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today we celebrated pain crowds gathered in the close hole they'd made, and, too, in fields where once were harvested anonymous body parts and broken luggage straps   and, why do they still need to remember that ... sad birthday he stares ahead, piercing the lens with blue eyes, apparent youth belying ancients inside uncertain how to smile yet, the tie uneven around his starched oxford collar there will be cake later, one supposes, laughter of other children gathered 'round the table the pretty brown girl in a pink dress accepted presents from those who'd gathered - maybe her mother set her hair in those loose braids- her brown eyes brushed him, lips smiled and newspapers said it was wrong because it made too much fire, burned whole cities to the ground he never saw her again until bobbing hens got lost in a wailing Hammond; they'd missed The End it was spring again then, like in Eden, when, unashamed and perfect, her ******* danced with music and a yellow rose was pressed between their unused notebooks to mark the occasion Mother was mad, and derided the prospect of pickaninny babies taking seats at her fine linen-draped table until everyone forgot once ... again Now the New Yorker has finally canceled itself, ever a meager meal, its offerings of pinto beans and metaphors quickly swallowed in secret in hopes that divine inspiration might ensue as he picked ripened tomatoes and peaches, each in their seasons, and ate of them lustily, too and suddenly it's spring ...  again but eyes weak and weepy, his life lost in stone-walled sanctuaries that protected imaginary pickaninnies and half-breeds today accustomed to titles of "mister" or "ma'am" because it's America, and at her own End, Mother fell in love with so many other brown-skinned girls it didn't matter anymore Clayton leans on his push broom, always remembers to smile as he requests the odd bit of change "if you can..." the boy can't remember his own name anymore nor her's rubs broken dust with his black leather shoes, wonders where they've been - because bold hues loudly pronounced the arrival of spring again, which revives nagging pain from the picture he'd saved and not yet time for tomatoes or peaches nor the pretty, brown eyed-girl, her pink dress and braids which had always come and gone without celebrations
0
May 16, 2014
May 16, 2014 at 12:42 AM UTC
Sepia Pictures of a Boy with Blue Eyes
today we celebrated pain crowds gathered in the close hole they'd made, and, too, in fields where once were harvested anonymous body parts and broken luggage straps   and, why do they still need to remember that ... sad birthday he stares ahead, piercing the lens with blue eyes, apparent youth belying ancients inside uncertain how to smile yet, the tie uneven around his starched oxford collar there will be cake later, one supposes, laughter of other children gathered 'round the table the pretty brown girl in a pink dress accepted presents from those who'd gathered - maybe her mother set her hair in those loose braids- her brown eyes brushed him, lips smiled and newspapers said it was wrong because it made too much fire, burned whole cities to the ground he never saw her again until bobbing hens got lost in a wailing Hammond; they'd missed The End it was spring again then, like in Eden, when, unashamed and perfect, her ******* danced with music and a yellow rose was pressed between their unused notebooks to mark the occasion Mother was mad, and derided the prospect of pickaninny babies taking seats at her fine linen-draped table until everyone forgot once ... again Now the New Yorker has finally canceled itself, ever a meager meal, its offerings of pinto beans and metaphors quickly swallowed in secret in hopes that divine inspiration might ensue as he picked ripened tomatoes and peaches, each in their seasons, and ate of them lustily, too and suddenly it's spring ...  again but eyes weak and weepy, his life lost in stone-walled sanctuaries that protected imaginary pickaninnies and half-breeds today accustomed to titles of "mister" or "ma'am" because it's America, and at her own End, Mother fell in love with so many other brown-skinned girls it didn't matter anymore Clayton leans on his push broom, always remembers to smile as he requests the odd bit of change "if you can..." the boy can't remember his own name anymore nor her's rubs broken dust with his black leather shoes, wonders where they've been - because bold hues loudly pronounced the arrival of spring again, which revives nagging pain from the picture he'd saved and not yet time for tomatoes or peaches nor the pretty, brown eyed-girl, her pink dress and braids which had always come and gone without celebrations
robert-zanfad
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May 16, 2014
May 16, 2014 at 12:42 AM UTC
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