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"baths" poems
this is the garden:colours come and go, frail azures fluttering from night’s outer wing strong silent greens silently lingering, absolute lights like baths of golden snow. This is the garden:pursed lips do blow upon cool flutes within wide glooms,and sing (of harps celestial to the quivering string) invisible faces hauntingly and slow. This is the garden. Time shall surely reap and on Death’s blade lie many a flower curled, in other lands where other songs be sung; yet stand They here enraptured,as among the slow deep trees perpetual of sleep some silver-fingered fountain steals the world.
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This Is The Garden:Colours Come And Go
I like old glass with bubbles Pockets of breath of the dead laid to rest I break and I breathe and I taste Their spices and vices Kisses from wives Curses and verses Songs of themselves Wine of their wrath Salt from their baths Smoke from their fires Sweet tastes of desire Shared sighs and cries Dead butterflies Air.
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Mar 16, 2015
Mar 16, 2015 at 11:06 PM UTC
Air
i don’t know how someone as small as me with bones that break at the sight of heat lightning and heart strings that thread apart at the sound of his voice could make anyone feel like the sun shines brighter through kaleidoscope eyes— you’re okay if it brings out the freckles on your face, and you feel good, you feel alive you say i showed you how to love in a new way, that i taught you to be so much more okay with your tummy, “it’s been very freeing and life is a lot better, thank you,” but i feel like i can’t say you’re welcome because i am a messy cliché of imperfect scraps and hypocrisy loosely sewn together with “you are strong you are strong you are strong,” but i feel so weak i feel so weak i feel so weak and i am not steady hands, they shake like wet dogs after kiddy pool baths, i am flower seeds that forgot how to bloom, trapped below the surface of a garden that feels like quicksand and i’m sorry but you don’t see all the mistakes i make, all the words i’ve preached that look back at me and laugh when they see what i feel, what i think, who i am behind closed doors, i’m sorry. you keep hanging medals around my neck, and they’re so heavy, and i don’t know what to say besides i love you when you speak words of adoration, but please do not praise me, i am not good.
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Sep 4, 2014
Sep 4, 2014 at 2:12 AM UTC
i'm just as broken as you are
Homework, oh homework, I hate you! You Stink! I wish I could wash you away in the sink. If only a bomb would explode you to bits. Homework, oh homework, You're giving me fits! I'd rather take baths with a man eating shark, Or wrestle a lion alone in the dark. Eat spinach and liver, pet ten porcupines, Then tackle the homework my teacher assigns. I get more and more angry as I turn the next page, Homework, oh homework, You fill me with rage! Homework, oh homework, You're last on my list, I simply can't see why you even exist. If you just disappeared, it would tickle me pink. Homework, oh homework, I hate you! You stink!
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Sep 4, 2017
Sep 4, 2017 at 5:28 PM UTC
I Hate Homework.
My beautiful blue skein of yarn, Here in my bag you sit, I'd love to pick you up to knit, If only for a bit. But clothes need washing and babes need baths, And food needs cooking too, Besides, I'd have a hard time choosing, What to make of you. You see, my stitches were not even, My gauge, no one could guess, My beautiful blue skein of yarn, You would not have been impressed. But oh how I've practiced, how I've improved,  I'm sure you'll find it so, My stitches fly right off my needles and sit in pretty rows. My gauge is constant, my edges neat, now I am ready for you, But still that nagging question comes, what with you will I do? Maybe I will make of you a felted wooly bonnet, And everyone would stop and gaze and cast their eyes upon it. I'll wear you on holiday, we'll march in a parade, I'll prance so proudly, show you off, and say, "yes, you're handmade". Maybe I will make of you, a purse, like those I see in Vogue, I'll put in you my favorite things, and then, we'll hit the rode! We'll travel round the city, and everyone will see, How beautiful and remarkable a skein of yarn can be. Maybe I will make you gloves, My baby's hands to cover, And everyone who saw her'd say, "her mother must really love her". A hat, a purse, a pair of gloves, your beauty for all to see, But, only if I stop and knit, Now look what you've made of me, Your potential's not all I see...
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Oct 25, 2014
Oct 25, 2014 at 11:28 PM UTC
Potential
multimedia macramé sloshing propaganda sewage on the unsuspecting public ***** lice infest ****** hill folk west Virginia outbreak threatening the world as we know it flesh altering nonsense explicitly graphed charting movement of microbes on air, land, and/ or sea global currents the new deliverer of death – infected immigrants sit smiling internment camps providing nutrition never before experienced as non-natives negotiate freedom by submitting to vaccinations baths and the standard delousing powder – paranoid hand-sanitizer users glued to the **** tube spray their shoes with disinfectant praying to an absent GOD for health while shoveling GMO corn chips into ever widening mouth holes pharmaceutical companies lick lifeless lips as Congress recognizes their humanity while rejecting the concerns of the poor …..no money in it – outlandish claims of outbreaking Ebola flood the mainstream outlets fear: version – infinity one more plague plan to stimulate new legislation more law no touching even looking at the infirm can be cause for isolation radiation treatments courtesy of Fukushima, reactors 1-4 – new found focus on fracturing the shale releasing new oil reserves and old bacteria dinosaur killers free-radicals radically changing the genetic code humanity altered once again –
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Oct 14, 2014
Oct 14, 2014 at 12:16 PM UTC
Ebola Schmebola
we could respect those around us, while respecting ourselves. we could love each other with trust, but not until we fall in love with ourselves do you trust yourself? because self love is more than bubble baths and buying things take a walk with yourself, and have long conversations ponder on the meaning of life and slow dance with yourself fall in love with you & let's be truthful because before anyone else can wrap their arms around you before anyone else can call you beautiful you have to learn it before they do
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Jun 9, 2015
Jun 9, 2015 at 12:13 PM UTC
self love
island summer heat big backyards shared by three families with rambunctious kids sundresses, sandals, swim trunks a big mango tree and a merry-go-round with red chipped paint geckos and mud baths "boy's got cooties!"    mid-west plains' dry, summer heat Mr. Sun is our lamp well past 9:00pm Dow St., a giant hill covered in uniform houses, filled with the uniformed sacrificial spinning wheels, acre-wide hide and seek nintendo and donkey kong, fireflies in jars front yard mulberry trees pippy longstocking "lets' go into this 'cave' of vines" poison-ivy    southern peninsula, humid, summer heat above ground pools and trampolines a red brick house; the first home the first CD collection, Filipino food THE PARK, the sandbox lid drowning in the bayou sleeping in guest rooms, sleepovers a sign of status pelicans, ducks, fishing, sleeping in the boat; camping on the beach
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Jul 2, 2012
Jul 2, 2012 at 4:18 PM UTC
Summer Homes
By A Foreigner I like Americans. They are so unlike Canadians. They do not take their policemen seriously. They come to Montreal to drink. Not to criticize. They claim they won the war. But they know at heart that they didn't. They have such respect for Englishmen. They like to live abroad. They do not brag about how they take baths. But they take them. Their teeth are so good. And they wear B.V.D.'s all the year round. I wish they didn't brag about it. They have the second best navy in the world. But they never mention it. They would like to have Henry Ford for president. But they will not elect him. They saw through Bill Bryan. They have gotten tired of Billy Sunday. Their men have such funny hair cuts. They are hard to **** in on Europe. They have been there once. They produced Barney Google, Mutt and Jeff. And Jiggs. They do not hang lady murderers. They put them in vaudeville. They read the Saturday Evening Post And believe in Santa Claus. When they make money They make a lot of money. They are fine people.
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I Like Americans
Whisper Drop peonies in my eardrums Sew violets under my skin Take all my fragrance in and Exhale Pave a path of fuchsia petals We’ll share baths with chrysanthemums, lilies, hydrangeas And crown ourselves in wreaths of all the roses.
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Jun 21, 2013
Jun 21, 2013 at 11:25 PM UTC
June 20, 2013 - Love Poem of Flowers
worthless I should hurt less I'm still loving you I'm putting stars in my eyes hearts in my mouth I'd love to eat you out but you keep dancing around I'm no toy to play around with stop putting me away we should make out kiss and don't tell we should go out If no one is around come lay down my heart feels like a million bubbles exploding every time I hear your voice bubble baths in your bathtub what do you think should I hold your hand holding my breath
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Aug 28, 2018
Aug 28, 2018 at 6:05 PM UTC
soap, bubbles, hands
Let me tell you a story about a busy steet in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world. Somewhere near the end of this busy street in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world, there was a flowershop. It was a lovely old place; an elegant building surrounded by beautiful gardens with daisies and daffodils and roses. It had bird baths where the cheery cardinals and bluejays stopped by for an afternoon splash, and even a sprinkler for the young children to run around in while their mommy's and daddy's were picking out pretty flowers. Now, inside this flowershop, there were rows upon rows of pots filled with any type of plant you could imagine: dragonsnaps, lilies, zinnias, tulips, the whole lot. Baskets of flowers hung from the ceiling, overflowing with bright colours. Every once in a while, petals would rain down and the entire shop would look magical. Everyday, people of all ages would dash into this flowershop. Men in suits, looking to find the perfect gift for their dates. Ladies in dresses, picking out just a little something to look nice in a vase on their dinner table. And of course, the gardeners, with their overalls and ***** fingers. So, as I said, busy people on a busy street in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world would dash into this busy flowershop, then dash back out and get on with their busy lives. Always looking for the most ravishing type of flower, the ones that could catch your eye as soon as you entered the shop. Never focusing on anything else. What no one realized was that there was a small flower placed near the back wall of the shop. It was never moved; always been in the same exact place ever since it arrived at the flowershop years and years ago. The owners had stopped watering it, so the flower was beginning to shrivel up. Most of the petals had fallen off and were now laying in a sad little pile on the ground, and the few that remained had turned the colour of black. The little flower got sicker and sicker every day, but it never lost hope. Every time the suited man stopped in, or the lady with the dress, or the ***** gardener; the flower would use its last bit of strength to make itself noticed. It stood on its tippy toes, perking up and spreading its wilted petals and frail stem as much as it could. No one saw. Then, one day, when the owner was sweeping the floor of the flowershop, he saw something near the back wall. Something broken. Crumpled. Blackened. Ugly. Dead. Something that once was beautiful until it stopped being noticed; stopped being loved. You see, in a busy flowershop on a busy street in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world, no one's ever going to notice a wallflower until it wilts.
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Apr 16, 2013
Apr 16, 2013 at 6:47 PM UTC
The Wilting Wallflower
Let me tell you a story about a busy steet in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world. Somewhere near the end of this busy street in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world, there was a flowershop. It was a lovely old place; an elegant building surrounded by beautiful gardens with daisies and daffodils and roses. It had bird baths where the cheery cardinals and bluejays stopped by for an afternoon splash, and even a sprinkler for the young children to run around in while their mommy's and daddy's were picking out pretty flowers. Now, inside this flowershop, there were rows upon rows of pots filled with any type of plant you could imagine: dragonsnaps, lilies, zinnias, tulips, the whole lot. Baskets of flowers hung from the ceiling, overflowing with bright colours. Every once in a while, petals would rain down and the entire shop would look magical. Everyday, people of all ages would dash into this flowershop. Men in suits, looking to find the perfect gift for their dates. Ladies in dresses, picking out just a little something to look nice in a vase on their dinner table. And of course, the gardeners, with their overalls and ***** fingers. So, as I said, busy people on a busy street in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world would dash into this busy flowershop, then dash back out and get on with their busy lives. Always looking for the most ravishing type of flower, the ones that could catch your eye as soon as you entered the shop. Never focusing on anything else. What no one realized was that there was a small flower placed near the back wall of the shop. It was never moved; always been in the same exact place ever since it arrived at the flowershop years and years ago. The owners had stopped watering it, so the flower was beginning to shrivel up. Most of the petals had fallen off and were now laying in a sad little pile on the ground, and the few that remained had turned the colour of black. The little flower got sicker and sicker every day, but it never lost hope. Every time the suited man stopped in, or the lady with the dress, or the ***** gardener; the flower would use its last bit of strength to make itself noticed. It stood on its tippy toes, perking up and spreading its wilted petals and frail stem as much as it could. No one saw. Then, one day, when the owner was sweeping the floor of the flowershop, he saw something near the back wall. Something broken. Crumpled. Blackened. Ugly. Dead. Something that once was beautiful until it stopped being noticed; stopped being loved. You see, in a busy flowershop on a busy street in a busy city in a busy country in a busy world, no one's ever going to notice a wallflower until it wilts.
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ALL I can give you is broken-face gargoyles. It is too early to sing and dance at funerals, Though I can whisper to you I am looking for an undertaker humming a lullaby and throwing his feet in a swift and mystic buck-and-wing, now you see it and now you don't. Fish to swim a pool in your garden flashing a speckled silver, A basket of wine-saps filling your room with flame-dark for your eyes and the tang of valley orchards for your nose, Such a beautiful pail of fish, such a beautiful peck of apples, I cannot bring you now. It is too early and I am not footloose yet. I shall come in the night when I come with a hammer and saw. I shall come near your window, where you look out when your eyes open in the morning, And there I shall slam together bird-houses and bird-baths for wing-loose wrens and hummers to live in, birds with yellow wing tips to blur and buzz soft all summer, So I shall make little fool homes with doors, always open doors for all and each to run away when they want to. I shall come just like that even though now it is early and I am not yet footloose, Even though I am still looking for an undertaker with a raw, wind-bitten face and a dance in his feet. I make a date with you (put it down) for six o'clock in the evening a thousand years from now. All I can give you now is broken-face gargoyles. All I can give you now is a double gorilla head with two fish mouths and four eagle eyes hooked on a street wall, spouting water and looking two ways to the ends of the street for the new people, the young strangers, coming, coming, always coming. It is early. I shall yet be footloose.
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5.6k
Broken-face Gargoyles
ALL I can give you is broken-face gargoyles. It is too early to sing and dance at funerals, Though I can whisper to you I am looking for an undertaker humming a lullaby and throwing his feet in a swift and mystic buck-and-wing, now you see it and now you don't. Fish to swim a pool in your garden flashing a speckled silver, A basket of wine-saps filling your room with flame-dark for your eyes and the tang of valley orchards for your nose, Such a beautiful pail of fish, such a beautiful peck of apples, I cannot bring you now. It is too early and I am not footloose yet. I shall come in the night when I come with a hammer and saw. I shall come near your window, where you look out when your eyes open in the morning, And there I shall slam together bird-houses and bird-baths for wing-loose wrens and hummers to live in, birds with yellow wing tips to blur and buzz soft all summer, So I shall make little fool homes with doors, always open doors for all and each to run away when they want to. I shall come just like that even though now it is early and I am not yet footloose, Even though I am still looking for an undertaker with a raw, wind-bitten face and a dance in his feet. I make a date with you (put it down) for six o'clock in the evening a thousand years from now. All I can give you now is broken-face gargoyles. All I can give you now is a double gorilla head with two fish mouths and four eagle eyes hooked on a street wall, spouting water and looking two ways to the ends of the street for the new people, the young strangers, coming, coming, always coming. It is early. I shall yet be footloose.
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at age five, her bath is full of bubbles and happiness. yellow ducks floating on the surface, make her young soul happy. at age ten, her bath is not full of bubbles. she does not take baths anymore. she showers now, because it's faster, and forgettable, just like life should be. at age fifteen, her bath is not full of bubbles, again. but now, she sits in the tub, only dull water surrounding her body. on the surface there are no more yellow ducks, they are now replaced by flowers, which are ripped out from the hard ground along with the root, *just like she was ripped out from her silly dream, along with her insane mind.*
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Mar 23, 2014
Mar 23, 2014 at 7:12 PM UTC
bubble baths
NY Hip Hop Gold Express Bling Shop Afro Brothers proprietorship buyin and sellin filthy lucre of down hard Gat packin Gangstas on the down low throwin down fallin hook line and stinker just a bunch of lil fishies wigglin at the end of golden chains its all about the bling baby all about the bling "I pity the fool" saith Mr. T the potentate of soul and gold who ain't down with the cool jewels of righteous B Teamers arrested by the silk rope of glitzy discos bribing bouncers with an earnest Jackson to *** rush the vanity faire of bumping A Listers Or was it Def Jam Buddhas minting coin on MTV? exploiting misogyny and ghost face killas NWAs slugging cases of Kristol blowing fat spliff smoke up the *** of Phat Farm kids in the hood shooting silver bullets at the man takin baths in tubs of fifties lighting up with crisp C Notes rollin through life in black Escalades its silver spinners twisting fast round corners where being cool went blind and Coolie High homies still tip a sip for the brothers who ain't there Today its all about the raised fist of power to the P Diddy fighting the power of the people as leggy Beyonce warbles songs for the posse of a Libyan Dictator whose blood money pays a cool mil cover for a New Years Eve tune Its all about the bling baby All about the bling baby, all about the bling. NY Hip Hop Gold Express Best Prices in Trenton Since 1997 You Tube Video: Gil Scott Heron Ain't No Such Thing As Superman Trenton 2/25/11 jbm
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Mar 20, 2013
Mar 20, 2013 at 9:19 AM UTC
NY Hip Hop Gold Express
Yes the tub of baths and child's play, Such a defining moment for me, I must say. Six years old and so independent, Yearning for ways to be transcendent. The reasons for why I locked that door, Unknown to me and will be forevermore. If I hadn't and still slipped, What kind of personality would I be stuck with? Would I pick myself up after falling? Would I be so strong to stop my crying, As I bleed out onto the floor? Would I ever reach for the door? At an early age I earned my brass. I have learned all pain will pass. I take this memory everyday, And remember how my paradigm could be different in a way.
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Oct 6, 2011
Oct 6, 2011 at 7:50 PM UTC
The Tub
It’s a 5 day world out there, followed by a 2 day scare of baths and walks and holiday forecast talks. Planning goodbyes before you’ve left and gone whilst sitting still on Subway platform one, with stationary thoughts like the stationary train, wiped down and dried by the city state rain. It’s a 5 day world out there, followed by a 2 day scare, together another 7 day affair.
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Dec 18, 2012
Dec 18, 2012 at 11:31 AM UTC
******** MAYAN CALENDER
I hang paper cranes Above my head So I can fly in my dreams The map of the world That hangs on my wall Is a canvas for me to paint The Shakespeare quote Reminds me of where I'm going Baby pictures remind me Of where I've been My blankets are my cocoon I'm a butterfly I lie in the dark Spinning poetry like a web Popcorn feeds my stomach Paperback novels feed my mind My dressing gown hangs on the door My walls are trimmed with fairy lights A tv sits atop a dresser Like a skeleton, it lay unwatched I'd prefer to dream of lilac baths Than force my brain to rot. Under my bed there's dust bunnies And monsters And in the dark they creak But I'm sleeping with my paper cranes And flying in my dreams.
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Apr 16, 2014
Apr 16, 2014 at 8:35 PM UTC
Bedroom
A Child Whispers to Himself Someday I will wake up in the morning And not be wrong Someday I will look outside the window And not be wrong Someday I will not make up my bed just right (or maybe not make it up at all) And not be wrong Someday I will open the refrigerator And not be wrong Someday I will choose my clothes for the day And not be wrong Someday I will say something I think And not be wrong Someday I will toast a slice of bread And not be wrong Someday I will read a book because I like it And not be wrong Someday I will visit a friend of my choosing And not be wrong Someday I will admire the pictures I like And not be wrong Someday I will play in the leaves with the dogs And not be wrong Someday I will order from a menu And not be wrong Someday I will eat my dessert first And not be wrong Someday I will hug only people I like And not be wrong Someday I will buy the coat I want to wear And not be wrong Someday I will smile at the girl next door And not be wrong Someday I will write poetry openly And not be wrong Someday I will say, “That’s a pretty car” And not be wrong Someday I will say, “I like the fog and mist” And not be wrong Someday at the store I will buy some little thing And not be wrong Someday I will use the shampoo I like And not be wrong Someday I will take long, hot, soapy baths And not be wrong Someday I will tell someone about my dreams And not be wrong Someday… Someday I will leave this unhappy house And not look back And not be wrong
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Nov 24, 2018
Nov 24, 2018 at 2:22 PM UTC
A Child Whispers to Himself (public posting)
A Child Whispers to Himself Someday I will wake up in the morning And not be wrong Someday I will look outside the window And not be wrong Someday I will not make up my bed just right (or maybe not make it up at all) And not be wrong Someday I will open the refrigerator And not be wrong Someday I will choose my clothes for the day And not be wrong Someday I will say something I think And not be wrong Someday I will toast a slice of bread And not be wrong Someday I will read a book because I like it And not be wrong Someday I will visit a friend of my choosing And not be wrong Someday I will admire the pictures I like And not be wrong Someday I will play in the leaves with the dogs And not be wrong Someday I will order from a menu And not be wrong Someday I will eat my dessert first And not be wrong Someday I will hug only people I like And not be wrong Someday I will buy the coat I want to wear And not be wrong Someday I will smile at the girl next door And not be wrong Someday I will write poetry openly And not be wrong Someday I will say, “That’s a pretty car” And not be wrong Someday I will say, “I like the fog and mist” And not be wrong Someday at the store I will buy some little thing And not be wrong Someday I will use the shampoo I like And not be wrong Someday I will take long, hot, soapy baths And not be wrong Someday I will tell someone about my dreams And not be wrong Someday… Someday I will leave this unhappy house And not look back And not be wrong
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As she is Feeling worthy, She takes the journey With Eyes wide shut; in truth ever so blindly Embracing her spirituality Divinely She Rises As Peek of the Day At High Noon She’s In tune Like the Sun in rotation to the 28 phases of the moon She’s in tune as summer in the month of June Just as a flower in its fullest bloom She’s in tune As the skin embracing the molecules of perfume She’s in tune Just as a baby in the mother’s Womb Just waiting to be born soon She’s uses Art of Divination Shes sees Life/God in all of Creation She self heals through crystals, spiritual baths and mediation Her Aura is that of roses, poetry, and galaxies She pulls one in with her defiant rules of gravity Draws one closer with her celestial cavity She’s cosmic candy Some may say They call her the Milky Way Because around her even the stars feel safe enough to come out and play She’s a whole vibe, the rhythm of reggae She’s life one breathes into their airway She’s paradise’s secret highway She’s Cosmic Candy She’s As beautiful as watching the chaotic grace of a Star burst to me Her spirit is wild and free as the unknown depths of the sea Speaking aesthetically, she is truth So heavenly She is Cosmic Candy
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Sep 14, 2019
Sep 14, 2019 at 1:05 PM UTC
“Cosmic Candy “
Around me architectural mastery: sycamores, embankments, enduring ionic pillars. I round a walkway bordered by trees, enamel thawing, gliding off their low leaves. Beneath the late-May’s pounding sun, through the glittered trees’ reaches, a gazebo crackles into sight. Children in their prime, sunbathers, a wistful portraitist encircle it carelessly: a leisured chimney; the billows of life. The foliage escapes into the river, purplish, palpitating, cyclic creases receive the dewy notes. Kayaks licking acacia-gum-edged ripples sputter and slip through reverberations of leveled white-water terraces. Blackcurrants in clotted cream slide on the plush lips of a young passerby. The 8 above a doorway dances motionless, silent in my periphery; “Nicolas Cage just sold the spot” pops from unknown lungs inside the Circus crowd. Unacknowledged, half-proud hands built the Roman baths alone, closed-in by such grace, forgotten, then as now. I wander these ancestral lanes more or less alone, the same.
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Jul 4, 2012
Jul 4, 2012 at 7:55 AM UTC
Lines Written in Bath, Somerset
bases on the character Blanche DuBois from Streetcar Named Desire a play by Tennassee Williams Crushed white satin Hot baths on warm days Polka music makes me sway That young man I wish had stayed Light dances around me Never daring a touch Here in the lantern light All a lady has is her looks Stranger Stranger everywhere Darkness always a little too near Shep oh Shep where are you dear? "I don't know you" please get off For star and the common pig I leave no words of fancy For now I sit with pen an paper In the light of a padded room and the piano was still slow and blue
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May 9, 2013
May 9, 2013 at 10:23 AM UTC
Blanche DuBois
One's grand flights, one's Sunday baths, One's tootings at the weddings of the soul Occur as they occur. So bluish clouds Occurred above the empty house and the leaves Of the rhododendrons rattled their gold, As if someone lived there. Such floods of white Came bursting from the clouds. So the wind Threw its contorted strength around the sky. Could you have said the bluejay suddenly Would swoop to earth? It is a wheel, the rays Around the sun. The wheel survives the myths. The fire eye in the clouds survives the gods. To think of a dove with an eye of grenadine And pines that are comets, so it occurs, And a little island full of geese and stars: It may be that the ignorant man, alone, Has any chance to mate his life with life That is the sensual, pearly spouse, the life That is fluent in even the wintriest bronze.
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3.5k
The Sense of the Sleight-of-Hand Man
Every night was tortellini when were roommates. I complained about my chapped feet; you bought me the wrong socks. Black, mens, I clarified, but you kept buying the women's. Then one day you got it right, only they were for you because black is a warmer color than white, and the socks of a man felt like cherubs. I complained about my chapped feet, you the heart of the world, its cold silence. But we remained "alright". You bought new pajamas every night and painted a beauty mark on your face to match. Years of x-marked places on our bodies which no one saw because we were cynics, I the most. No roses at our mat--we grew our own bushes, ordered the ones with the extra thorns. I charmed that snake, you bit me on its behalf. That I'd do such a thing was shameful. We were girlfriends in a can of salt, tears in our eyes, mouths and ears. We drank wine in bubble baths in our clothes for three days straight, or even four, after that guy dumped you. From then on every night was tortellini, La Dolce Vita, and-- and the freckle below your ear, the horns growing from my forehead, the way your falsies touched your cheeks, late nights looking brighter than they should, than they normally would. Pretending to be goddesses awaiting their gods-- while I awaited you. Then you felt them too, touched my head as though it were a fever. I always knew you hated the suburbs, and I did listen when you complained about the gray rooftops and the saturated green lawns-- "Give them a chance, please. Then we'll get away--" I begged, I relented-- The wine, finally, fermented. You remember what I said next, because after that you broke my heart. I never doubted it was a bad idea to say it but I said it and you left.
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Aug 3, 2015
Aug 3, 2015 at 8:15 PM UTC
Roommates
Every night was tortellini when were roommates. I complained about my chapped feet; you bought me the wrong socks. Black, mens, I clarified, but you kept buying the women's. Then one day you got it right, only they were for you because black is a warmer color than white, and the socks of a man felt like cherubs. I complained about my chapped feet, you the heart of the world, its cold silence. But we remained "alright". You bought new pajamas every night and painted a beauty mark on your face to match. Years of x-marked places on our bodies which no one saw because we were cynics, I the most. No roses at our mat--we grew our own bushes, ordered the ones with the extra thorns. I charmed that snake, you bit me on its behalf. That I'd do such a thing was shameful. We were girlfriends in a can of salt, tears in our eyes, mouths and ears. We drank wine in bubble baths in our clothes for three days straight, or even four, after that guy dumped you. From then on every night was tortellini, La Dolce Vita, and-- and the freckle below your ear, the horns growing from my forehead, the way your falsies touched your cheeks, late nights looking brighter than they should, than they normally would. Pretending to be goddesses awaiting their gods-- while I awaited you. Then you felt them too, touched my head as though it were a fever. I always knew you hated the suburbs, and I did listen when you complained about the gray rooftops and the saturated green lawns-- "Give them a chance, please. Then we'll get away--" I begged, I relented-- The wine, finally, fermented. You remember what I said next, because after that you broke my heart. I never doubted it was a bad idea to say it but I said it and you left.
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