Sometimes, sometimes I will sit in my own room like a stranger I will gracefully drag the chair out its den And run my fingers through the white fur That is white no longer It lies there inviting But I prop myself on the table instead Head just touching the shelves above Books kissed by dry dust College notes never noticed An empty fruitcake box A candy wrapper I run my gazes up and down the walls Up and down Up and down
A disheveled slave girl bare— Still for me Someone has covered her wounds With poems ripped out of forgotten books Her tears slide down like curious cracks Beneath the silver veil A bottle of Kerosine oil sits patiently near the pallet, Rows of paint tubes Children’s beds in a quiet, orphanage hall
Unfinished canvases awaiting a god Brushes scattered around Scattered like arms and legs and skulls In a tired battlefield
Sometimes I reread the stories Scribbled on the doors Quotes as bullet shells abandoned and hollow
Like a stranger I admire the designs on the wall picture Leaves of all the races And the blueness beneath Like a stranger This silent, beautiful girl I see For as a lover I have long ceased A shy dove scared Quietly humming a tune I have never known
I look for the person who smiles in the pictures The girl who’s known to talk to the walls But the bed is empty And folks in the photos Will not meet my eyes The verses swirl around in the air And fumes of the oil Rise up Slow as the arrival of blooms Slow as a withering moon Till they are everywhere A horde of soldiers Marching down my throat
There is no one here Somebody once taped the roses to the window And painted suns on pieces of stray T-shirts hung them up as tapestries But they are not here now The walls reek of aridity A slave girl who will not smile
They like to preach to us to Always be ourselves But who are we— Some fancy clothes wrinkled on the floor As if passed out after a jolly evening A fidget spinner Spinning spinning spinning In my hands The fan groaning— A symphony struggling to scream And fumes rise up
I jump off the table And slide the window open The city, a worried lover, rushes in It kisses the room Its beautified bruises Washes her with light Air jolts the calendar awake “Are you here?” “Are you here?” It seems to ask Are you here, are you here, are you— And the walls nod their tired nods A practiced, perfected ritual
Sometimes, some nights I will tread through my own writings Trail touches down My own drawings, looking For myself Looking, looking, And forever on search
Sometimes, sometimes I will realise that no matter how many plants I hang And words I nail to these walls To make them mine I will always be a stranger to this room Searching the stalls for another anklet that will smile a star in her next alluring dance— A slave girl And her golden crown. Dah
28/05/2021
sometimes, sometimes I write a lot of cringe I can already see the adult me trying to burn this one