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"deciduous" poems
She had hung it up from the mantelpiece in her bedroom, so when he entered the room there it was. It was suddenly lovely and he immediately imagined her body flowing into it, flowing from it. Standing close to the dress he brought his fingers to the fabric, touched gently, stroking then, as though it already held her form and substance.   Stepping past thoughts of her that so stirred his body he entered the pattern of the dress. It was a meadow in southern Ontario. July, when already the sun had bleached the profusion of grasses: water chestnut and papyrus sedge. He had stepped from the untidy veranda, past the pond, and down the rough track between the fields unmown, uncut, left fallow. As he entered the breaks of woodland between these swathes of grassland, deciduous leaves, dry and brittle from the summer's heat, were strewn on the path, and between the trees clumps of bramble bushes with berries of red and blue, black and purple.   There was no wind. The only sounds an underlay of crickets, his footfall, and the sharp mournful cries of geese on the now distant pond.   He saw her like an apparition standing motionless at the woodland’s  boundary; her dress at one with all that surrounded her. When he came close and placed his hand on her shoulder he could smell the sweet dry earth mingling with her body's sweat, a hint of her *** as he placed his cheek against the shower of printed pollen amongst the leaves on her back.   Back in the late afternoon bedroom he heard her move about in the kitchen, and the spell broken, he turned away and went downstairs.   Several days later, as they prepared for bed, she slipped the dress on. As she stood in the lamplight smoothing it against her flanks, adjusting its fall across her ******* he felt himself faint that such a thing of beauty could be a joy forever . . . and beyond.
0
Oct 14, 2012
Oct 14, 2012 at 4:55 AM UTC
Dress
She had hung it up from the mantelpiece in her bedroom, so when he entered the room there it was. It was suddenly lovely and he immediately imagined her body flowing into it, flowing from it. Standing close to the dress he brought his fingers to the fabric, touched gently, stroking then, as though it already held her form and substance.   Stepping past thoughts of her that so stirred his body he entered the pattern of the dress. It was a meadow in southern Ontario. July, when already the sun had bleached the profusion of grasses: water chestnut and papyrus sedge. He had stepped from the untidy veranda, past the pond, and down the rough track between the fields unmown, uncut, left fallow. As he entered the breaks of woodland between these swathes of grassland, deciduous leaves, dry and brittle from the summer's heat, were strewn on the path, and between the trees clumps of bramble bushes with berries of red and blue, black and purple.   There was no wind. The only sounds an underlay of crickets, his footfall, and the sharp mournful cries of geese on the now distant pond.   He saw her like an apparition standing motionless at the woodland’s  boundary; her dress at one with all that surrounded her. When he came close and placed his hand on her shoulder he could smell the sweet dry earth mingling with her body's sweat, a hint of her *** as he placed his cheek against the shower of printed pollen amongst the leaves on her back.   Back in the late afternoon bedroom he heard her move about in the kitchen, and the spell broken, he turned away and went downstairs.   Several days later, as they prepared for bed, she slipped the dress on. As she stood in the lamplight smoothing it against her flanks, adjusting its fall across her ******* he felt himself faint that such a thing of beauty could be a joy forever . . . and beyond.
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6
**via woodland trail, along deciduous dale amid a rocky terrain, through geographic chicane meandrous no longer, smoky waters beleaguered upwelling they burble, in deep tracts they gurgle hypnotic they swirl, then turgidly whorl the rivers egress, from caverns sub-aqueous bereft of surrender, outpours now in splendour the Wharfe expelled from the strid. ...   ...   ...**
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Jun 20, 2012
Jun 20, 2012 at 12:26 PM UTC
... Yorkshire Strid [the] ...
Looking upon this tree with its quaint pretension Of holding the earth, a leveret, in its claws, Or marking the texture of its living bark, A grey sea wrinkled by the winds of years, I understand whence this man's body comes, In veins and fibres, the bare boughs of bone, The trellised thicket, where the heart, that robin, Greets with a song the seasons of the blood. But where in meadow or mountain shall I match The individual accent of the speech That is the ear's familiar? To what sun attribute The honeyed warmness of his smile? To which of the deciduous brood is German The angel peeping from the latticed eye?
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4.9k
An Old Man
1422 Summer has two Beginnings— Beginning once in June— Beginning in October Affectingly again— Without, perhaps, the Riot But graphicker for Grace— As finer is a going Than a remaining Face— Departing then—forever— Forever—until May— Forever is deciduous Except to those who die—
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4.6k
Summer has two Beginnings—
The daffodils; Pristine yellow With a soft white hue. A cup for the fairies Evening tea for two. Dancing in the peaceful breeze In a synchronized tango with The deciduous trees.
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Jun 17, 2014
Jun 17, 2014 at 4:43 PM UTC
The Daffodil
Mind, like a deciduous forest has lost all its foliage, all leaves torn away by the autumnal blasts The brain where great schemes were concocted is now an abyss where spiders sway It is bare – dismally barren of all memories – sweet and sour Like a kite afloat in the boundless sky moving nowhere, but as the wind directs, cut out from the past, turned from the present with the future yet to surge from the abyss or like serpents intertwining,     hissing in turmoil within the brain, unable to sense the gusty blast, or hear the whispering air, dead to sounds that disturb, deaf to songs that soothe, like a phantom he moves weird, drifting far away to a space and time impenetrable   with nothing to make the mind agog or depress it to let out a sigh. Loitering on roads without hurrying feet with no bliss coming on the way to run or hasten to embrace or fear to be missed sore passing through dark labyrinthine tunnels forever barred with no exit churned in oblivion, oblivious of all, he remains a spectral facsimile of his onetime self plummeting into a black hole The pulse of a heart beat is all that keeps him alive,   all else is dead…… !   with dreary nights ahead that shall not know another morrow
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Jan 7, 2018
Jan 7, 2018 at 8:13 AM UTC
Dementia
Often times I’m staring Awing in the curves of full blooming lips Carved jawbone covered with deepening dark moss The journey through the damp forest after warm rain It is all awake alive and breathing clearly Rising and falling like the rare drops from deciduous leaves I cannot tell you how inhuman you feel to me Your skin darkens around your eyes from nights up Long evenings too many and whiskey that never even made it to a cup Sometimes I cannot break a gaze from the casement around your pupil The pools of honey drip further toward me My feet find it impossible to remove themselves So much like quicksand but sweet calming and warm Smooth and simplistic in youth the way skin drapes Hangs over structured bones in the most phenomenal way Just as your eyes are lavished in graham brown You stay glowing even in the cold weather from blessed ancestry Down to tender arteries and muscle where I’ve placed lips a thousand times Shoulders swoop outwards like broad boulders Distinguishable markers play connect the dots toward inked surfaced skin Permanence of scarred lines forming a hot air balloon and anchor pulling it down It’s from your favorite band, I’m noticing synapses collide on the concept Elongated extended vines lead to tools that hold and create masterpieces Strong slender hands with fingertips that press and pluck strings Coat themselves with paint on late evening or early mornings Tread lightly on my skin and illuminate my face with a coaxing touch You are the rain forest from sunrise My heart thumps to the sense of danger behind a corner But I know such things and if they were to **** me, I would be treasured in becoming a tall Kapok With roots buried miles deep
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Sep 19, 2015
Sep 19, 2015 at 11:33 AM UTC
The Rain Forest
Often times I’m staring Awing in the curves of full blooming lips Carved jawbone covered with deepening dark moss The journey through the damp forest after warm rain It is all awake alive and breathing clearly Rising and falling like the rare drops from deciduous leaves I cannot tell you how inhuman you feel to me Your skin darkens around your eyes from nights up Long evenings too many and whiskey that never even made it to a cup Sometimes I cannot break a gaze from the casement around your pupil The pools of honey drip further toward me My feet find it impossible to remove themselves So much like quicksand but sweet calming and warm Smooth and simplistic in youth the way skin drapes Hangs over structured bones in the most phenomenal way Just as your eyes are lavished in graham brown You stay glowing even in the cold weather from blessed ancestry Down to tender arteries and muscle where I’ve placed lips a thousand times Shoulders swoop outwards like broad boulders Distinguishable markers play connect the dots toward inked surfaced skin Permanence of scarred lines forming a hot air balloon and anchor pulling it down It’s from your favorite band, I’m noticing synapses collide on the concept Elongated extended vines lead to tools that hold and create masterpieces Strong slender hands with fingertips that press and pluck strings Coat themselves with paint on late evening or early mornings Tread lightly on my skin and illuminate my face with a coaxing touch You are the rain forest from sunrise My heart thumps to the sense of danger behind a corner But I know such things and if they were to **** me, I would be treasured in becoming a tall Kapok With roots buried miles deep
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31
Your hair is thick and dark
 evergreen branches that glide 
against lilac petals 
made of powdered sugar. 
I wish your hands were not so rough,
 when you mold my body out of clay 
you leave divots, not as deep
 as tire tracks in snow
but tiny deer prints
 left behind in secret
 the kind where the mystery
 makes you follow them into the thicket. 
Strum that song again, 
the one you played, laughing 
at the silliness of knowing
 every chord, even though we both 
silently love it. Don't talk to me
 about intimacy problems 
because you know I would have 
loved you, more 
then children with fried dough 
the kind that comes from county
fairs and you can't look at me
 like that, with painful eyes
 'cause we're both guilty. 
What happens to women without
 men? Running fingers over bare
hills, hoping to once again 
be covered with fur trees
 thick and dark. So catch me 
with those that match
 your pea coat that smells
 sweetly of cigarettes 
and stories only known 
by haylofts and cotton pillows.
0
Aug 11, 2011
Aug 11, 2011 at 8:11 PM UTC
Deciduous Forests
Carrying your name forward on a silver stein raft with the wreckage of me I long to crave, mouth agape, eyes watering proof I long to crave, my deciduous vulnerability flashed wide upon when you’re there I long to crave, your sweet nectar lips dipped in honey; have a taste of your white chocolate lava cake I long to crave, to stare into the openness of your porcelaina doll face I long to crave, look through the window to your soul through your nebulaic eyes. I long to crave, Suggestively suggestive advice from you to me to you I long to crave, My lover dreamer’s dream I long to crave, My tinder streak keeping me warm I long to crave, the shoulder to lean on in my darkest hours I long to crave, The person I want to be beside When I’m at my most beautiful. I long to crave, Oh, how I long to crave ? My undying longing to crave. You.
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Dec 20, 2015
Dec 20, 2015 at 8:43 AM UTC
Decadence.
Upstanding citizen of forest floor. Tall and proud. Lowest level. Tall and strong. Home to many. An ancient realm. Mighty den of bugs and grubs. Detritus munching in the hole. A deciduous conifer. Gets undressed for winter. Redresses early spring. Parody of pine tree. Wood as red as fire. The itching sky she needs to scratch. Always reaching upwards. Until her time is done! By ladylivvi1 © 2013 ladylivvi1 (All rights reserved)
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Nov 3, 2013
Nov 3, 2013 at 10:14 AM UTC
Redwood!
In the dim yellow light beneath deciduous trees she spun methodically in Autumn. Shadows loomed aloft, chirping their approval. She spun and seemed to levitate, the flickers of the evening flame reflected in her pale green eyes darting in between loose strands of bland vermilion hair. And she spun and spun as if she'd spin forever, Autumn. She was Autumn there and then, personified in glints of golden green and faded yellow brown descending listlessly to greet the open canvas of the forest floor. And the shadows pressed into the earth and disappeared as overhead the rain slashed through the shyness of the crowns betwixt the trees. And she slowly spun her last, and lastly, panting stood before me naked, shivering in the gentle gales that rose and fell like Mozart's heavy heart. I beckoned her with dead weights crudely fashioned to the pauldrons of my coffin that hung lowly, swaying listless as the leaves. And she smiled a tired smile and blew the kiss I yearned for seasons to receive before collapsing in the dirt. In Autumn. -Mike Robbins-
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Oct 1, 2017
Oct 1, 2017 at 5:50 PM UTC
Autumn
Maiden, maiden, maiden, a depilidate mobious minaret – Holical, Eris begs an atlatl defection, the Genuis-from-Mars technique – an erathicus lecanopteris. Suffretex, past-perfection in pastel gloxinia, Glowingly acidic and shiftingly glossidic, it’s cosmaltry mariala; Ungual outmoded, holonym singing Aquilar rapax as demiurge. Demos and Phobos weep, coruscating terrathos, killing riva. Swell quickly, optic ophidia, lest the ira florena rise – Rise, maiden, rise optic ophidia, ignore Irredelphine! Strut the hematacolpa and pace-willow, but fail flow: Deciduous telechir beckons, demanding autobogotic-hajra. Piss-venom and picea hovea, eche verri naught echo – Beta-decay and COBOL error, fandango with teeth And sing praise for Eucladanic soignè solaris Sprint quick, maiden-solidago gesparisè, to Misra pourum! Majerns and hapax, death-knell aloud and encelia, Enfloranè, haste! Enatic haste tichodrome, flee, anise! Apios, harken: tryst-sans-thermobic sweeping of thresher-thrown, Little-low else yet achroma, de-jubilance: Fall fairly, ayah! So to be so, blanking systemic, A thousand steps for one death.
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Jul 4, 2010
Jul 4, 2010 at 12:25 PM UTC
The Maiden as Demiurge
a nacreous tossing around at the sides, a dappled silver sunlight if looked one way, an apocalyptic gloam if another, exhaled from a seeming mouth, feeding on what has already eviscerated an unfelt ***** a predator certainly its own prey, a heat certainly poison-breath on a cheek falling when a meretricious lover spouts that spurious hypocorism, and also just a wavering, iridescent puddle— cornered, soft as a liquid steel echo of a futile struggle rolling around, bouncing off a wine glass, and a porcelain table edge, while a listening head shakes, looks down despondently, gloom glowing out the hair, a voice jaded since birth saying some thing about differences, or a helpless slender strap of hope hanging itself on the way two other eyes look at it across checkered watered wings, two swirling god whorls, two effulgent galaxies the color of melting pine bole circling around in living umber striae, pulling its gaze, raising it, as if they, they were blazing truth cased behind lithophane, and it, only an aporetic puddle now of tepid ocher, a mild earth stone placed in a hand, asked what is thought of it and the response: yes, yes of course, before foreign distance splutters its face, and it retreats from its meaning imparted to every thing (with the vulnerable precision of a swaying finger tip) to the baby lanugo of a delicate floating, through human rills, of what is horizon docked, dead, not merely deciduous—forever jilted with breath bulging as when beating a flopping eyeless fish to half-dead, head tilted up a throat trying to pry itself free, trying to live by streaming snagless, airful, without spirant sound of going lost straight from the hands— then a short chop of fullness finally expunged and sputtering like an escaped tuft of shackled wonder soaring up the sky in a puff and soul ring.
0
Mar 27, 2012
Mar 27, 2012 at 7:43 PM UTC
I in Graffiti Mural
a nacreous tossing around at the sides, a dappled silver sunlight if looked one way, an apocalyptic gloam if another, exhaled from a seeming mouth, feeding on what has already eviscerated an unfelt ***** a predator certainly its own prey, a heat certainly poison-breath on a cheek falling when a meretricious lover spouts that spurious hypocorism, and also just a wavering, iridescent puddle— cornered, soft as a liquid steel echo of a futile struggle rolling around, bouncing off a wine glass, and a porcelain table edge, while a listening head shakes, looks down despondently, gloom glowing out the hair, a voice jaded since birth saying some thing about differences, or a helpless slender strap of hope hanging itself on the way two other eyes look at it across checkered watered wings, two swirling god whorls, two effulgent galaxies the color of melting pine bole circling around in living umber striae, pulling its gaze, raising it, as if they, they were blazing truth cased behind lithophane, and it, only an aporetic puddle now of tepid ocher, a mild earth stone placed in a hand, asked what is thought of it and the response: yes, yes of course, before foreign distance splutters its face, and it retreats from its meaning imparted to every thing (with the vulnerable precision of a swaying finger tip) to the baby lanugo of a delicate floating, through human rills, of what is horizon docked, dead, not merely deciduous—forever jilted with breath bulging as when beating a flopping eyeless fish to half-dead, head tilted up a throat trying to pry itself free, trying to live by streaming snagless, airful, without spirant sound of going lost straight from the hands— then a short chop of fullness finally expunged and sputtering like an escaped tuft of shackled wonder soaring up the sky in a puff and soul ring.
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63
Your mind and you are our Sargasso Sea, London has swept about you this score years And bright ships left you this or that in fee: Ideas, old gossip, oddments of all things, Strange spars of knowledge and dimmed wares of price. Great minds have sought you- lacking someone else. You have been second always. Tragical? No. You preferred it to the usual thing: One dull man, dulling and uxorious, One average mind- with one thought less, each year. Oh, you are patient, I have seen you sit Hours, where something might have floated up. And now you pay one. Yes, you richly pay. You are a person of some interest, one comes to you And takes strange gain away: Trophies fished up; some curious suggestion; Fact that leads nowhere; and a tale for two, Pregnant with mandrakes, or with something else That might prove useful and yet never proves, That never fits a corner or shows use, Or finds its hour upon the loom of days: The tarnished, gaudy, wonderful old work; Idols and ambergris and rare inlays, These are your riches, your great store; and yet For all this sea-hoard of deciduous things, Strange woods half sodden, and new brighter stuff: In the slow float of differing light and deep, No! there is nothing! In the whole and all, Nothing that’s quite your own. Yet this is you.
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2.2k
Portrait d’Une Femme
they were undeveloped. fetal figurines in preservation still and detached from the placenta of a better time tiny knucklebones grew miniature orchards half in bloom out of season, tracing palm lines. (deciduous wrists) forever in the interim, encapsulated while clock-hands melted through ceramic face and dripped over cream lids sealing their last breath like hurricanes in a time capsule
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Mar 27, 2013
Mar 27, 2013 at 1:39 PM UTC
Formaldehyde
The fleeing clouds have cleansed the tawny earthen meadows Migrating sun doth steal away waning light of summer’s glee High atop fir boughs bow in wind whispered homage To the sapience the coloured leaves hath gleaned The sweet scent of auburn brindled pinecone clusters Ooze of  glistening pitchy resinous fruit Sticky figured squirrels chatter while they gather, Stashing a survival cache of acorns and spinner seeds, For another moment in sleepy winter tide dreams A swirling eddy of spiraling leaves whirl beneath the tall timber Fluttering gracefully with a gravity only falling leaves embolden Enchanting like the evanescent timbre poignant piano notes decay Writhing silent as summer Jasmine’s fragrant final bloom Dandelion wishes soaring higher to kiss the fleeting winged skies Lazily adrift up and over Cascade Mountain Crest Fuzzy treetop flyers ascending far beyond darting dragonflies below The sliver of golden harvest moon’s blossom aglow ,… While wishing upon a shooting star's paling gleams Serendipity sown about whimsically in the blustery wind For to sow the will of untamed heart’s desires                                     A festive troop of Chickadees clinging like tiny acrobats Foraging on ripened ginger hued fir-cone seeds Wings to the sky wave goodbye to the deciduous cadence Softly wafting with a pungent Lavender potion scented breeze There is a secret place where memories go to hide deeply alive Amongst the wild wood and impending leafless trees, The only place on earth I've ever understood a sense of belonging Where Autumn coloured leaves whisper in the gentle breeze ,…                   “I would do it all over again” Come September ,..when the leaves come falling down                       © ... September 15th, 2016
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Sep 28, 2017
Sep 28, 2017 at 10:47 AM UTC
Come September ,..when the leaves come falling down
The fleeing clouds have cleansed the tawny earthen meadows Migrating sun doth steal away waning light of summer’s glee High atop fir boughs bow in wind whispered homage To the sapience the coloured leaves hath gleaned The sweet scent of auburn brindled pinecone clusters Ooze of  glistening pitchy resinous fruit Sticky figured squirrels chatter while they gather, Stashing a survival cache of acorns and spinner seeds, For another moment in sleepy winter tide dreams A swirling eddy of spiraling leaves whirl beneath the tall timber Fluttering gracefully with a gravity only falling leaves embolden Enchanting like the evanescent timbre poignant piano notes decay Writhing silent as summer Jasmine’s fragrant final bloom Dandelion wishes soaring higher to kiss the fleeting winged skies Lazily adrift up and over Cascade Mountain Crest Fuzzy treetop flyers ascending far beyond darting dragonflies below The sliver of golden harvest moon’s blossom aglow ,… While wishing upon a shooting star's paling gleams Serendipity sown about whimsically in the blustery wind For to sow the will of untamed heart’s desires                                     A festive troop of Chickadees clinging like tiny acrobats Foraging on ripened ginger hued fir-cone seeds Wings to the sky wave goodbye to the deciduous cadence Softly wafting with a pungent Lavender potion scented breeze There is a secret place where memories go to hide deeply alive Amongst the wild wood and impending leafless trees, The only place on earth I've ever understood a sense of belonging Where Autumn coloured leaves whisper in the gentle breeze ,…                   “I would do it all over again” Come September ,..when the leaves come falling down                       © ... September 15th, 2016
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31
I love the majestic ugliness of the Eucalypt; Aesthetically more appealing in its twisted, gnarled appearance Than any uniform northern conifer; Infinitely more adapted to the unforgiving antipodean climate Than those idealised European deciduous living monuments Still transfixing our collective view of how a tree should be. Those dropping leaves allowing scenes beyond; Those tendrils of bark denoting Darwinian fitness; All tug at the heart of we new Australians, Conflicted, as we are, by sensibilities born elsewhere, But borne, nevertheless, into an Ancient Eden.
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Mar 6, 2014
Mar 6, 2014 at 3:29 PM UTC
Eucalyptus
the air seized it’s chance today screaming **** me!” and every seed burst obligingly in a torrent of stars and silken hope yet a mere quarter hence the deciduous mantle will slip, dowager dry and lentigo browned, to dance tiny pirouettes with devils of dust & grit amongst a litter of sepia confetti as summer’s rusted brides fall their contract fulfilled
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Jun 5, 2015
Jun 5, 2015 at 12:22 PM UTC
burst
--- the roots of the deciduous tree - become - the wind barren branches - become - the veins of the leaves - which fall - into the streams which become rivers - which become deltas - which feed the oceans - which create rain - which feeds ***the roots of the trees once more*** soulsurvivor (c) 5/17/2015
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May 17, 2015
May 17, 2015 at 5:23 AM UTC
patterns
My internal landscape was once a wetland. Grasses and herbaceous plants sprout from the ventricles of my heart. My rib is a birch tree, a deciduous hard wood crowned with thin leaves. My veins are wild ravines. Inside it is the torrent of rain water that keeps me alive. My heart is a beating water lily, eternally blooming on the lake of my blood. I was a sullen mist, and I loved it that way. But they mistook my solitude for loneliness, the crowd, the clever engineers. So they loaded sands on their trucks, sacks after sacks. They opened me up, covered my wetland, and built a city inside me. They paved roads. They constructed buildings. They opened cafes and pubs and restaurants. They turned on their neon lights. A rave party is inside me at night, and they won't stop until I am filled with cigarette stubs and empty bottles and used issues and half-eaten plates -- litters and grime that I have to clean every morning of my life. My gutter is overflowing and they call this happiness. I call this wreckage. I moved close to the bed, pulled the sheet and laid down. I tried to remember my by-gone world -- my birch trees, my herbaceous plants, my wild ravines, my water lily -- before I was converted into a rattling shell called Happiness. You wrapped your arms around me and press your face on small of my back. My spine was a hard wood once, and every October it shed its golden leaves. "What do you want?" you asked. The neon lights and the avalanche of noise from everywhere drowned my thoughts, and all I can do for my defense is curl my mutiliated body.  "Love me until the end of everything," I whispered. "And understand that this is not a plea." This is a burning desire to have my wetland back.
0
Feb 18, 2017
Feb 18, 2017 at 12:13 PM UTC
Marshland
My internal landscape was once a wetland. Grasses and herbaceous plants sprout from the ventricles of my heart. My rib is a birch tree, a deciduous hard wood crowned with thin leaves. My veins are wild ravines. Inside it is the torrent of rain water that keeps me alive. My heart is a beating water lily, eternally blooming on the lake of my blood. I was a sullen mist, and I loved it that way. But they mistook my solitude for loneliness, the crowd, the clever engineers. So they loaded sands on their trucks, sacks after sacks. They opened me up, covered my wetland, and built a city inside me. They paved roads. They constructed buildings. They opened cafes and pubs and restaurants. They turned on their neon lights. A rave party is inside me at night, and they won't stop until I am filled with cigarette stubs and empty bottles and used issues and half-eaten plates -- litters and grime that I have to clean every morning of my life. My gutter is overflowing and they call this happiness. I call this wreckage. I moved close to the bed, pulled the sheet and laid down. I tried to remember my by-gone world -- my birch trees, my herbaceous plants, my wild ravines, my water lily -- before I was converted into a rattling shell called Happiness. You wrapped your arms around me and press your face on small of my back. My spine was a hard wood once, and every October it shed its golden leaves. "What do you want?" you asked. The neon lights and the avalanche of noise from everywhere drowned my thoughts, and all I can do for my defense is curl my mutiliated body.  "Love me until the end of everything," I whispered. "And understand that this is not a plea." This is a burning desire to have my wetland back.
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9
On a bright and sunny day On the 18th of May An earthquake resulted in a landslide That unleashed a massive force brewing inside The eruption removed the upper 1,300 feet The magma chamber burst- rock & gas blown at supersonic speed Within 8 miles, all was instantly wrecked With a shockwave so big, what could one expect? As the north slope collapsed down All life forms began to drown Every tree in sight swept away 19 miles outward; a ruinous ashtray Silence breaks as ash falls like snow The once mature landscape now just an embryo What had become a lifeless terrain, Now shows us what 35 years can attain. After the volcanic cataclysm Biological legacies determine the pace of new ecosystems The following colonizers proceed: Lupines, pearly everlasting, alder shrubs, and fireweed. The coniferous forest was replaced The deciduous Alder trees won the race The new forest attracts grasshoppers, birds, and ants Larks, gophers, sparrows and deer mice take a chance Out of 256 species alive prior to the eruption, 86 are now in production 20% of the surface is covered with grass and legumes Struggling young trees that endeavor to bloom Ecological gaps begin to fill Strong ecosystems form, production is uphill. Elk arrives to munch on grass and bark The thick forests attract birds, like larks. Fallen logs create nutrients and feed biofilm to the lake Floating ecosystems now have plenty resources to take Elevation affects the rate of recovery reports. The higher the colder, which means the growing season is short. The loss of trees means more room for sun As the lake warms up, there’s increased production More insects and bigger fish, like rainbow trout Salamanders are scarce now, not many about. Lupines deserve their own stanza, those purple legumes. They help make a pumice landscape suitable for others to bloom. Lupines create essential nutrients the pumice is low on Other plants are thankful for the rare space to grow on. All this information hopefully to inspire, Life pulls through in situations most dire. Mount Saint Helens’ destructive wake is seen clearly today, The eruption that obliterated had also paved a way.
0
May 18, 2022
May 18, 2022 at 11:31 AM UTC
Re-vegetation of Mt. St. Helens
On a bright and sunny day On the 18th of May An earthquake resulted in a landslide That unleashed a massive force brewing inside The eruption removed the upper 1,300 feet The magma chamber burst- rock & gas blown at supersonic speed Within 8 miles, all was instantly wrecked With a shockwave so big, what could one expect? As the north slope collapsed down All life forms began to drown Every tree in sight swept away 19 miles outward; a ruinous ashtray Silence breaks as ash falls like snow The once mature landscape now just an embryo What had become a lifeless terrain, Now shows us what 35 years can attain. After the volcanic cataclysm Biological legacies determine the pace of new ecosystems The following colonizers proceed: Lupines, pearly everlasting, alder shrubs, and fireweed. The coniferous forest was replaced The deciduous Alder trees won the race The new forest attracts grasshoppers, birds, and ants Larks, gophers, sparrows and deer mice take a chance Out of 256 species alive prior to the eruption, 86 are now in production 20% of the surface is covered with grass and legumes Struggling young trees that endeavor to bloom Ecological gaps begin to fill Strong ecosystems form, production is uphill. Elk arrives to munch on grass and bark The thick forests attract birds, like larks. Fallen logs create nutrients and feed biofilm to the lake Floating ecosystems now have plenty resources to take Elevation affects the rate of recovery reports. The higher the colder, which means the growing season is short. The loss of trees means more room for sun As the lake warms up, there’s increased production More insects and bigger fish, like rainbow trout Salamanders are scarce now, not many about. Lupines deserve their own stanza, those purple legumes. They help make a pumice landscape suitable for others to bloom. Lupines create essential nutrients the pumice is low on Other plants are thankful for the rare space to grow on. All this information hopefully to inspire, Life pulls through in situations most dire. Mount Saint Helens’ destructive wake is seen clearly today, The eruption that obliterated had also paved a way.
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Once dense thicket, coppiced To bear a cornucopia filled with Indian’s Summer rare blood moon. The All-Hallows summer extends As Samhain comes closer Recognizing, celebrating the ever coming. Wide leaves writhing and crunching from Deciduous oaks as they bare to nothing. Crushed grass and brush uncover a Light trail leading to preserved boscage. Through the dense brush Untouched water thickens From frosty moons bite. Seizing gossamers flight The soft breeze harshens For long nights moon is soon near.
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Sep 30, 2013
Sep 30, 2013 at 1:47 PM UTC
Forest Walk in Autumn
my soul breaths. it rises and falls as the red tides do on the western shore. my soul breaths, just as the leaves of the deciduous must redden and fall. my soul breaths, the songs of the lonely mournfully whispered over the piano. my soul breaths. unique. inevitable. longing. universal.
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Oct 30, 2011
Oct 30, 2011 at 1:44 AM UTC
breath
*Tried to hold onto you, to plant myself in the fertile soil in the creases of your elbows, tried to breathe in when you exhaled, to fill my lungs with your leftovers but there is not enough oxygen here to share and I have told you that I cannot breathe, told you I think I need to get out of here, I'm feeling claustrophobic but you only hold me closer, bruise my ribs like rotted fruit, kiss me with no desire to heal what you have broken, and I am trying to survive but I cannot live in the vacuum you have created in your chest cavity.*
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Oct 30, 2014
Oct 30, 2014 at 12:40 PM UTC
Deciduous
Here.. I'm still under the sky but different place and ground I feel in medieval era atmosphere Seeing lots of castles with old architecture Beautiful view in Montmartre, the custom of art Pampering my eyes Autumn creates a wonderful art naturally This place like a natural canvas created by a magical brush from God's hand Though Claude Monete and Renoir aren't exist anymore I can see the blend colors of autumn with my naked eyes There is yellow, orange, red and brown such a lovely painting Let me wear jacket this day Cause the air makes me pretty cold Strolling a countryside of French Deciduous trees along village street With bird song around It's time to harvest I like pumpkins in the field Picking apples and pears in the orchard near Talcy castle French is like a gold treasure Paris in autumn this month Eiffel tower is waiting me I'm walking on the leaves carpet So crisp under my feet The maple trees above me shadowing The leaves twirling send them to dance in the air Exceedingly romantic I was sitting on bench wood Oh.. if September comes NA.2016
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Jul 26, 2016
Jul 26, 2016 at 8:48 PM UTC
If September Comes