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"pairs" poems
*Streaming sunlight, what an intense, insistent lover! empty catamaran dances in it's sultry embrace, on the foam bed of gently rocking sea waves. The dark shadow of this union finds it's kind of fun swimming deeper, frightening fish roaming in pairs.*
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Jul 28, 2014
Jul 28, 2014 at 12:13 PM UTC
Love: above and below the dancing waves
Are you listening to the whispers? are you feeling scandalised? Harbouring ***** little feelings that you wanna sanitise? Walk through the swinging doors of a catholic franchise Ask em for that sailors knot a black-n-white man-ties To the pairs of prying eyes his practical rebuke Is a marital disguise and a tactical puke Throw the garter ‘mongst the pigeons, the voluntary victims... Whose single minds are filled with matrimonial conviction Paired up poets pool their miseries; the price of art Each miserable synergy - the sum of its parts Did he swear that he’d hold you ever dear to his heart? To love and to cherish til your knees did part? If she wants you like her father and you want her like your mother What the hell are you gonna do when you’re bored of one another? There she stands on ceremony all silk and sinew While the vow evicted from his Adam’s apple continues To stutter as the panic builds like stifled farts Til it splutters its devotions on her lady parts Her eyes sentence you to sit though your neck-hairs stand She’s the ****** ****** written in the lines on your palm Old scores squeeze sideways through her gritted teeth And he takes on the debt of every promise she believed Hide the love-bites in a polo-neck, your love life in a Rolodex When the ***** hand of happen-stance runs its evil down your keks Cos like the indelible digits on your bathroom mirror Love is for life until you dress it with liquor If she wants you like her father and you want her like your mother What the hell are you gonna do when you’re bored of one another? We are but experiments, seven billion shades of wrong The clever ones stay celibate, the others pass it on That’s an easy line to settle-on in present company Single-riders in the peloton to pick up the debris
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Mar 7, 2018
Mar 7, 2018 at 5:44 PM UTC
(You Will in Your) Holy Matrimony
Are you listening to the whispers? are you feeling scandalised? Harbouring ***** little feelings that you wanna sanitise? Walk through the swinging doors of a catholic franchise Ask em for that sailors knot a black-n-white man-ties To the pairs of prying eyes his practical rebuke Is a marital disguise and a tactical puke Throw the garter ‘mongst the pigeons, the voluntary victims... Whose single minds are filled with matrimonial conviction Paired up poets pool their miseries; the price of art Each miserable synergy - the sum of its parts Did he swear that he’d hold you ever dear to his heart? To love and to cherish til your knees did part? If she wants you like her father and you want her like your mother What the hell are you gonna do when you’re bored of one another? There she stands on ceremony all silk and sinew While the vow evicted from his Adam’s apple continues To stutter as the panic builds like stifled farts Til it splutters its devotions on her lady parts Her eyes sentence you to sit though your neck-hairs stand She’s the ****** ****** written in the lines on your palm Old scores squeeze sideways through her gritted teeth And he takes on the debt of every promise she believed Hide the love-bites in a polo-neck, your love life in a Rolodex When the ***** hand of happen-stance runs its evil down your keks Cos like the indelible digits on your bathroom mirror Love is for life until you dress it with liquor If she wants you like her father and you want her like your mother What the hell are you gonna do when you’re bored of one another? We are but experiments, seven billion shades of wrong The clever ones stay celibate, the others pass it on That’s an easy line to settle-on in present company Single-riders in the peloton to pick up the debris
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32
your old socks haunt me as they linger in my drawer Touching all my innocent matched pairs. you had slipped them to me one frosty night when the cold nipped at my toes An act of a gentleman. but now what am i to do? you're gone, but your socks remain Each opening of my drawer kindles the coldness I feel. you and your socks betrayed me none of you comfort me anymore But at least the socks decided to stay.
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May 10, 2014
May 10, 2014 at 11:59 PM UTC
betrayal
Dear, though the night is gone, Its dream still haunts today, That brought us to a room Cavernous, lofty as A railway terminus, And crowded in that gloom Were beds, and we in one In a far corner lay. Our whisper woke no clocks, We kissed and I was glad At everything you did, Indifferent to those Who sat with hostile eyes In pairs on every bed, Arms round each other's neck, Inert and vaguely sad. O but what worm of guilt Or what malignant doubt Am I the victim of, That you then, unabashed, Did what I never wished, Confessed another love; And I, submissive, felt Unwanted and went out?
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18.2k
Dear, Though the Night Is Gone
Barefooted is not good ,so A pair of shoes helps in any season ... People rush to buy the best and the highest qualities Even if their prices are like pyramids ... I don't understand this rush towards All different kinds of pairs of shoes ... There are people who are ready to buy The whole shoes' stores At any price !
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Jan 29, 2015
Jan 29, 2015 at 2:41 PM UTC
Pairs of shoes
What we have named Fire Escape (an ordered, angular tangle of ladders and rail) had made picture geometries in my west window well-framed and flat--set foreground and background in two dimensions, as the sun hid, and my round eye opened. What we have named Fire Escape was flaked-paint brown orange, as if first it had been born of a flame and then had taken up living as metal-- tempered itself into usefulness, which I should trust now, in case of the yelling and the engines. What we have named Fire Escape was happy Jungle Jim or Jungle for Jane for the sparrows I saw this morning which flitted and wildly played within, rising up arched and back again. Made of the square pairs of ladder rungs-- a tunnel entrance or ducking posts, or highway bridges to clear; the birds like small plane, daredevil pilots each following each, going under. No sparrow would ever crash. And what is this I remember now? How one bird eased its engine and perched there to stay? As if to offer me, with a little turn of head gesture-- a thank you, for the bread I'd left on the sill? Or to say I'd better shut the curtain and make my exit? Either prideful guess gets me nowhere fast. Failed even is speaking in any sparrow languages from my recline stuffed chair; again, but now imagined, to draw beady eyes to fix on me, telling me much less. That morning, with the very last sparrow gone, I remember that nothing in my sight moved, save an American flag at a distance in the wind, with its one red-white striped wing waving toward the cold north, as the white church spire, framed in open quadrilaterals, held its position.
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Apr 15, 2013
Apr 15, 2013 at 5:18 AM UTC
A Fire Escape of Sparrows
What we have named Fire Escape (an ordered, angular tangle of ladders and rail) had made picture geometries in my west window well-framed and flat--set foreground and background in two dimensions, as the sun hid, and my round eye opened. What we have named Fire Escape was flaked-paint brown orange, as if first it had been born of a flame and then had taken up living as metal-- tempered itself into usefulness, which I should trust now, in case of the yelling and the engines. What we have named Fire Escape was happy Jungle Jim or Jungle for Jane for the sparrows I saw this morning which flitted and wildly played within, rising up arched and back again. Made of the square pairs of ladder rungs-- a tunnel entrance or ducking posts, or highway bridges to clear; the birds like small plane, daredevil pilots each following each, going under. No sparrow would ever crash. And what is this I remember now? How one bird eased its engine and perched there to stay? As if to offer me, with a little turn of head gesture-- a thank you, for the bread I'd left on the sill? Or to say I'd better shut the curtain and make my exit? Either prideful guess gets me nowhere fast. Failed even is speaking in any sparrow languages from my recline stuffed chair; again, but now imagined, to draw beady eyes to fix on me, telling me much less. That morning, with the very last sparrow gone, I remember that nothing in my sight moved, save an American flag at a distance in the wind, with its one red-white striped wing waving toward the cold north, as the white church spire, framed in open quadrilaterals, held its position.
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42
two red kites like pairs of white kittens locked in a spiritual trance ice-skating pairs triple-axle across the ice blue sky with a flare
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Sep 2, 2014
Sep 2, 2014 at 10:34 AM UTC
Ice Blue Sky
my sonnet is A light goes on in the toiletwindow,that’s straightacross from my window,night air bothered with a rustling din sort of sublimated tom-tom which quite outdoes the mandolin- man’s tiny racket. The horses sleep upstairs. And you can see their ears. Ears win- k,funny stable. In the morning they go out in pairs: amazingly,one pair is white (but you know that)they look at each other. Nudge. (if they love each other,who cares?) They pull the morning out of the night. I am living with a mouse who shares my meals with him,which is fair as i judge.
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10.4k
My Sonnet Is A Light Goes On In
In a bedroom in small-town Pennsylvania, you’ll find an unmade bed, a pile of clothes on the floor— clean but not folded, open drawers and dusty shelves, a desk in the corner of the room with pictures laid across it. When I caught my first fish at six. I held it at arm’s length by the fishing line to avoid the slimy scales, a frown on my face from being forced to sit silently in the cold. When my family went to Marco Island, my sister and I, sifting sand for the best seashells in our matching swimsuits and hats. Mom and dad’s fights forgotten in our fun. High school graduation posing with my best friend since first grade, diplomas in one hand and an extra cap held between us because not everyone survived all four years. Move-in day at college, sitting on my raised bed with a grey comforter and two decorative pillows the color of cotton candy. Sweat on my brow from southern humidity and moving furniture without the help of a father. The pictures are merely snapshots that lack the full story. How I learned what it meant for love to fall apart when I was eight years old. My sister warned me before it happened, told me what a divorce was. I mistook her for joking until they called us upstairs. Dad cried when they told us, but mom held her tears until the day he left. The sounds of her cries escaping from behind a closed door. “This doesn’t mean we don’t love each other.” But that’s exactly what it meant. How I was taught by my father that love is conditional, and I repeatedly needed to prove myself through good grades and unquestioning obedience. Forced to stay home to spend time with the family, sitting wordlessly on the couch while he watched TV. Made guilty for wanting to spend time with friends because that somehow meant that I was a bad daughter. It’s funny—I never asked myself if he was a good father. If you look harder at the bedroom, you’ll find journals filled with bitter words, screws from disassembled pencil sharpeners, loose razors, and Aquaphor, food wrappers stuffed in hidden places, a closet brimming with junk and pairs of shoes, evidence of a story untold. Until you.
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Sep 20, 2023
Sep 20, 2023 at 9:09 PM UTC
To Whom It May Concern:
In a bedroom in small-town Pennsylvania, you’ll find an unmade bed, a pile of clothes on the floor— clean but not folded, open drawers and dusty shelves, a desk in the corner of the room with pictures laid across it. When I caught my first fish at six. I held it at arm’s length by the fishing line to avoid the slimy scales, a frown on my face from being forced to sit silently in the cold. When my family went to Marco Island, my sister and I, sifting sand for the best seashells in our matching swimsuits and hats. Mom and dad’s fights forgotten in our fun. High school graduation posing with my best friend since first grade, diplomas in one hand and an extra cap held between us because not everyone survived all four years. Move-in day at college, sitting on my raised bed with a grey comforter and two decorative pillows the color of cotton candy. Sweat on my brow from southern humidity and moving furniture without the help of a father. The pictures are merely snapshots that lack the full story. How I learned what it meant for love to fall apart when I was eight years old. My sister warned me before it happened, told me what a divorce was. I mistook her for joking until they called us upstairs. Dad cried when they told us, but mom held her tears until the day he left. The sounds of her cries escaping from behind a closed door. “This doesn’t mean we don’t love each other.” But that’s exactly what it meant. How I was taught by my father that love is conditional, and I repeatedly needed to prove myself through good grades and unquestioning obedience. Forced to stay home to spend time with the family, sitting wordlessly on the couch while he watched TV. Made guilty for wanting to spend time with friends because that somehow meant that I was a bad daughter. It’s funny—I never asked myself if he was a good father. If you look harder at the bedroom, you’ll find journals filled with bitter words, screws from disassembled pencil sharpeners, loose razors, and Aquaphor, food wrappers stuffed in hidden places, a closet brimming with junk and pairs of shoes, evidence of a story untold. Until you.
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51
There is a harsh beauty in mathematics. Under curves and over slopes, Equations rise and fall endlessly In a perfectly measured void. Optimized, rationalized, sterilized; Formulas that never lie, Theorems looming before us Like an archaic God, A golden deity whose Volume is maximized. How I dream of drifting in this flux, Concave up and concave down, Riding the sign of my second derivative For positive and negative, For better and worse. I would not travel alone; With C by my side, Friend, ally, brother, Always paired with my antiderivative, For whenever we journey back Into the past, it is necessary To have a companion to pull us out again In case we are unsure of where we started. Rules and laws Strict organization, control; There is a harsh beauty in mathematics. Order; two plus two is always four. Sines and cosines and theta All dancing in the unit circle of life, A conga line that joins itself To form a mathematical ouroboros. But the harshest of the harsh beauties Presented in this Divine Subject Is that though there is an infinite capacity For positivity and growth, So too is there the possibility of stretching Endlessly towards negativity forever. However, it is much more terrifying To lie in the middle; To be undefined, unknowable, and to add Or subtract to no effect; The most fear inducing, mysterious, and gorgeous number Of zero; nothing yet something, Infinite yet not, The most grand of all contradictions. A hole; a jump; a discontinuity, Easily removed from life and smoothed out If you just apply the formulas. Graphs and coordinates, integers and ordered pairs, Is that not what life is? We live within the grandest equation, Each our own variable, Constantly solving for ourselves With the harsh beauties of mathematics.
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Jun 2, 2013
Jun 2, 2013 at 10:27 PM UTC
Calculus
There is a harsh beauty in mathematics. Under curves and over slopes, Equations rise and fall endlessly In a perfectly measured void. Optimized, rationalized, sterilized; Formulas that never lie, Theorems looming before us Like an archaic God, A golden deity whose Volume is maximized. How I dream of drifting in this flux, Concave up and concave down, Riding the sign of my second derivative For positive and negative, For better and worse. I would not travel alone; With C by my side, Friend, ally, brother, Always paired with my antiderivative, For whenever we journey back Into the past, it is necessary To have a companion to pull us out again In case we are unsure of where we started. Rules and laws Strict organization, control; There is a harsh beauty in mathematics. Order; two plus two is always four. Sines and cosines and theta All dancing in the unit circle of life, A conga line that joins itself To form a mathematical ouroboros. But the harshest of the harsh beauties Presented in this Divine Subject Is that though there is an infinite capacity For positivity and growth, So too is there the possibility of stretching Endlessly towards negativity forever. However, it is much more terrifying To lie in the middle; To be undefined, unknowable, and to add Or subtract to no effect; The most fear inducing, mysterious, and gorgeous number Of zero; nothing yet something, Infinite yet not, The most grand of all contradictions. A hole; a jump; a discontinuity, Easily removed from life and smoothed out If you just apply the formulas. Graphs and coordinates, integers and ordered pairs, Is that not what life is? We live within the grandest equation, Each our own variable, Constantly solving for ourselves With the harsh beauties of mathematics.
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54
Tiny pairs of wings in colours of lavender & mint flutter over rose chiffon, hanging over the curtains of my window Outside, the world settles slowly in the white night. It's most unbearable because I recall that such lovely creatures have no place in this stoic wasteland at all. There is no warm wind to lift their feather-light  wings, nor flowers in which they may sip on delicately Jack Frost would nip at their tiny bodies Father Winter would freeze their wings in motion The cold winter wind would whip their breaths away. A sunrise pattern on the snow, littered with colourful decay. Broken butterflies- frozen; for the world on display I still collect my voice with a tone of surprise, that they continue to flutter by inside next to this bed in which I lay. For without your arms wrapped around my waist the air in here is much the same, As what lies beyond the window pane
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Jan 6, 2014
Jan 6, 2014 at 4:53 PM UTC
White
From the woodlands of Madagascar To the highlands of Ethiopia Dwell nine species of lovebirds. Their genus name is Agapornis, From the Greek agape (love) and ornis (birds). The French call them Les inséperables While affection between compatible pairs Can be a joy to behold, Lovebirds can be quite territorial And will defend their nest. Sexually dimorphic they mate for life. Like all parrots they need to be well Socialized and taken care of. They  are very vocal, making loud High-pitched noises, especially In the early morning time. Stocky little birds With short blunt tails You can hold them In the palms of your hands. They love to snuggle, They love to preen. Happy birds: together.
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Jul 20, 2014
Jul 20, 2014 at 3:38 PM UTC
Les Inséperables
With our extremities entwined two pairs of digits, stroke in kind. One pair, painted. The other, dirt. One of us delicate. The other, dirt. A soft and fragrant anticipation succumbs to an accrid and earthy magnetic like hold. . . Hold. . . Hold. . . Thankyou Sweetheart, you were great. I'm going, are you ******* Poetry by Kaydee.
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Jan 14, 2019
Jan 14, 2019 at 12:25 PM UTC
Thankyou Sweetheart (you were great)
“You’re overweight,” he says, tapping his finger against his chart of heights and measurements, thighs too big and fingers too plump. I already know. I nod, and continue nodding, listening to the word echo and then fall onto the ground, bouncing and bounding, restrictions that have surrounded my whole life, my whole curvy figure. If I could be like the girls with the flesh wrapped tight and the bones loose and caving in on one another, I would grab the chance before it had a chance to flutter away from my desperately aching hands. When I look in the mirror, I try to remind myself that flaws are flaws and yet they were made to be beautiful, but I see what I see and what I see makes me want to ***** makes me want to close my eyes, makes me want to pull and tug and rip until there is nothing left but a pile of rotting decay. I am stuck, I am back on the playground in sixth grade where the boys would taunt and laugh, point and gasp, as I tried to pretend I looked like everyone else, every other small, petite little girl who didn’t have to worry about these types of things. My clothes don’t fit, I’ve gone through seven pairs of jeans in the last month alone, I look back at the pictures when I thought I was fat, but I wasn’t, I was fine then, why did I think that? I lay in bed beside the man I’m supposed to be with, fully clothed and pushing his hands away from my hips, away from my lips, don’t touch me then if you can’t handle all that I have to give. I’m not her, and she never wished to be me.
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Oct 21, 2012
Oct 21, 2012 at 5:19 PM UTC
curvy
“You’re overweight,” he says, tapping his finger against his chart of heights and measurements, thighs too big and fingers too plump. I already know. I nod, and continue nodding, listening to the word echo and then fall onto the ground, bouncing and bounding, restrictions that have surrounded my whole life, my whole curvy figure. If I could be like the girls with the flesh wrapped tight and the bones loose and caving in on one another, I would grab the chance before it had a chance to flutter away from my desperately aching hands. When I look in the mirror, I try to remind myself that flaws are flaws and yet they were made to be beautiful, but I see what I see and what I see makes me want to ***** makes me want to close my eyes, makes me want to pull and tug and rip until there is nothing left but a pile of rotting decay. I am stuck, I am back on the playground in sixth grade where the boys would taunt and laugh, point and gasp, as I tried to pretend I looked like everyone else, every other small, petite little girl who didn’t have to worry about these types of things. My clothes don’t fit, I’ve gone through seven pairs of jeans in the last month alone, I look back at the pictures when I thought I was fat, but I wasn’t, I was fine then, why did I think that? I lay in bed beside the man I’m supposed to be with, fully clothed and pushing his hands away from my hips, away from my lips, don’t touch me then if you can’t handle all that I have to give. I’m not her, and she never wished to be me.
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1
I guess even in pairs, even in love, applies the rule every men on his own!
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May 12, 2014
May 12, 2014 at 5:49 PM UTC
Selfish love
1. Fallow brown, like he's poured his whole soul out through the gold sieve and lies in wait to be replenished. 2. The color of the ocean. Blue, I guess, but that’s not even the half of it. All the ruggedness of the waves—forming up, breaking, and forming again like life is only the motions. Her eyes are blue, but you could hardly tell. 3. A hand-painted bowl of fresh chocolate frosting from which the most immature hands soonest get a mouthful. 4. Beautiful. Like, drop dead gorgeous. I’d dig my own grave and stick to rolling in it if she ever looked at me some type of way. Their color? I don’t know. But most of all, I dare to wonder about the bludgeoned scar between them. 5. Sturdy cobalt. Far more indicative of her steady heart than gold could ever hope to be. Still susceptible to tear, but not so easily warped by heat or stress. 6. Simply brown. No, red? It’s always been hard to tell through the fog. Truthful like the rawest earth, I’ll call her mahogany. 7. Faded blue spray paint over a slate gray wall. Forcibly muted after her years of blasting music, but there’s still that rogue twinkle to them that I pray slips through the cracks. 8. Coffee, with all the vim and vigor to make you click your heels and fall in love. 9. Unripe lime seen lazing in the shade. Not fit for a margarita just yet, but straining at the bit nonetheless. 10. Hazel, although I still don’t know what the **** that actually is. Whatever. It looks nice on her resume. 11. Green. Or were they blue? The memories of her were too wonderful, too important, that I had to let the littlest details fade away first. 12. The crystallized seafoam that made me realize I deserved to feel alive, too.
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Jun 24, 2018
Jun 24, 2018 at 3:09 AM UTC
A dozen pairs of eyes
1. Fallow brown, like he's poured his whole soul out through the gold sieve and lies in wait to be replenished. 2. The color of the ocean. Blue, I guess, but that’s not even the half of it. All the ruggedness of the waves—forming up, breaking, and forming again like life is only the motions. Her eyes are blue, but you could hardly tell. 3. A hand-painted bowl of fresh chocolate frosting from which the most immature hands soonest get a mouthful. 4. Beautiful. Like, drop dead gorgeous. I’d dig my own grave and stick to rolling in it if she ever looked at me some type of way. Their color? I don’t know. But most of all, I dare to wonder about the bludgeoned scar between them. 5. Sturdy cobalt. Far more indicative of her steady heart than gold could ever hope to be. Still susceptible to tear, but not so easily warped by heat or stress. 6. Simply brown. No, red? It’s always been hard to tell through the fog. Truthful like the rawest earth, I’ll call her mahogany. 7. Faded blue spray paint over a slate gray wall. Forcibly muted after her years of blasting music, but there’s still that rogue twinkle to them that I pray slips through the cracks. 8. Coffee, with all the vim and vigor to make you click your heels and fall in love. 9. Unripe lime seen lazing in the shade. Not fit for a margarita just yet, but straining at the bit nonetheless. 10. Hazel, although I still don’t know what the **** that actually is. Whatever. It looks nice on her resume. 11. Green. Or were they blue? The memories of her were too wonderful, too important, that I had to let the littlest details fade away first. 12. The crystallized seafoam that made me realize I deserved to feel alive, too.
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12
he walks alone; faking a smile deep within are pairs of agonies grief, distraught; but still he smiles walking down the pavement, he stops turning around are unfriendly friends they wave at him; camouflaging a smile he looks away and continues He has moved thus far, still no one he hears the birds chipping; the cats crying and water falling the queen of the night's flower arouse him; bringing him to a rush of impulse and pleasure, but still he wanders they have stabbed him twice; his closest pals they set him up; they slander him behind the scene and still rush to.him with cold hands he has decided to stay firm; a man of his own- to walk through the valley alone; A Beautiful Loner.
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Feb 3, 2015
Feb 3, 2015 at 5:59 AM UTC
"Beautiful Loner"
your stars hung in pairs against the accustomed singularity of celestial bodies your stars held the promise of enlightenment and i sought you the way kings did hunting you down in the endeavor of navigation pinned down and ****** until man left the stars for devices of their own and when the stars followed humanity stardust resurrecting in the arrangement of atoms constellations manifesting in wombs nebulae shattering for the genesis the universe destroyed itself for you oh gemini boy the cosmos are not kind to boys who are destined to be halves on an eternal voyage for missing fragments in a lover's touch and a child's laugh the world is not kind to boys who look into your eyes and only see their reflection but you were kind to me oh gemini boy this is an apology to a mortal born from the immortality of twins whose love bore the gods' mercy to rest among the stars not knowing that stars die just as the children born from them do just as you oh gemini boy maybe i should have known better than to love a boy always searching for himself i mistook you for a cosmic collision meant for the dawn of a new heaven and maybe i fell in love with your destruction as i navigated you the way ancients looked to your stars for salvation oh gemini boy my stars hang in the silhouette of the unknown isolated from the promise of deliverance man was once told we are born from different stars our fates moving in parallel precision never meeting again after our stardust once laid prints upon our astral anatomy and because we are not stars but the echoes of seraphic wars meant to traverse desolate lands in search for completion oh gemini boy i forgive you you just wanted to be whole
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Sep 5, 2016
Sep 5, 2016 at 4:19 AM UTC
gemini boy
your stars hung in pairs against the accustomed singularity of celestial bodies your stars held the promise of enlightenment and i sought you the way kings did hunting you down in the endeavor of navigation pinned down and ****** until man left the stars for devices of their own and when the stars followed humanity stardust resurrecting in the arrangement of atoms constellations manifesting in wombs nebulae shattering for the genesis the universe destroyed itself for you oh gemini boy the cosmos are not kind to boys who are destined to be halves on an eternal voyage for missing fragments in a lover's touch and a child's laugh the world is not kind to boys who look into your eyes and only see their reflection but you were kind to me oh gemini boy this is an apology to a mortal born from the immortality of twins whose love bore the gods' mercy to rest among the stars not knowing that stars die just as the children born from them do just as you oh gemini boy maybe i should have known better than to love a boy always searching for himself i mistook you for a cosmic collision meant for the dawn of a new heaven and maybe i fell in love with your destruction as i navigated you the way ancients looked to your stars for salvation oh gemini boy my stars hang in the silhouette of the unknown isolated from the promise of deliverance man was once told we are born from different stars our fates moving in parallel precision never meeting again after our stardust once laid prints upon our astral anatomy and because we are not stars but the echoes of seraphic wars meant to traverse desolate lands in search for completion oh gemini boy i forgive you you just wanted to be whole
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52
For you my dear anew for you all through the year; for you my dear.
0
May 29, 2010
May 29, 2010 at 9:53 PM UTC
Minimal pairs
Alexander of Macedonia this time won’t U-turn from the might Gangaridai. At the bubbling edge in the Indian subcontinent, one would dare, taking his last plunge, believing it here the proverbial Well of Life! Yet Al Khwarizmi will discover the algebra, drawing from ‘nothing,’ purely untouchable: The Zero from the Indian pole. Not a digit, not a number on its own, yet it’s all. Every number jumps up in the zero loophole! Then the whole number bows down into decimals, escalating the hunts of the 1.618 golden ratios. Plough through at your own pace for the uncharted water, for ab-e-hayath. Sip in a drop of elixir in this secured zone. Sylhet is in the core, is written in stone. What do these mean? I too wonder down the line, I was intrigued by the Arab and Indian tectonic plates’ slow dance. Both rolled out, hugging each other Then the Makkan soil lying at the heart of earth gets exposed, with Sylhet’s soil it pairs up! 360 Sufi dynamos, mathematically a perfect circle, find the match giving a perfect heads up laid on the nine yard show the whole box of wax, simply inking the vivo jump on the storylines. What’s under the tectonic-rug at the bottom of the earth? Shush softly, whisper—the heavens might hear it out! Hold on to the least bit, it could be all one wants. The earth, the ocean, all started with a drop of water! Let alone any well, which way did this original matter, the first, primeval drop of water stream down Has this alleyway been exposed here, or in Paradise? Then how can we say we don't have a secret for Paradise?
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Aug 7, 2018
Aug 7, 2018 at 11:26 AM UTC
Alexander the Great own't U-turn
Alexander of Macedonia this time won’t U-turn from the might Gangaridai. At the bubbling edge in the Indian subcontinent, one would dare, taking his last plunge, believing it here the proverbial Well of Life! Yet Al Khwarizmi will discover the algebra, drawing from ‘nothing,’ purely untouchable: The Zero from the Indian pole. Not a digit, not a number on its own, yet it’s all. Every number jumps up in the zero loophole! Then the whole number bows down into decimals, escalating the hunts of the 1.618 golden ratios. Plough through at your own pace for the uncharted water, for ab-e-hayath. Sip in a drop of elixir in this secured zone. Sylhet is in the core, is written in stone. What do these mean? I too wonder down the line, I was intrigued by the Arab and Indian tectonic plates’ slow dance. Both rolled out, hugging each other Then the Makkan soil lying at the heart of earth gets exposed, with Sylhet’s soil it pairs up! 360 Sufi dynamos, mathematically a perfect circle, find the match giving a perfect heads up laid on the nine yard show the whole box of wax, simply inking the vivo jump on the storylines. What’s under the tectonic-rug at the bottom of the earth? Shush softly, whisper—the heavens might hear it out! Hold on to the least bit, it could be all one wants. The earth, the ocean, all started with a drop of water! Let alone any well, which way did this original matter, the first, primeval drop of water stream down Has this alleyway been exposed here, or in Paradise? Then how can we say we don't have a secret for Paradise?
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I Said the Duck to the Kangaroo, 'Good gracious! how you hop! Over the fields and the water too, As if you never would stop! My life is a bore in this nasty pond, And I long to go out in the world beyond! I wish I could hop like you!' Said the duck to the Kangaroo. II 'Please give me a ride on your back!' Said the Duck to the Kangaroo. 'I would sit quite still, and say nothing but "Quack," The whole of the long day through! And we'd go to the Dee, and the Jelly Bo Lee, Over the land and over the sea;-- Please take me a ride! O do!' Said the Duck to the Kangaroo. III Said the Kangaroo to the Duck, 'This requires some little reflection; Perhaps on the whole it might bring me luck, And there seems but one objection, Which is, if you'll let me speak so bold, Your feet are unpleasantly wet and cold, And would probably give me the roo- Matiz!' said the Kangaroo. IV Said the Duck ,'As I sate on the rocks, I have thought over that completely, And I bought four pairs of worsted socks Which fit my web-feet neatly. And to keep out the cold I've bought a cloak, And every day a cigar I'll smoke, All to follow my own dear true Love of a Kangaroo!' V Said the Kangaroo,'I'm ready! All in the moonlight pale; But to balance me well, dear Duck, sit steady! And quite at the end of my tail!' So away they went with a hop and a bound, And they hopped the whole world three times round; And who so happy,--O who, As the duck and the Kangaroo?
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The Duck And The Kangaroo
Night witches own the dark, as they sweep the skies on their knotted broomsticks. They take to flight, in pairs, under waxing or new moons, when the sky is darkest, the stars at their dimmest and gloom the deepest. They steal souls, drink warm blood, gather teeth and fresh, human meat. They drift, smoke-like, with noir-intent, chewing their charcoal treats in that imperfect silence that prickles with all the sounds of the earth: growing plants, creeping insects, rustling leaves, and shivering birds. Although their stygian laughter is frequently mistaken for cat fighting, they are soundless, becoming the shadows that disturb, that draw startled glances from the periphery of vision. In their dark-passing, a mother will check her sleeping children one more time - dogs will whimper and fathers, the hair on their neck standing, will check already-locked windows. Are you meandering out this night - to walk the dog or check the mail? If so, look to the sky. A little decision can be the worst mistake of your life.
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Feb 15, 2022
Feb 15, 2022 at 9:31 AM UTC
the night witches