Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The work began with cedar, ash, and pine. In cold months, the architecture rose on Utah timber, the truest I could find. Eventually, come spring, the windows shone. The house stands abandoned now. In time, the clapboard, screens, and porch decomposed to a bleak mark—a wreck on the tree line. So ruination brings the builder home. The red metal box is packed with tools: galvanized nails for the bedroom I dreamed in, a trowel for the plaster my fists passed through, a needle and thread for the curtains’ revision. Open the unlocked door. At once a throng of starlings scatters, bursts from the roof in song.
0
Sep 26, 2016
Sep 26, 2016 at 8:25 AM UTC
Homecoming
The work began with cedar, ash, and pine. In cold months, the architecture rose on Utah timber, the truest I could find. Eventually, come spring, the windows shone. The house stands abandoned now. In time, the clapboard, screens, and porch decomposed to a bleak mark—a wreck on the tree line. So ruination brings the builder home. The red metal box is packed with tools: galvanized nails for the bedroom I dreamed in, a trowel for the plaster my fists passed through, a needle and thread for the curtains’ revision. Open the unlocked door. At once a throng of starlings scatters, bursts from the roof in song.
jonathan-witte
Written by
Sep 26, 2016
Sep 26, 2016 at 8:25 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem