Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
the moon had a fingernail-split underline and there, in small heights, you could hear the sea from anywhere. the lamps cast shadows from objects that were, and are always, beautiful and ugly. a lone soft life, calling, from out over grass & then in, rippling through the curtains. and, there in my bones, was the familiar ache: the vastness of the ocean, its comprehensibility appearing only in glimpses as each other fibre untangled. little warm dissolution. comforting tiny mutability of the world, and all its associated weights. laid down in so many russet fields, was each time-kept glance, gone-stale motion, fervent belief, or undenied hope: the breadth of humanity lay, still. the world was and is and will, for ever, be the backlit glow of sunrise over a picture-book we chose colours for, and reference, followed by names and indices: here, the paint peeling, the rain, settled on long grass outside of the kitchen, the undiscoverable full fear and joy of living, the cluttered expanse of patterns in the chaos. the light we only see with half-open eyelids, as the skyline burns from ahead or behind. and i firmly insisted i was lying or standing here, that my eyes were closed or lying to their ordinance; that there was nothing but more or less to life, and that it was not my decision, anymore, and sat cross- legged in either sun or snow, and it did not matter which, at all, for i had no compass to find bearing, no string to twist between fingerprints and tie knots like milestones, just the lasting impression of my own impossible and shining inevitability. in the dust of river- beds or the debris of sanctity, insects broke down my flesh and the unbroken rays of sunlight bleached my bones and finally, all else burnt down& out, the meaning of life precipitated from an empty sky, running streams over the cracked surface.                               the soil set to loam, and the dried roots engorged, so swollen that gravel once again became sand, and canopies burst from everything: in the array, in my emptiness, there was still nothing to know, and my ferned jaw turned upwards to know, as part of all, that i, too, was meaning, and i woke, on a park-bench, in the streams of the momentary dawn that punctuate the endless night, as a mother puts child, sweetly, to rest. so, finally, hook was cast into sea or pick was cast into ground and life, in its infinite meaninglessness, struck another second-hand and bundled its arms tight around, in this season without relent. and i, at once, knew: for all the stars, stuck in that firmament, or cloudlines, unalgebraically shuffling against that paling blue, those i'd been lost in; the uncountable nights and days spent toiling in bliss and woe, for each unfurling front, i was not forgetting a single iota, but simply recollecting all i'd so long lost.
0
Aug 29, 2015
Aug 29, 2015 at 1:40 AM UTC
the spur of endless night
the moon had a fingernail-split underline and there, in small heights, you could hear the sea from anywhere. the lamps cast shadows from objects that were, and are always, beautiful and ugly. a lone soft life, calling, from out over grass & then in, rippling through the curtains. and, there in my bones, was the familiar ache: the vastness of the ocean, its comprehensibility appearing only in glimpses as each other fibre untangled. little warm dissolution. comforting tiny mutability of the world, and all its associated weights. laid down in so many russet fields, was each time-kept glance, gone-stale motion, fervent belief, or undenied hope: the breadth of humanity lay, still. the world was and is and will, for ever, be the backlit glow of sunrise over a picture-book we chose colours for, and reference, followed by names and indices: here, the paint peeling, the rain, settled on long grass outside of the kitchen, the undiscoverable full fear and joy of living, the cluttered expanse of patterns in the chaos. the light we only see with half-open eyelids, as the skyline burns from ahead or behind. and i firmly insisted i was lying or standing here, that my eyes were closed or lying to their ordinance; that there was nothing but more or less to life, and that it was not my decision, anymore, and sat cross- legged in either sun or snow, and it did not matter which, at all, for i had no compass to find bearing, no string to twist between fingerprints and tie knots like milestones, just the lasting impression of my own impossible and shining inevitability. in the dust of river- beds or the debris of sanctity, insects broke down my flesh and the unbroken rays of sunlight bleached my bones and finally, all else burnt down& out, the meaning of life precipitated from an empty sky, running streams over the cracked surface.                               the soil set to loam, and the dried roots engorged, so swollen that gravel once again became sand, and canopies burst from everything: in the array, in my emptiness, there was still nothing to know, and my ferned jaw turned upwards to know, as part of all, that i, too, was meaning, and i woke, on a park-bench, in the streams of the momentary dawn that punctuate the endless night, as a mother puts child, sweetly, to rest. so, finally, hook was cast into sea or pick was cast into ground and life, in its infinite meaninglessness, struck another second-hand and bundled its arms tight around, in this season without relent. and i, at once, knew: for all the stars, stuck in that firmament, or cloudlines, unalgebraically shuffling against that paling blue, those i'd been lost in; the uncountable nights and days spent toiling in bliss and woe, for each unfurling front, i was not forgetting a single iota, but simply recollecting all i'd so long lost.
out where dawn and dusk touch lips
tom-mccone
Written by
New Zealander
Aug 29, 2015
Aug 29, 2015 at 1:40 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem