Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
parched wind, salt‑tongued from the far edge of the bay, licks the last drift of mauve jacarandas. in the tin‑roof blush, I hear the slow heartbeat of soil— patient, cracked, still keeping the memory of rain. I walk the market’s narrow spine, hands grazing mango skins, the laughter of vendors lifting like myna birds into a sky just beginning to remember itself blue. and when night comes, the stars lean low enough to touch my forehead— reminding me this place is both root and horizon, a country that holds me as much in absence as in light. .
0
Sep 4, 2025
Sep 4, 2025 at 7:52 AM UTC
Lovin’ where I live
parched wind, salt‑tongued from the far edge of the bay, licks the last drift of mauve jacarandas. in the tin‑roof blush, I hear the slow heartbeat of soil— patient, cracked, still keeping the memory of rain. I walk the market’s narrow spine, hands grazing mango skins, the laughter of vendors lifting like myna birds into a sky just beginning to remember itself blue. and when night comes, the stars lean low enough to touch my forehead— reminding me this place is both root and horizon, a country that holds me as much in absence as in light. .
hellopoet
Written by
Sep 4, 2025
Sep 4, 2025 at 7:52 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem