Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
You roll in like a vaquero to the Wild West: water galloping the earth & black clouds rippling: the foaming flank of a stallion. Tip your hat & get to business: charge the air with cactus-prickle shivers, slip your Zeus fingers from holsters and lightning- rod them to the sky. Rumble your spurs & order me a sarsaparilla—lid-crack carefully; an effervescent gale will brew. Breathe slow at first: electric hum through bone- white grass: bows as you ghost by— clear your throat, lasso tight my attention with guttural echoes pressed heavy on my chest. Then rip open the constellations with gunshot blows, explode wide saloon doors & take no prisoners. Oil-lacquer streets & ride off blazing: leave the women but take me, saddle-swing me high in the catatonic static of a ghost town. You’ll vanish like you came: I know what they say about red skies in morning. But I’m never awake to watch you silhouette away.
0
May 2, 2014
May 2, 2014 at 11:37 PM UTC
Love Letter to a Thunderstorm
You roll in like a vaquero to the Wild West: water galloping the earth & black clouds rippling: the foaming flank of a stallion. Tip your hat & get to business: charge the air with cactus-prickle shivers, slip your Zeus fingers from holsters and lightning- rod them to the sky. Rumble your spurs & order me a sarsaparilla—lid-crack carefully; an effervescent gale will brew. Breathe slow at first: electric hum through bone- white grass: bows as you ghost by— clear your throat, lasso tight my attention with guttural echoes pressed heavy on my chest. Then rip open the constellations with gunshot blows, explode wide saloon doors & take no prisoners. Oil-lacquer streets & ride off blazing: leave the women but take me, saddle-swing me high in the catatonic static of a ghost town. You’ll vanish like you came: I know what they say about red skies in morning. But I’m never awake to watch you silhouette away.
cortnicofficuss
Written by
May 2, 2014
May 2, 2014 at 11:37 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem