Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
 
Toby Lucas May 2016
A dot outside the circle,
Isolated.
Feeling as if I'm
A puddle on the beach.

So close, almost the ocean.
So close to the sea it needs to join,
Otherwise it will evaporate
Unfinished.

I am the one who waits for the time to speak,
But opens his mouth once the moment passes. Too late.
The tide of conversation has gone out,
Leaving just a puddle on the beach.

When the rain comes to drench the soil,
It's the crop that grows offside,
Not a ****, but un-harvested nonetheless,
That's yearning for a transplant into the greener side.

And if this flower was to be picked,
Would the field realise?
Eventually.
You don't realise something's there until it's gone.
September 2015
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
There is a reservoir of perfect words waiting to be touched,
But I cannot scale the dam.
I can't get up to this water of life,
No matter how profound I am.

There the greats sail,
The poets who shall survive
The erosion of time, but
Will I see this ocean whilst alive?

I can only drink their gilded overspill,
The aftertaste of nectar from the brim.
I must take in as much as I can
And store it deep within.

Would that I could grasp the heights
And stride the distance set before me!
I want this wall to hold fast against the tide,
But it's as impregnable as it shall ever be.
A poem about potential, and how steep the climb is to the 'great poets'. We can only hope to imitate their genius, and aspire.
January 2016
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
You can’t bury stars underground,
Or preserve this sight in sound;
Of Dawn blushing our quilted sky,
Lacing it with divine alchemy.

Eos blushes as she caresses
Earth with the hem of her dresses.
We trace the tangible crease of sunrise,
As the night peels away before our eyes.

She fashions a shroud of technicolour,
As the night dies a beautiful crescendo death.
And we lay mourning the night, another,
Waking up from stargazing on the heath.

We could have watched in awe for hours,
Counting the stars; Heaven’s and ours,
There was enough wonder in our eyes,
Enough fuel to write an ocean of lines.

God’s fingerprints for us all to see,
As he rolls up again his tapestry:
He repaints his canvas from black to blue,
The balm of light once more renewed.

We watched what can’t ever be said,
Only immortalised in my head
Like a stained glass window to the soul,
Heaven’s curtain descends before us all.

I’m trying to say how I cannot write
The size and breadth and depth that night;
My wonder suffocates my ink,
These words are not the words I think.

Decanting light into the darkness,
The birdsong chorus provides the anthem
To herald in our breathless thoughts:
What is man that you are mindful of him,
Mankind that you care for them?
Spring 2016
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
You can't compare,
You can't complete

The line, the sentence, the poem, the life.
You can't comprehend the mind of a poet,
Speak not of what you don't know.
Overspill reconnecting gilded twines of truth,
Splashed and dabbled into ink,
Paper soaking in wisdom.

Lacking inspiration, strayed away from the sacred muses.
Desecrated the holy routine, violated -
The sacred spring of inspiration dried to a dust bowl.
You've had the draught and drunk it dry,
Now scraping the base for drops of dew,
Underfed and underdrunk, afterloved and now
The plate is empty.

Starched dry of opportunity, for progress' sake.
Busy lives no longer free to mingle with life,
To drink the horns of gilded mead.

To write poetry, to bleed the music of the heart.

But I must cease,
For I speak of what I know not,
What I no longer know.
A poem about feeling uninspired. Winter 2015
Toby Lucas Jul 2016
Prowling through the undergrowth
In our barging juggernaut,
Ploughing the rolling hills of water,
Which crease as the narrowboat sluggishly gliding past,
Brushes the bulrushes like a tiger in the reeds.

For four intrepid days
Our film and photographs are empty to show,
No sign, only missed whispers,
Of the hummingbird blue blur.

A darting flash cresting the morning chill,
Regal turquoise stealthily steals
Our attention, our focus, and our tiller
Noses toward the bank hugger.

And we have him.

Small amber-royal fisherman,
Eclipsing his heron heralds
And the swans silent vigil
In majestic lapis lazuli.
Swift and sure he graces the water,
Fisher King,
Which bends beneath his dive.
Resurfacing, his golden breast
Mottled with silver minnow.

There recluse in his exclusive spot,
Fish foundering still in the ******,
The kingfisher's poise frames his catch
Aperture, shutter, captured shot.
Spotting a kingfisher from a canal boat - Summer 2016
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
Alchemists, behold.
I have found your precious gold.
I have found the fleeting fame of immortality.
It isn't found in baser metals,
But rather in the ink;
The blood of the souls of ideas.
My pages stem from me,
A lifeblood to my thoughts,
As it ever was and evermore shall be.

I adopt these begotten thoughts which I had forlorn before I kept.
Some inevitably left me behind,
To never quite be forgot.
They'll follow me eventually,
And catch me in some quiet unexpected café.
Do you remember me?
Will you remember this?
Or will I fade again this time
Into your mind's abyss?

I must stop.
Before all the oceans of ink
That are in my heart
Dry up before they bleed.

A tragedy.
Or perhaps a romance, a comedy.
We would never know.
Winter 2015
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
One of the things I can’t stand
are poems.
That break
off the line for no real reason.
If it were to rhyme,
that’d be fine,
we’d all get by.
But no. Now
poetry is like this, which doesn’t
flow,
flow,
flow,
for any reason.
It’s the same feeling as listening to “music” from artists
which all sounds
the same.
The same reprocessed junk
labelled
a masterpiece;
by the snake tongued producers
who just want to
make money.

O!
I pause
to think of how,
nay verily, why,
poets think that this,
this,
this,
is acceptable.
To waste paper, trees, rainforests, lives, time,
while people,
politely
read
and try to comprehend
the tangle
            of
                      words,
indecipherable to man.

We can’t
(any of us)
understand.
So we all nod in amazement
and call
it
art.
Summer 2014
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
I only told you I loved you in my poetry,
But never in person.
I never loved you out loud,
Only ever in my song.

I didn't show you what I'd written,
I loved you in what my poems say.
It's too late now for you to read them;
Now this verse too shall see decay.

The ghost of you in what I write,
A beauty of words that comes from you.
I feel a sting in what I sing,
I write to a person I'll never read to.

My words never reached you,
And perhaps they never will,
But my poetry is my heartbeat
Which beats forever still.
Autumn 2015
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
How is it
That every perfect word has already been spoken,
Have all dropped off another person's tongue?
I feel I cannot pen originality, but chosen
Poetic words and poetic lyrics from poetic songs.
If a fledgling writer dips his quill in another's inkwell,
It's stealing and lack of imagination.
But in other's rhymes, lifting becomes an art
That leads to success, a homage rebranding genius.
I sometimes find it difficult to find just the right words, and often someone else seems to have done it so much better! Also, don't plagiarise ;)
Winter 2015
Toby Lucas May 2016
A waxy, dimpled orb in my hand,
A tiny sunrise, sweet and sharp.

One nail-blade incision and the
Peel tears away when you find the foothold,
Then coursing acid fires through your cuts and bruises,
Burning and tasting wounds with sharp recoil taste,
An acerbic spark.

Pith lodges under my nails,
Tang cloys beneath my nose.
The fruit now pulled apart, the ceremony over,
Segments of the sun lie exposed.
Eat half and half a year you'll remain.

The stringy web of white
Latticing the fruit-flesh
Is a pain to unentwine
What with the juice.

An explosion when you pierce the pocket,
And the gamble of what the burst will be.
Hedge your bets by eating the tasteless ones too.
Then the bathos of a pip
(the pebble inside the fruit, too small to be a stone)
Punctuates the sweetness you'd been enjoying.
Now the fumbling spat to get it out.

And after all the effort it's flavourless,
And you ask was it worth it?
Wasn't even really orange.
'Nothing rhymes with orange.'
'No, it doesn't.'
Summer 2016
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
They say that love is blind.
Evidently it also has no sense of smell.
And come to think of it,
Love has poor taste as well.
Summer 2015
Toby Lucas Dec 2016
If one word was to define who you were -
Not what you were like or how you come across -
But what and who you are,
I would strive for sincerity.
Capturing the nuance of being counter-cultural
(stark against the world we live in);
Honest to the point of perfect precision in what I say and mean;
Genuine in openness and lacking deceit;
Firm and unmoving against the tide;
Secure in the validity of that on which I stand;
Disciplined for integrity and truth;
Heartfelt and reliable (despite frequent shortcomings);
Prepared not only to go the distance but to run it,
To invest and care through thick and thin,
Not to forgo earnest in the buffering and buffeting;
Wholeheartedly honourable, the man others would wish to be;
Virtuous and steadfast in quality and character,
A rock to hold onto, a solid foundation,
A dedication to being authentic and true.
No false wax to the visage you see,
An artistic and inhuman ideal.
-
Sincerity has been under attack, besieged as an unachievable goal
In a world focused on the self - to be selfless seems foolishness.
Attention in this life lasts the sum amount of difficulties;
We flee from the floodplains when the river comes
Rather than endure and be refined by rich streams.
Sincerity does not crumble under commitment,
Nor erode in the face of effort:
Prepared to invest, forgoing instant gratification,
Persevering under pressure whilst all else fades.
It does not shrink from the fight but turns its cheek,
It forgives the slight and suffers for the lost,
It carries the cross for the rejected and the weak,
It sacrifices all it has at great personal cost,
It stands up to scrutiny when it stands for truth,
It lives and dies in unfathomable love.
It's been a while. Hello, poetry. Winter 2016
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
When you change the colour of the view,
The world takes on a different hue.
Writing's both a window and a mirror,
You can see life and yourself clearer.
This stained glass window labelled a poem,
Different phrases, different colours, different gems.
The scales of glass in an iron frame,
My words must fit the form.
Each word a different shard on the palette,
A poetic mosaic, not quite transparent.

A translucent lens.

I will you see creation through it
Extenuating before you in a piquant pigment.
In a tint I can show you joy,
In a separate, pane. Tainted.
Yellow, blue, red and green,
And a thousand nuances yet unseen.
You can't read all of it, nor look through every colour,
But perhaps the icon on the window can be discerned
When they tessellate together, the person I am trying to show, the bigger picture, the grand design.
Summer 2015
Toby Lucas Apr 2016
Weeping tears I haven't earned,
Saying prayers I don't deserve,
Breathing music I must preserve
On pages of poems I haven't burned.

Sleeping away these transient treasures,
This well of ink which is my heart.
Using the dregs of my soul to start
Composing symphonies to passing pleasures.

Every uttered thought is a secret shared,
Emotion sustains each syllable said,
Shared on paper so they can be read,
These words in which my soul is bared.

Live through the poetry and the prose,
Don't look back onto the sorrow,
Endure, survive, outlast tomorrow.
Curb this music before it flows

Over the line and out of control.
Once you read, it's yours to own;
You're in charge of what you're shown.
The poet himself cannot read them all.

These songs will blackmail me, in time.
Something tender to remember the pain,
I can't regret what I forget remains;
Where do dreamers go to die?
Winter 2015

— The End —