Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The sun saturates—maturates my family's backyard like clomiphene for chlorophyll. Swords emerge from my sward, harboring mosquitoes, the edges need to be filed down. Father would edge the lawn, trimming its sides to make a perfect geometric shape. The wind would push the grass down, like God patting the top of the field's head. I would cut that grass—each blade sent through my blades dispersing into a green mist. Clippings are thrown into bat cave black garbage bags tied tight to avoid leakage. But when I go inside, I notice that green powder has collected on my shoes.
0
Nov 27, 2020
Nov 27, 2020 at 1:45 AM UTC
Clippings
The sun saturates—maturates my family's backyard like clomiphene for chlorophyll. Swords emerge from my sward, harboring mosquitoes, the edges need to be filed down. Father would edge the lawn, trimming its sides to make a perfect geometric shape. The wind would push the grass down, like God patting the top of the field's head. I would cut that grass—each blade sent through my blades dispersing into a green mist. Clippings are thrown into bat cave black garbage bags tied tight to avoid leakage. But when I go inside, I notice that green powder has collected on my shoes.
andrew-rueter
Written by
30/M/Kentucky
Nov 27, 2020
Nov 27, 2020 at 1:45 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem