Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Rapidly the crows started circling under clouds, the winter dropped it’s hemlines, wind chimes started hanging bones and teeth where feathers were now too fickle. I whisper to you from a distance who whispers to me from just below. You went missing from my dreams. I couldn’t recognise their forms, their frenetic and frenzy, their motion and melancholy, I drew the world in shades of cry, you cut me out and walked away. The black and white figures floating like paper planes or glued on snowflakes, origami flowers, ornamental place settings. You were always somehow both the paving stones beneath my shoes and the endlessness of sky rolled above my head, a canopy sprinkled with stars blown from your knuckles like snow. This is not a morning song because the sun isn’t going to rise on this land anymore, it’s seen enough of daylight and there’s nothing you can do about it. This is called growing up. This is called a learning curve. A wake up call. A character building exercise that requires some demolition before you begin. No one can tell you if the darkness has come to stay or if there is an exit route. Is there anybody there, treading the waves in this night-time sea. I hear your voice, I hear the stars coughing quietly at the back of heaven, I hear the lampshades sigh, the picture frames, the paperweights, the rain gutters. Were you up there with the birds, like you hoped you someday might be, although I hope this doesn’t mean that you are dead. There’s a finality to being dead, everyone just accepting the empty space that holds your shape, the vacuum you once breathed in, trying to move on and trying to forget the presence of that loss, trying to forget it ever happened or you ever happened- that you never died, so never lived. Nothing else quite has that same brutal symmetry that is maddeningly unequal on one side. Dark and light. You can’t have one without the other, yet light is filled with shadows, and war and peace. War is a permanent state of losing when you are supposed to be winning but with so much losing all the time, you accept some victory wherever you can, and then peace becomes an arbitrary thing, a concept, a Utopia, a fairytale, and war both real life and the stuff of fiction, both their problem and on your doorstep. It won’t be war or darkness that kills us. It will be the forgetting of things, letting them drift away and not being able to remember them being with you still. Parts of yourself start getting chiseled away, you are whittled down to slimmer sets of variables, the situation tightening around you, the doors closing, more dead ends, more walled up corridors, and this time, only one escape, no trap doors, to loopholes. Hands you used to hold, you forget who they ever belonged to. Words you used to speak sounding now just like silence. Wishes you used to make greying the glow of wishing entirely until you are left with just bones, an empty bottle, a melted candle and a broken fountain. Those little games you used to play with yourself, those superstitions and fantasies, the make believe, the Peter Pan, they become cumbersome and painfully false, the skin they are in hardening to cold plastic. You are already an overexposed and underexposed and wrongly exposed photograph and you haven’t even grown up that far yet, you still have further the go, nobody to show you the way. No wonder I got lost. And I have never been good at orientation. So I found a place for my head in the sand, and listened to the sound of the sea in shells, the glimmer of fish, the sea monkeys we released into the Wiltshire stream. People want to fill the world with silly love songs and goldfish and miniature castles. Four seconds, flash and it’s gone, it’s a whole new world. The sand got in my eyes, in that dust bowl of papery scratchy anxiety, attrition against my skin, dry and eating away at the edges of me, until I start to collapse on myself. I should have worked on making my skin thicker, or growing a stronger backbone. I brace myself with wishbones and wish that you were here, or I was anywhere with a star to point me in one way and the moon to change the tide, for planets to align and the poets to smile on my fortune, write me a perfect sonnet. Where are you now? With a dagger and a pack of sandwiches and sardonic smile, flint stone eyes, shadows on your heels. Where did the time go, is it under my pillow, and if I slept right through it how am I or was I ever supposed to know? The clocks hold hands, the faces slip just slightly out of position, the hammer on the nail one more time, the forest fire that used to be contained in an ashtray? I hear you, are you out there somewhere swimming. Quiet now. Was it you I heard, or me?
0
Jul 18, 2017
Jul 18, 2017 at 10:37 AM UTC
An elegiac roundabout
Rapidly the crows started circling under clouds, the winter dropped it’s hemlines, wind chimes started hanging bones and teeth where feathers were now too fickle. I whisper to you from a distance who whispers to me from just below. You went missing from my dreams. I couldn’t recognise their forms, their frenetic and frenzy, their motion and melancholy, I drew the world in shades of cry, you cut me out and walked away. The black and white figures floating like paper planes or glued on snowflakes, origami flowers, ornamental place settings. You were always somehow both the paving stones beneath my shoes and the endlessness of sky rolled above my head, a canopy sprinkled with stars blown from your knuckles like snow. This is not a morning song because the sun isn’t going to rise on this land anymore, it’s seen enough of daylight and there’s nothing you can do about it. This is called growing up. This is called a learning curve. A wake up call. A character building exercise that requires some demolition before you begin. No one can tell you if the darkness has come to stay or if there is an exit route. Is there anybody there, treading the waves in this night-time sea. I hear your voice, I hear the stars coughing quietly at the back of heaven, I hear the lampshades sigh, the picture frames, the paperweights, the rain gutters. Were you up there with the birds, like you hoped you someday might be, although I hope this doesn’t mean that you are dead. There’s a finality to being dead, everyone just accepting the empty space that holds your shape, the vacuum you once breathed in, trying to move on and trying to forget the presence of that loss, trying to forget it ever happened or you ever happened- that you never died, so never lived. Nothing else quite has that same brutal symmetry that is maddeningly unequal on one side. Dark and light. You can’t have one without the other, yet light is filled with shadows, and war and peace. War is a permanent state of losing when you are supposed to be winning but with so much losing all the time, you accept some victory wherever you can, and then peace becomes an arbitrary thing, a concept, a Utopia, a fairytale, and war both real life and the stuff of fiction, both their problem and on your doorstep. It won’t be war or darkness that kills us. It will be the forgetting of things, letting them drift away and not being able to remember them being with you still. Parts of yourself start getting chiseled away, you are whittled down to slimmer sets of variables, the situation tightening around you, the doors closing, more dead ends, more walled up corridors, and this time, only one escape, no trap doors, to loopholes. Hands you used to hold, you forget who they ever belonged to. Words you used to speak sounding now just like silence. Wishes you used to make greying the glow of wishing entirely until you are left with just bones, an empty bottle, a melted candle and a broken fountain. Those little games you used to play with yourself, those superstitions and fantasies, the make believe, the Peter Pan, they become cumbersome and painfully false, the skin they are in hardening to cold plastic. You are already an overexposed and underexposed and wrongly exposed photograph and you haven’t even grown up that far yet, you still have further the go, nobody to show you the way. No wonder I got lost. And I have never been good at orientation. So I found a place for my head in the sand, and listened to the sound of the sea in shells, the glimmer of fish, the sea monkeys we released into the Wiltshire stream. People want to fill the world with silly love songs and goldfish and miniature castles. Four seconds, flash and it’s gone, it’s a whole new world. The sand got in my eyes, in that dust bowl of papery scratchy anxiety, attrition against my skin, dry and eating away at the edges of me, until I start to collapse on myself. I should have worked on making my skin thicker, or growing a stronger backbone. I brace myself with wishbones and wish that you were here, or I was anywhere with a star to point me in one way and the moon to change the tide, for planets to align and the poets to smile on my fortune, write me a perfect sonnet. Where are you now? With a dagger and a pack of sandwiches and sardonic smile, flint stone eyes, shadows on your heels. Where did the time go, is it under my pillow, and if I slept right through it how am I or was I ever supposed to know? The clocks hold hands, the faces slip just slightly out of position, the hammer on the nail one more time, the forest fire that used to be contained in an ashtray? I hear you, are you out there somewhere swimming. Quiet now. Was it you I heard, or me?
daisy-king
Written by
27/F/English
Jul 18, 2017
Jul 18, 2017 at 10:37 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem