Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I painted the bedposts and bedside whiteboard beside the baseboard, the outlet occupied by a power cord, the bookshelf, both coffeemakers, the power strip duct-taped to the brick wall, the bush outside, the sidewalks, the brick, the steel fences separating traffic babble from pedestrian small talk, then filled the wall in, gave the oak posts enough depth to hold up four coats, a backpack, and a shoe lace, swirled in the condoms and coffee rings inside the microwave, sketched a Sears Apple-Jack-colored record player plugged in, turning dusted Beatles records like the cosmos, like the snow, squirrel- hair, and leather-leaf bush outside. I masked off the concrete, the asphalt, and construction yard sidewalks, penciling dead mosquitoes in the cracks and $2.39 Rock Salt Slush along the edges. I measured the fence, so each stake hit the vanishing point like cigarette butts in cement cereal bowls of cat litter. But I ran out of paint before I could fill the mouths of motorist **** yous*, the car barks chasing dogs to the chain-link guard rail, doorbells and mailbox flags being flipped up, pay phones clashing on metal receivers, church bells, footsteps, some guy breathing, and a red-light button Wait. Maybe it’s for the best.
0
Mar 5, 2015
Mar 5, 2015 at 4:36 PM UTC
Overly Large Canvas
I painted the bedposts and bedside whiteboard beside the baseboard, the outlet occupied by a power cord, the bookshelf, both coffeemakers, the power strip duct-taped to the brick wall, the bush outside, the sidewalks, the brick, the steel fences separating traffic babble from pedestrian small talk, then filled the wall in, gave the oak posts enough depth to hold up four coats, a backpack, and a shoe lace, swirled in the condoms and coffee rings inside the microwave, sketched a Sears Apple-Jack-colored record player plugged in, turning dusted Beatles records like the cosmos, like the snow, squirrel- hair, and leather-leaf bush outside. I masked off the concrete, the asphalt, and construction yard sidewalks, penciling dead mosquitoes in the cracks and $2.39 Rock Salt Slush along the edges. I measured the fence, so each stake hit the vanishing point like cigarette butts in cement cereal bowls of cat litter. But I ran out of paint before I could fill the mouths of motorist **** yous*, the car barks chasing dogs to the chain-link guard rail, doorbells and mailbox flags being flipped up, pay phones clashing on metal receivers, church bells, footsteps, some guy breathing, and a red-light button Wait. Maybe it’s for the best.
christopher-cizek
Written by
Mar 5, 2015
Mar 5, 2015 at 4:36 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem