Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I taste the brightness Of citrus when she smiles, Almost like a sunrise. I taste something mournful When I remember our midnight conversations.   Blackberries, dark and bitter, But as the tang fades, The stain remains. People say crying tastes like saltwater. Yes: the stale sting of sweat on my palms, Tastes like graphite and desperation, Like expired mangoes,   And a voice that won’t stop talking. I remember the ache of Evenings, lonely and suffocating. Mornings that I still wake to Where I dream of breakfast and Treat myself to black coffee. It sounds like a braggart king’s Biggest lie, the taste of death. It tastes like showering in the dark, Like metal and blood that won’t wash off, Like black coffee when I would Rather have Cheerios.
0
Mar 14, 2018
Mar 14, 2018 at 3:30 PM UTC
Palatable
I taste the brightness Of citrus when she smiles, Almost like a sunrise. I taste something mournful When I remember our midnight conversations.   Blackberries, dark and bitter, But as the tang fades, The stain remains. People say crying tastes like saltwater. Yes: the stale sting of sweat on my palms, Tastes like graphite and desperation, Like expired mangoes,   And a voice that won’t stop talking. I remember the ache of Evenings, lonely and suffocating. Mornings that I still wake to Where I dream of breakfast and Treat myself to black coffee. It sounds like a braggart king’s Biggest lie, the taste of death. It tastes like showering in the dark, Like metal and blood that won’t wash off, Like black coffee when I would Rather have Cheerios.
astr
Written by
Mar 14, 2018
Mar 14, 2018 at 3:30 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem