Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The dead ask nothing Nothing offers no answer. Life makes demands. She reminds me of someone. I once was deeply in love. The glass is empty, yet she keeps sipping the straw. The surgeon’s serrated saw, severed crown of his skull, to allow brain swelling. The detachment is frozen, in purgatory, in Paris, California, in as much as I can gather. I keep making the same mistakes, over and over. Eternity is preposterous. She has same prominent forehead, same brown silken hair, same slender fingers as my ex, same buttoned-up betrayal. “Man-up! You ******* son-of-a-bitch,” she said, he said, their ceaseless quarreling makes me hide. Stomach knots, breathing hurts. The allure of her stink. My sister insists it will be okay. The glass is half. Mom can’t remember. Everything fits neatly. She burrows in the booth. This one needs money, that one needs parts, liver, lung, cerebrum, heart. Her hands cup the glass. She gazes beyond. Everything is a lie
0
Nov 28, 2012
Nov 28, 2012 at 2:05 PM UTC
The dead ask nothing
The dead ask nothing Nothing offers no answer. Life makes demands. She reminds me of someone. I once was deeply in love. The glass is empty, yet she keeps sipping the straw. The surgeon’s serrated saw, severed crown of his skull, to allow brain swelling. The detachment is frozen, in purgatory, in Paris, California, in as much as I can gather. I keep making the same mistakes, over and over. Eternity is preposterous. She has same prominent forehead, same brown silken hair, same slender fingers as my ex, same buttoned-up betrayal. “Man-up! You ******* son-of-a-bitch,” she said, he said, their ceaseless quarreling makes me hide. Stomach knots, breathing hurts. The allure of her stink. My sister insists it will be okay. The glass is half. Mom can’t remember. Everything fits neatly. She burrows in the booth. This one needs money, that one needs parts, liver, lung, cerebrum, heart. Her hands cup the glass. She gazes beyond. Everything is a lie
michael-reid-rubenstein
Written by
Nov 28, 2012
Nov 28, 2012 at 2:05 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem