Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
say something or just keep on makin' ghost-patterned, intervening silences, singing or half-murmuring verses, those ones from slow songs under low light, the same refrain that runs between all the others, through the passage of weeks, stained tobacco sweet by eleven-thirty iterations; * [post-meridian or particulate matters only, of course, it's hard to wake before noon anymore.]* with the way these rhythms keep us down and out, counting the methods- the summations of potential miseries, and the probabilities that all would or could turn around, before the end of the week. or the next one. and, outside the door, the one after that, over the acres of concrete and pale shade, streetlit likenesses hushing air through melting neighbourhoods, I make imaginary footprints, wondering which, of the field of household starlit comforts, is the blade of grass you cast seeds from to inadvertently germinate and sprout a well of aspiration, the wind in a stranger's ribcage, continually growing, hiccoughing leaf litter, with every last breath.
0
Dec 11, 2012
Dec 11, 2012 at 6:24 AM UTC
after the Jacobean epoch of gardening began:
say something or just keep on makin' ghost-patterned, intervening silences, singing or half-murmuring verses, those ones from slow songs under low light, the same refrain that runs between all the others, through the passage of weeks, stained tobacco sweet by eleven-thirty iterations; * [post-meridian or particulate matters only, of course, it's hard to wake before noon anymore.]* with the way these rhythms keep us down and out, counting the methods- the summations of potential miseries, and the probabilities that all would or could turn around, before the end of the week. or the next one. and, outside the door, the one after that, over the acres of concrete and pale shade, streetlit likenesses hushing air through melting neighbourhoods, I make imaginary footprints, wondering which, of the field of household starlit comforts, is the blade of grass you cast seeds from to inadvertently germinate and sprout a well of aspiration, the wind in a stranger's ribcage, continually growing, hiccoughing leaf litter, with every last breath.
I couldn't think of a title, which ended up in lawn research my sister said "I think I'm here", as I embraced another goodbye and I was already opening the door [this was unnecessary, but I liked the line] I am tired, too tired for my own good. and, still, awake. It has been another day. Like any other.
tom-mccone
Written by
New Zealander
Dec 11, 2012
Dec 11, 2012 at 6:24 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem