Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Through a split lip red foam, froghopper froth fizzing, haemoglobin, half-life sitting thickly-thick, on a paving stone. Looking like Clinton’s cards think human hearts are shaped like. But mine’s an artichoke a watery phloem thistle core folded in fronds and furs, bristles of cowlick baleen, sailing, ship-lapped bark, darkness and birdcages. Mine’s a rigour-mortis pill bug potato fly, oddball, ***** slug an ammonite, a butterfly tongue, a bending toe curled in ecstasy. Exponential shell chambers and septums ending alongside everything. And the guts of my heart incessantly churn mechanically, maniacally and obliviously rhythmically Keeping me malleable soft, moving, un-enveloped by beetle wings. Just like the platelets of my hardening spit-heart are, blackening blood, amber caught bugs, clay in mud, elliptical, eclipsing. Nothing like we think it is.
0
May 31, 2016
May 31, 2016 at 5:21 PM UTC
I Spat a Heart
Through a split lip red foam, froghopper froth fizzing, haemoglobin, half-life sitting thickly-thick, on a paving stone. Looking like Clinton’s cards think human hearts are shaped like. But mine’s an artichoke a watery phloem thistle core folded in fronds and furs, bristles of cowlick baleen, sailing, ship-lapped bark, darkness and birdcages. Mine’s a rigour-mortis pill bug potato fly, oddball, ***** slug an ammonite, a butterfly tongue, a bending toe curled in ecstasy. Exponential shell chambers and septums ending alongside everything. And the guts of my heart incessantly churn mechanically, maniacally and obliviously rhythmically Keeping me malleable soft, moving, un-enveloped by beetle wings. Just like the platelets of my hardening spit-heart are, blackening blood, amber caught bugs, clay in mud, elliptical, eclipsing. Nothing like we think it is.
<3 Thoughts on how our hearts are nothing like their symbolic counterparts, or like anyone else's. They're ***** and alive, and, when drawn out, just feel dead.
harry-randle-marsh
Written by
May 31, 2016
May 31, 2016 at 5:21 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem