Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The springs of the trampoline squeak to our movements, till we fall dead on mesh. I pulled off screen to my window into undeveloped darkness, and ran to you after I heard you calling in my yard. Home sounded like vents and boom box hissing, and mother's silent shoulder silhouetted by some artificial glow. I love you, shoulder, and all the pages that I put a finger to flip; under the covers, covered in dark where I adorn myself in cloths to my coffin— too slow, then come out wrinkled in the schoolyard to get laughed at. Here now, where I'm sleeping in some friends wardrobe, you called out to me again, from a car with tendrils of rain streaking the glass, but I didn't pull off any screen. I didn't run anywhere I just sat and sighed.
0
May 7, 2014
May 7, 2014 at 2:52 AM UTC
Wrinkled Mornings
The springs of the trampoline squeak to our movements, till we fall dead on mesh. I pulled off screen to my window into undeveloped darkness, and ran to you after I heard you calling in my yard. Home sounded like vents and boom box hissing, and mother's silent shoulder silhouetted by some artificial glow. I love you, shoulder, and all the pages that I put a finger to flip; under the covers, covered in dark where I adorn myself in cloths to my coffin— too slow, then come out wrinkled in the schoolyard to get laughed at. Here now, where I'm sleeping in some friends wardrobe, you called out to me again, from a car with tendrils of rain streaking the glass, but I didn't pull off any screen. I didn't run anywhere I just sat and sighed.
Sam1955
Written by
English
May 7, 2014
May 7, 2014 at 2:52 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem