Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
Aug 2013
To you i would give the passion of the sun
and the shine provoked from simmered grass
and if the moonlight was not safe from your eye,
it's buttermilk glow i would surely pluck down.
To you i would give the midnight chimney smoke
that sillouette on the sky putting cobbles underfoot.
Take my taste of salt as sea white mer-men come
a breeze in the laughter of workmen's homecoming.
I give the feeling when swallowed by field flax
pinpricks of cotton, i'd lay you down bare-skinned.
You empty the film on my flesh camera,
I keep the removal cuts.
Harry Randle-Marsh
Written by
Harry Randle-Marsh  England
(England)   
2.8k
     eve and Anoushka B
Please log in to view and add comments on poems