Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Daylight to look out a window and midnight to see into one. Say some name three times at a candlelit face, a flashback to fear at such a young age. These were stories that were told to us by older brothers and sisters during our weekend sleepovers. We're mirror images of them no matter how old we grow. Children playing in the snow in the coldest of northern winters, making a snowman, giving a name, topping him with a black-ribboned hat and an added lit cigarette to allow easy passing of a lampless evening faced an overbearing, light-speckled sky. The image passes away in the day, everything melted to bring spring anew to the streets and city pools. Clean them out, remove their stories from the past year for the new ones to come. Crop your face to bring light back in and to tabula rasa our crevices. Spiderwebs and crows feet. Let your frame pass into the attic to lean on your dusty, keylocked journals and that 19th century armoire that has no place in your place anymore. Tell me those stories, tell me your stories. Tell me your stories, and I'll tell you mine.
0
Feb 16, 2013
Feb 16, 2013 at 7:17 PM UTC
Stories Forgotten, Stories Remembered
Daylight to look out a window and midnight to see into one. Say some name three times at a candlelit face, a flashback to fear at such a young age. These were stories that were told to us by older brothers and sisters during our weekend sleepovers. We're mirror images of them no matter how old we grow. Children playing in the snow in the coldest of northern winters, making a snowman, giving a name, topping him with a black-ribboned hat and an added lit cigarette to allow easy passing of a lampless evening faced an overbearing, light-speckled sky. The image passes away in the day, everything melted to bring spring anew to the streets and city pools. Clean them out, remove their stories from the past year for the new ones to come. Crop your face to bring light back in and to tabula rasa our crevices. Spiderwebs and crows feet. Let your frame pass into the attic to lean on your dusty, keylocked journals and that 19th century armoire that has no place in your place anymore. Tell me those stories, tell me your stories. Tell me your stories, and I'll tell you mine.
joseph-valle
Written by
American
Feb 16, 2013
Feb 16, 2013 at 7:17 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem