Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
But lately, I've been falling like rain, collectively puddling at the edges of your rain boots, splash, your boots bright red like my cheeks the first time we impromptu'd to the beach because we didn't have anything better to do, and everyone forgot us anyway. My pants were, peach, or maybe coral, but rolled up enough to see the sharped edges of my ankles, because it was what I could afford to give you, I had lost those trimmings long ago to the world, even though it never gave me any of my pieces back, and speaking of, I still have white pieces of sand in my pockets, and maybe if I poured them out on your floor, we could have had a beach of our very own. And I could roll down those pants, you could change into your teal shirt, and we might have sunbathed in our own warmth, glowing yellow and bright like those little specks in your eyes nobody ever notices, but I knew they were there. That's what happens when you pay attention to the details of people, You find in them colors that are too hard to name, but if you have a color wheel and a pen, you can find out what they're called, and even if you can't, you can make up your own as you go along, like; Greasy-pizza-stain-from-the-little-shack-on-the-water-red, and light-2009-Pontiac-G6-that-got-you-to-the-beach-when-you-had-no-place-else-to-go-grayish-blue. You can even almost mix these colors into paint, and hand them out in pamphlets to all of your friends and family; "Here's the shade of green the leaves were on the tree she sat on with me." "This is the shade of pink her lips were when she said 'I love you.'" "And here's the shade of red I saw when I heard her say goodbye."
0
Jun 10, 2015
Jun 10, 2015 at 12:41 AM UTC
The Colors of Tybee
But lately, I've been falling like rain, collectively puddling at the edges of your rain boots, splash, your boots bright red like my cheeks the first time we impromptu'd to the beach because we didn't have anything better to do, and everyone forgot us anyway. My pants were, peach, or maybe coral, but rolled up enough to see the sharped edges of my ankles, because it was what I could afford to give you, I had lost those trimmings long ago to the world, even though it never gave me any of my pieces back, and speaking of, I still have white pieces of sand in my pockets, and maybe if I poured them out on your floor, we could have had a beach of our very own. And I could roll down those pants, you could change into your teal shirt, and we might have sunbathed in our own warmth, glowing yellow and bright like those little specks in your eyes nobody ever notices, but I knew they were there. That's what happens when you pay attention to the details of people, You find in them colors that are too hard to name, but if you have a color wheel and a pen, you can find out what they're called, and even if you can't, you can make up your own as you go along, like; Greasy-pizza-stain-from-the-little-shack-on-the-water-red, and light-2009-Pontiac-G6-that-got-you-to-the-beach-when-you-had-no-place-else-to-go-grayish-blue. You can even almost mix these colors into paint, and hand them out in pamphlets to all of your friends and family; "Here's the shade of green the leaves were on the tree she sat on with me." "This is the shade of pink her lips were when she said 'I love you.'" "And here's the shade of red I saw when I heard her say goodbye."
Old, repurposed poetry. I can't think of anything new.
chasingshores
Written by
28/F/American
Jun 10, 2015
Jun 10, 2015 at 12:41 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem