Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The tower climbs in periodic orange, lung-like patterns above the slate run, casting evening in long frequencies as I run the face of century rows. A hilted moon cuts swaths through clouds of interior peach, piercing a gin-muted sky. Blocks of night advance across the blue golf course & empty highball glasses clink like bells in the porch dark. Broad curves of street rise in the humid trees, then sweep and glitter toward the hospital. Four and a half miles bring me to the train station, under the black water circuitry. You arrive in your night-soaked dress, walking me home. The streetlamps are aching yellow. Rain never comes. As a we drift home I feel so lucky that all my runs carry me home to you. I draw a shower, & a charcoal horizon tilts, tilts, tilts.
0
Aug 1, 2019
Aug 1, 2019 at 10:23 AM UTC
August Night Run
The tower climbs in periodic orange, lung-like patterns above the slate run, casting evening in long frequencies as I run the face of century rows. A hilted moon cuts swaths through clouds of interior peach, piercing a gin-muted sky. Blocks of night advance across the blue golf course & empty highball glasses clink like bells in the porch dark. Broad curves of street rise in the humid trees, then sweep and glitter toward the hospital. Four and a half miles bring me to the train station, under the black water circuitry. You arrive in your night-soaked dress, walking me home. The streetlamps are aching yellow. Rain never comes. As a we drift home I feel so lucky that all my runs carry me home to you. I draw a shower, & a charcoal horizon tilts, tilts, tilts.
EvanS
Written by
46/M/DC
Aug 1, 2019
Aug 1, 2019 at 10:23 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem