Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
how many stories can we pour into our summertime beer steins how much before the foam spills over into real-time there’s no numerical answer to that, let’s state plainly bubbles geometrically become one another, shrink and multiply and turn amber-red in the august nightshade and dogs skitter under basketball hoops, couples play in shadow fathers sneeze and industry marches on under our noses, outside our windows, between our ribs how many stories can we swallow before we’re drunk on the skyline and the view to the next does it matter? that one brew is for sale only in midtown and sometime I might go back, drink it with you not there watch the spinning hexagon floor tiles and I’ll write you that I had it, and it was all right how many stories can we fit into the new year stuff into the hamper, hide in creases of the couch like quarters like hands on knees, yours, yeah, the soft elegant spider-hands I wanted on my knees since the first day— two perfect hands how many stories can we write on our palms as reminders, how many can we fit between appointments the ending’s not so important, is it— bubbles join together, multiply, change shape go hexagonal, spin touch, remember, forget, divide always even numbers just shy of eleven shy of prime but amber-red in august like that first time
0
Feb 20, 2014
Feb 20, 2014 at 1:58 AM UTC
Underneath the Concrete Sky
how many stories can we pour into our summertime beer steins how much before the foam spills over into real-time there’s no numerical answer to that, let’s state plainly bubbles geometrically become one another, shrink and multiply and turn amber-red in the august nightshade and dogs skitter under basketball hoops, couples play in shadow fathers sneeze and industry marches on under our noses, outside our windows, between our ribs how many stories can we swallow before we’re drunk on the skyline and the view to the next does it matter? that one brew is for sale only in midtown and sometime I might go back, drink it with you not there watch the spinning hexagon floor tiles and I’ll write you that I had it, and it was all right how many stories can we fit into the new year stuff into the hamper, hide in creases of the couch like quarters like hands on knees, yours, yeah, the soft elegant spider-hands I wanted on my knees since the first day— two perfect hands how many stories can we write on our palms as reminders, how many can we fit between appointments the ending’s not so important, is it— bubbles join together, multiply, change shape go hexagonal, spin touch, remember, forget, divide always even numbers just shy of eleven shy of prime but amber-red in august like that first time
so he slept on a mountain in a sleeping bag underneath the stars he would lie awake and count them
Written by
American
Feb 20, 2014
Feb 20, 2014 at 1:58 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem