Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
A barbaric itch slithers underneath my collar. While chairs scuffle upon overgrown tile, the brutality of our chance meeting gets my finger nails scraping-- you keep tossing what's left of your hair, as you siphon through the greasy grime of your fought for fast food, and rattle my cage with foreign sentiment-- you smirk to break my narrowing gaze, did you wear that same black blouse when we launched into our old mess? The one we left on your bedroom floor, and I really, really want to know where that mess could go-- when I dream, we simplify. You are free of clothing, and I'm free to feed on your body and time, the ache satisfies, but as children run past us, as acne teens screech-- the plight of getting hot and never off roars in the midnight corridors of my starving brain. One touch-- a broken nail, a sharpened tooth, a swift tug of my scalp-- could really, really help me cope with your amorous toxicity.
0
Apr 17, 2011
Apr 17, 2011 at 5:51 PM UTC
Lioness pt. II
A barbaric itch slithers underneath my collar. While chairs scuffle upon overgrown tile, the brutality of our chance meeting gets my finger nails scraping-- you keep tossing what's left of your hair, as you siphon through the greasy grime of your fought for fast food, and rattle my cage with foreign sentiment-- you smirk to break my narrowing gaze, did you wear that same black blouse when we launched into our old mess? The one we left on your bedroom floor, and I really, really want to know where that mess could go-- when I dream, we simplify. You are free of clothing, and I'm free to feed on your body and time, the ache satisfies, but as children run past us, as acne teens screech-- the plight of getting hot and never off roars in the midnight corridors of my starving brain. One touch-- a broken nail, a sharpened tooth, a swift tug of my scalp-- could really, really help me cope with your amorous toxicity.
jj-hutton
Written by
American
Apr 17, 2011
Apr 17, 2011 at 5:51 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem