,
there are smokers in the meadow,
there are citadels in the grass.
You see,

I am blind under the small-talk lighting,
I am blind to managing debts,
half a person delivered in writing,
half a person pressed to your chest.
You see,

I have fallen in love with the poet,
I have fallen out with the sun,
for turning words into sweat,
for staying inside too long.
You see,

looking back at swollen passions,
looking back at future dread,
I have given up on asking questions,
I have grown used to an empty bed.
c
Oct 2014 · 391
Saturdays are the Greatest
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Saturday night in with the blues.
A Memphis Session
on a loop, the last dancers
in the smoking bay,
casting out their dues
for another day at work,
for another sorry pay.

The chancers are out tonight,
groping *****
on the tube, the last train call
to another city,
of broader sight and brighter light,
with a silk-lined wallet
and discarded winter shawl.

I can stay inside with the blues.
Let it wash on me
like pre-worn jeans, copper leaves
in an October street,
death forming in aesthetic hues,
to colour the abandoned quarry,
to soften the falling
of my feet.
Title/Theme inspired by a song by Kristina Train under the same name :)
Oct 2014 · 401
Suicide Note #1
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Dear friend,

I couldn't find the answer today, for why the world is turning. A half-dozen lovers in a timeless frame, are now but bridges burning. The coffee makes me feel like hell in the morning, whenever morning is an option. You see, I've fallen for a misery, I have become the local burden. They invite me out to harmonise their doubt, over trends we have seen before; the brief salute from a military brute; the human cost of war.

It's been a misery for days and days – weeks and weeks if I tell the truth, but I have been baying at the nail, and sharpening the tooth. I think money is a postcard lover who promises salvation, but in truth can only under-achieve against cigarettes and meditation. The Bowl has been singing to me, but I cannot understand a word,  at times I think I hear the answer, or else the passing of an airborne ****.

Forgive me for crudeness, or for my vague choice of tone, I am kissing my pillow in my sleep, but waking up all alone. From that I have decided that I've got to ask for more, so I am slipping up my sentences, to become a well-spoken bore. I hope you find the answer each time you sip on tea, some heat upon your lips and tongue, some red blossoms on the tree.

I am going now I promise you, I'm serving out my time, I am going to hang out with my father, I'm going to chase it down with wine. For all the good I had desired to do, I am committed to this crime, don't drink in bed, do drugs instead, and do not forget to write.

with love.
Jack.
c
Oct 2014 · 548
A Common Thread
Edward Coles Oct 2014
We're all looking for that bigger high,
we're all looking for a match,
a retreat into a field of wine,
with a roof made out of thatch.

The gulls cry out across the quay,
a prayer naught but an angry mob;
they are searching for eternity,
they are doing it all for G-d.

The solider cries into his ballast sleep
in the analogue plains of war,
no poppy to **** the pain so steep,
no desire to ****, no more.

We're all looking for that higher love,
we're all looking for that 'it',
a life beyond land-mine and slaughter,
beyond false outrage and solemn submit.
c
Oct 2014 · 224
Therapy #2
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Depression: the state of clinging
onto everything until you can't work out
what to let go of.
c
Oct 2014 · 432
Therapy #1
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Feet pedal the laminate flooring
as the screen door slides apart to
reveal her patient professional smile
c
Oct 2014 · 573
It Won't Be Long
Edward Coles Oct 2014
It won't be long.
It won't be long
until you find yourself
running to the platform
with your suitcase
faltering over the cracks
in the concrete.
As the train pulls out
you see blinding fears
diminish and then
disappear entirely.
You see false love
for what it is
and then thank whoever
for your opportunity
to experience it.
It won't be long
until those psalms of travel
become a reality.
Until you are removed
from your pigeon-hole
and post-code
which have been tagged
to you since birth.
You can replace
them with a new name
or in the different way
you apply your eye-liner
and look across
the new rooms
you frequent.
It won't be long
until you find yourself.
I promise,
it won't be long.
c
Oct 2014 · 399
Women
Edward Coles Oct 2014
Women dominate my mind in schizophrenic images
of taut skin, legs opened like a butterfly pinned inside
a display case, and their impatient, rhythmic breath.

I think this is youth. I think this is the longing of
a human, the urges that come once the universe
loses its blackness, and all that is left is light.

I have learned to love the ******. The soft low
of an eventual freedom, exultant in a head-spin of
low blood sugar, and the careful throttle of her neck.

Women dominate my days as a conspiracy theorist
chases truth. It comes in fits of suspended disbelief,
believing that my body holds something wonderful
in the centre.
c
Sep 2014 · 650
You and Me (a song)
Edward Coles Sep 2014
We are locked in this state of paralysed rage
for the powers that have come to be,
with their newspeak lies
and corporate ties,
they'll poison the sky and the sea.

Wherever you will go,
my mind will follow,
there's no shame in feeling weak,
when everything's looking so bleak.

Cop on the beat, we look to believe
that everything is in control.
No divisions of wealth,
your own mental health;
nothing is ever your fault.

Still, they come to say all this hard work will pay,
though your bedsheets are made out of lead,
so forget your disease,
get dirt on your knees,
and take this for your troubled little head.

Wherever you will go,
my mind will follow,
I have been writing these letters to say,
I hope everything's coming your way.

And it's all comin' down, like a surgical gown
replaced with a new lease of living.
Palestinian fields,
reinvented wheels,
and the churches won't lock their doors.

You see, the baby boomers, the white-men-in-suits,
they're a dying breed don't you know?
So keep saluting the sun,
the race isn't run;
I gave up worrying long ago.

Wherever you will go,
my mind will follow,
but if you're looking for a real kind of love,
stop looking to the skies above.

Wherever you will go,
you've got my heart in tow.
Now I'm sober,
all I can see
is the simplicity of you and me.

If only the whole world could be
as simple as you and me.
c
Sep 2014 · 7.6k
Sleep
Edward Coles Sep 2014
Sleep, sleep,
still your breath
and just sleep.
Sleep through
the drum-circle,
the neighbour's garden,
sleep through
the fever,
the sentence,
and the eventual pardon.

Sleep, sleep,
blot your eyes
and just sleep.
Sleep through
her hands touching,
the solemn submit;
sleep through
the wastelands,
the war-zones,
and sleep with the deficit.

Sleep, sleep,
in the castle keep, sleep.
Sleep for the potions,
the poisons,
the crimes you commit.
Too steep is the gangway
to an easier life,
too far is the leap
and too impossible, the wife.

Sleep, sleep,
still your mind
and just sleep.
Keep to
the sidelines,
with intellect deep;
fall to sleep
in the limelight
of your  day,

for you have
earned your rest,
you have found your way.
c
Sep 2014 · 415
Old Photographs
Edward Coles Sep 2014
Stood in a military uniform,
a costume I so despise,
you stare frankly
at the tobacco leaves
that I scrape the table to save.

The Villain is hanging from the tree
in the grounds that house your grave.
A benign smile
has ghosted me
and still I have learned nothing
about being brave.

The Villain spits on the cityscape,
a behaviour I so despise,
but he does it
to savour the drop,
to fall asleep to yoga breath
and harmonic lullabies.

You stand poised for combat,
a costume for the ages,
still you come to me
through poetry
as I keep filling up these pages.
c
Sep 2014 · 782
A Night Alone
Edward Coles Sep 2014
He collects copies of The Watchtower
to get a feel of true America,
to spike a lonesome fever, a voice of
desperation now in the hands of fate.

And in the black tapestries of starlight,
upon smoke and abandoned birthright,
he will stumble into a walking pace,
whenever the moment has come too soon.

He writes about writing more than he writes,
delusions of tyre-swings and fallen kites,
dreams of solitaire and those black-out fields
where you started the fire, then danced within.

And in the grey misery of hindsight,
in lack of sleep and forsaken sunlight,
he will stumble upon an inner peace
for the moments that are still yet to come.

He thinks of naked women all the time,
opened boxes of wine, slave to the mind
of divided poetry, words that rhyme,
a missing person, hidden in plain sight.
c
Sep 2014 · 672
Finding Mr. Right
Edward Coles Sep 2014
Is he patient with your moods?
Does he understand the difference
between weather and climate;
a weekend of sunshine
does not mean that it is summer.
Does he know how it feels
to be stuck in January for years?
Does he open the curtains
and expect your skin to tan?
Does he kiss between your legs
to pay off his passionless debts,
and does he bring you flowers
for all the times he forgets?
The tulips are vibrant in the vase.
Does anything else you know
contain that much colour and life?
c
Sep 2014 · 2.4k
Women
Edward Coles Sep 2014
There are bare-breasted women
lounging in the unmade bed
of my mind.
They teach me chords on the piano,
and how to stay grateful
in the face of time;
how it lingers between seconds,
but years go by unannounced.

We don't make love. We ****,
taking back each wasted Sunday
spent talking to G-d,
or waiting for political truth.
They run their fingers over my back,
send me to a sleep
of dried sweat and loving violence.
They send me sunflower seeds and ****

in the post,
so I can bloom by the open window
and feel warmth through winter.
There are powerful women
laying down the law by the clock tower.
They stand up for Syria
and challenge the authority
I had conjured in my mind.
c
Edward Coles Sep 2014
We are young, they say,
like the new stars forming,
like the ocean sounds adorning
sleep to the city dweller,
with his leathered face
but handsome pay.

He's exchanging the sirens
for a more rhythmic pace,
taking off his coat
and professional face,
to press you to the wall,
forgetting the Keats and the Byrons
that came before.

We are young, I'm sure,
despite having to crawl,
despite disappearing into
the city sprawl,
and returning half a person,
only memory intact,
and a stream of shutting doors.

You're giving up too soon.
Too soon a disciple of established fact,
too soon beguiled by
your own stage-lit act;
a smile worn, rather than felt,
a dress bought for him,
but never touched,

and for all of the hands
you may have dealt,
not a single one
has kept you young.
c
Sep 2014 · 19.0k
Sex
Edward Coles Sep 2014
***
My *** drive would cause earthquakes,
but I can never find the time
to leave this place,
this bed-side lamp,
and away from poor attempts at rhyme.

Depression is a tired old topic.
But *** is forever at hand
to pin you down,
to win you round,
slinking off to the toilet in my dressing gown.

I know you feel a belonging
to the archives of music,
you drink in bed,
and sink on in,
to the restless call of another troubled head.

I will find restoration
held between your slender legs.
It is all we've got,
in this paradise lost,
in this sweaty reclaim,
to a feeling we'd forgot.

Going down is not an art,
but a way of keeping young.
How can you claim to love
what you won't dare to kiss?
How will you ever hear her siren song?
c
Sep 2014 · 522
A Poem About No One
Edward Coles Sep 2014
You remind me of Stevie Nicks in her prime,
pinning medals to yourself for surviving love
and turning all sadness into effortless ***.

The lead guitar plays through your headphones
as you walk through another dreary street,
another dreary day where he will barely look at you.

Rain falls and autumn arrives as if it has always
been there, as if the seasons have finally caught up
with the mood that has been clinging to you

all year. You wonder from your place on the bus,
where your life is leading, if indeed, you want it
to lead anywhere at all. Every indication is given

by some well-wishing hand, each one hoping to
tend to you, pigeon-hole you into a life that they
had always hoped to live in, beyond hypocrisy

and lack of education. I know you gave up on
newspapers long ago. I am glad. You are worth
the peace of a morning. Someone like you

should never be dragged into war.
c
Sep 2014 · 483
Settling Down
Edward Coles Sep 2014
Do you remember those blues?
That early twenties something:
revolt against the people that
you are growing up to become.
Do you remember the music
we played to keep us company
in those nights without purpose,
in those days spent drunk and
saluting the sun upon its demise?
Do you remember the letters
of sadness we sent back and forth,
relaying uncertainty in our little
sink-hole of neurosis and boredom?
I wonder when that stopped.
I wonder if I miss it sometimes.
Do you?
c
Sep 2014 · 957
Retirement
Edward Coles Sep 2014
I still care.
Sitting behind the net curtain,
I burn incense to cover the smell
of cigarettes and watch the street
fill up each morning. I may have grown
old and fat and short of sight, but you know
I remained as half a person with a childhood mind.

The bodies come.
Mass graves as far as the eye
can see, and yet still I think of you
and how you patterned your hairstyle
to the changing of your moods. I wonder
how you are looking today, how you are feeling.
Though I am finding grey in my whiskers, I still care.

I paint now.
Nothing special, just irises
from the neighbours garden.
I grew tired of writing  once I found
that there was nothing to show for it.
I am too lazy to tend to a garden that
creeps up around me, I have given up on

trying to out-run the world.
I still care. Somewhere beyond
cynicism and charcoal, I still care.
c
Sep 2014 · 1.3k
Flamenco Sketches
Edward Coles Sep 2014
They put nails in my palms
for loving you.
You described bookcases
as a ladder to the moon,
and they did not care for that.
You labelled the radio
as the death of the album,
and upon each of your words
another sparrow flew
from the windowsill in my mind,
off to join you for warmer times,
your flesh on mine,
your glass, my wine.

They told me that you eat men.
High heels and corsets
as you make their acquaintance,
a black hood and axe
as you take a moonlit walk
past the old cemetery.
I would be lying
if I said I was not scared of you.
I would also be lying
if I told you I came with devotion,
or any other plan that did not
involve taming you with ***.
They put nails in my palms
for loving you.

They put nails in my palms
for never wanting you to go.
c
Sep 2014 · 410
Opposites Cannot Attract
Edward Coles Sep 2014
Desire only comes in the next train ticket,
the next fevered plan to get out of here.
They are selling roses in the canopies;
a thousand lovers for you to meet there.

This violence is born in desperation,
a vicious sting to quell the fear of death.
And yet you still wake to the radio news;
repeating in cycles, the pains of life.

Where did you disappear to in your longing,
your perilous climb down the fire escape?
Did you find that sense of humble belonging,
or else fall into a four-walled prison?

I miss you now, in absence of a letter,
your voice not heard to satisfy my days.
Stay with me as I take to pills and water,
straining to sleep without your words at night.
c
Sep 2014 · 519
The Whistle-Blower
Edward Coles Sep 2014
I heard they found him hiding
behind claims of inner peace
and the sweaty palms of a
bare-breasted Parisian lover.
They found red stains on the
mattress. She could have been
a ******; young thoughts and sin,
though I know Leonard had
quite the taste for cheap red wine.
It would often resemble blood-lust.

They dragged him away through
the photographer's parade,
one million flashes mimicking
nature to capture the colour
leaving his handsome face.
In a faded suit and tie,
in a faded verse and rhyme,
he addressed the crowd to call
for freedom, to call for anything
more than a monthly wage.

I heard they found him lurking
in the digital archives of their crimes,
biding his time to become a hero,
to blow the whistle once he had
finally learned how to carry a tune.
He found innocent blood-shed
in the dust-cloud streets and money
distributed amongst greedy hands
like poker chips, passing weaponry
between countries like a blunt.

They dragged him away to
great public disgrace,
funding the next big blockbuster,
turning genius to mania,
and his lover into a victim.
In the lack of space or time,
in the lack of pouring wine,
Leonard learned to whistle
from by the window until
the inner peace returned,

until he understood the birds,
until the city came to burn.
c
Sep 2014 · 532
Untitled
Edward Coles Sep 2014
I am a man of simple pleasures
and complex desires
Sep 2014 · 480
An Unexpected Visit
Edward Coles Sep 2014
I don't know why you came here.
I don't know why you brought
two gallons of wine
and a series of dresses to try on
in front of my postage stamp mirror.
I haven't slept a full night in two years.
It gets a little easier after the first.
You learn small tricks to bore yourself
into unconsciousness
but now you have given me a reason
to stay awake during the day.
How could I ever go back to dreams
now that you are stood in my doorway?
c
Sep 2014 · 1.4k
Life in Charcoal
Edward Coles Sep 2014
The street-side artist drew your body with
charcoal and claimed the best form of life came
after the forest fire, over a more
fertile land, when the ash-cloud will come to
unsettle your vision from what is laid out
before you. He shaded your ******* in with
his thumb over the blackened lines of hope
that you would come to envisage yourself
in the way each passer-by came to do.
Once you paid up and walked the promenade,
you came to the lighthouse in the distance
as a ship turned to change its course for you.
c
Sep 2014 · 503
Drowned
Edward Coles Sep 2014
I cannot write a sonnet
or funny limerick that will leave you
laughing into your third whiskey
of the night. I cannot spread your legs
with words and I guess geography and
lack of voice have always blighted
my route to a real home.
I cannot write greetings cards
to a second aunt sunbathing in
Great Yarmouth and coming back
with frostbite and head-lice.
I cannot write a song
and sing it to you in a way that will
leave you kissing your pillow
and wishing I was there to steady
your brand new appetite for living.
I cannot write a psalm for G-d
or an ode to nature without sounding
like a lost cause or reluctant romantic.
I cannot write the score to
the sounds of thunder that siren
with friction in the sky
nor can I give form to happenstance
memories of worms in the soil
and rainbow braids in your hair. I cannot
do much this year save from writing
an obituary and hoping you will understand
what it means to drown in open air.
c
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