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I already miss it, the lazy crawl of time, hurried waves across the water, fast cars glinting under the yellow sun. I miss the easiness of good-byes, with the knowledge of their flimsiness in this drawn-out frame of time, long days and warm nights, the flight of feet across pebbles and sand. I’d live there forever, memories replaying, never growing tired of those colours, only tired from the day; and yet two or three hours will do it, curled up with the imprint that a warm body makes next to mine, and if they’re there, really there, that’s fine. But summer is when I don’t mind being alone at night, because I’d rather be perched on those rocking slats of old wood, water lapping at my heels as they tease the water. You could plant me here, roots digging down through the cracks and around the ancient tires that keep this dock afloat; you could plant me here and I would grow. I have grown in these months, as I always do, mind, body and soul drinking in the new words I learn and the songs that repeat endlessly on the radio and the lyrics I find in my head, only to dig up later, much later, and put to wistful chords. Bare toes, freckles emerging, hands seeking refuge in each other, tinted glass peeling to reveal more of the interior; the leather seats and empty bottles and eyes lined with smiles that show through those perpetual frames. I’ll sit and wait for as long as it takes, until that shimmering sun takes its leave and the only light comes from the old lampposts that stick out of the water like totem poles, protecting their darkness. And when it’s over, I’ll sigh, summer escaping from my reddened lips, you escaping from my carefree arms, sand washing from the creases in my old denim shorts and trickling down the drain, and I’ll move on. I always do.
0
Oct 29, 2013
Oct 29, 2013 at 11:36 AM UTC
Plant Me Here
I already miss it, the lazy crawl of time, hurried waves across the water, fast cars glinting under the yellow sun. I miss the easiness of good-byes, with the knowledge of their flimsiness in this drawn-out frame of time, long days and warm nights, the flight of feet across pebbles and sand. I’d live there forever, memories replaying, never growing tired of those colours, only tired from the day; and yet two or three hours will do it, curled up with the imprint that a warm body makes next to mine, and if they’re there, really there, that’s fine. But summer is when I don’t mind being alone at night, because I’d rather be perched on those rocking slats of old wood, water lapping at my heels as they tease the water. You could plant me here, roots digging down through the cracks and around the ancient tires that keep this dock afloat; you could plant me here and I would grow. I have grown in these months, as I always do, mind, body and soul drinking in the new words I learn and the songs that repeat endlessly on the radio and the lyrics I find in my head, only to dig up later, much later, and put to wistful chords. Bare toes, freckles emerging, hands seeking refuge in each other, tinted glass peeling to reveal more of the interior; the leather seats and empty bottles and eyes lined with smiles that show through those perpetual frames. I’ll sit and wait for as long as it takes, until that shimmering sun takes its leave and the only light comes from the old lampposts that stick out of the water like totem poles, protecting their darkness. And when it’s over, I’ll sigh, summer escaping from my reddened lips, you escaping from my carefree arms, sand washing from the creases in my old denim shorts and trickling down the drain, and I’ll move on. I always do.
it wasn't poetry when I was living it, it was life, summer, all that
r-saba
Written by
Canadian
Oct 29, 2013
Oct 29, 2013 at 11:36 AM UTC
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