Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
You have inner-city-Chinese-restaurant-koi-pond eyes; infiltrated pupils that sit behind and spy on the others sitting around, all whilst remaining dark: a hallmark I admire. There's a maternity queen wrapped tight in a dress, blue and white, who sits at the front and speaks and you write down what leaks and you make it stick with a biro you bought with a virgin-first pay check envelope- ripped open with an eager thumb I'd like to hold when winter rolls up and in. Lighthouses look across bigger ponds to warn of storms that are yet to come. From afar they see and decide, weigh up and divide choice into digestible chunks of we can save them, or if not, we'll guide them whilst they swim: you make me do this endlessly, almost every day and this poem is to stop me from thinking your falsetto hums, that pause in mid air, free, are for me- you've another bow in brown hair and our corridor conversations lead nowhere- I'm gracelessly in love and I just said love and it's a kind-of cliché, a boring over used word that we all use when we're excited; when we run laps around a track that we cannot navigate, when we're hungover and don't want to work with another desk clerk bore who sits and talks and works as if an unpaid chore, but it is true and I wish you'd notice me.
0
Oct 29, 2013
Oct 29, 2013 at 1:16 PM UTC
Koi Ponds: A Love Poem
You have inner-city-Chinese-restaurant-koi-pond eyes; infiltrated pupils that sit behind and spy on the others sitting around, all whilst remaining dark: a hallmark I admire. There's a maternity queen wrapped tight in a dress, blue and white, who sits at the front and speaks and you write down what leaks and you make it stick with a biro you bought with a virgin-first pay check envelope- ripped open with an eager thumb I'd like to hold when winter rolls up and in. Lighthouses look across bigger ponds to warn of storms that are yet to come. From afar they see and decide, weigh up and divide choice into digestible chunks of we can save them, or if not, we'll guide them whilst they swim: you make me do this endlessly, almost every day and this poem is to stop me from thinking your falsetto hums, that pause in mid air, free, are for me- you've another bow in brown hair and our corridor conversations lead nowhere- I'm gracelessly in love and I just said love and it's a kind-of cliché, a boring over used word that we all use when we're excited; when we run laps around a track that we cannot navigate, when we're hungover and don't want to work with another desk clerk bore who sits and talks and works as if an unpaid chore, but it is true and I wish you'd notice me.
alllllllll the way from the UK >> www.coffeeshoppoems.com
tim-knight
Written by
English
Oct 29, 2013
Oct 29, 2013 at 1:16 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem