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 Oct 2017 Greenie
wordvango
cool
 Oct 2017 Greenie
wordvango
I need to start writing younger
like in hip hop about cool ****
the trend is younger
the millenial
I thinks

and I had my day
in the sun the gutter
had our sayings
like cool and groovy
made like we was

(cool)  I tried not to say that.
 Oct 2017 Greenie
wordvango
****,
so tell me again after
I die with flowers and a big ceremony

how I made you feel or melt or cry
talk now as I lay stiff unable to hear
how great and saintly I was , (unreal)

dress me in a black suit (I'd never wear
living)
place me in a golden casket
(I sure can't afford, now)
nor ever could
VA only pays 250

If I could inject while I am breathing
I want my funeral now, while I'm living!
Let's rent out the parlor
at the mortuary
and get high on ******
and Patron

I'll buy a black suit
for that cash in my life
insurance and spend it for
a big bowl of ******* and  Hash
and caviar (i've never tried it)

We'll all slurp oysters and
dance with lampshades on for nights
and then you can plant me
with the biggest smile

On my lapel, I'll die
smelling a rose I plucked
from the cemetery.
 Oct 2017 Greenie
Akira Chinen
She stole the poetry from his heart
and the color of love on her lips
made him stutter and blush
she replaced the air in his lungs
with the blue ocean
and beauty of sadness
trapped in the Vincent swirls
of magic dancing in her eyes
she gave his blood back
everything that was missing
or stolen or broken
from the life of days before
she was the touch
and the rhythm of madness
his feet needed to
dance
paint
shout again
he would always be falling for her
even when their hands
would never embrace
their lips never trade
soft or hard or long
kisses in the rain or sun or sin
for every poem she stole
she left behind
a reason
a dream
a love
for his heart to beat again
 Oct 2017 Greenie
Joshua Haines
White Interceptors illuminate, cry, and leave ribbons of red and blue,
  accelerating north on Featherbed. Streetlamps hang like midnight ornaments.

It starts to rain, turning the tar streets into slick mirrors.
  I can see my lights lead me, sweeping the asphalt.

Kent is still too dangerous to gentrify. The trashcans are spilling
  cereal boxes and empty two liters. I imagine a two-thousand year-old
mountain of trash, corroding and forming this neighborhood.

  Barefoot children walk around aluminum cakes, reaching for the rain.

Skinny cats trot across the street, green and yellow eyes,
  leaking through the dark. I name them after sicknesses.

The humming of my Camry grows louder as I squeeze by
  dripping, patting hands. I now recognize the moon.

Buildings swoosh by faster and faster. Minutes go by and I
  find myself on the outskirts; the trees sway, dodging rain.

My phone rings like a frenzied roach. Picking it up,
  'Hello.'

'Sure. Yeah, I'll be right there.
  'Nowhere.
    'I'm going nowhere.'

The phone bounces on the grey seat. A screeching.
  Coming to a stop; my chest almost touching the center
of the steering wheel. All becomes still.

  A buck with velvet antlers stands in the rain.
It runs into the dancing forest. Much like me.
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