Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
"sparse" poems
Give me a minute To read the stars Lamenting in their stories Their laboured twinkling far and sparse Give me this moment To stumble and swoon My branches reaching for The faraway moon Give me a while To be one with the universe Hear the colliding planets As they spill their mournful verse Give me some time To plot my rightful place Within my uncharted galaxy And collapsing space...
0
Oct 27, 2014
Oct 27, 2014 at 8:27 AM UTC
Give Me My Space
There's an ancient, ancient garden that I see sometimes in dreams, Where the very Maytime sunlight plays and glows with spectral gleams; Where the gaudy-tinted blossoms seem to wither into grey, And the crumbling walls and pillars waken thoughts of yesterday. There are vines in nooks and crannies, and there's moss about the pool, And the tangled weedy thicket chokes the arbour dark and cool: In the silent sunken pathways springs a herbage sparse and spare, Where the musty scent of dead things dulls the fragrance of the air. There is not a living creature in the lonely space arouna, And the hedge~encompass'd d quiet never echoes to a sound. As I walk, and wait, and listen, I will often seek to find When it was I knew that garden in an age long left behind; I will oft conjure a vision of a day that is no more, As I gaze upon the grey, grey scenes I feel I knew before. Then a sadness settles o'er me, and a tremor seems to start - For I know the flow'rs are shrivell'd hopes - the garden is my heart.
0
14.5k
The Garden
"Back from vacation", the barber announces, or the postman, or the girl at the drugstore, now tan. They are amazed to find the workaday world still in place, their absence having slipped no cogs, their customers having hardly missed them, and there being so sparse an audience to tell of the wonders, the pyramids they have seen, the silken warm seas, the nighttimes of marimbas, the purchases achieved in foreign languages, the beggars, the flies, the hotel luxury, the grandeur of marble cities. But at Customs the humdrum pressed its claims. Gray days clicked shut around them; the yoke still fit, warm as if never shucked. The world is still so small, the evidence says, though their hearts cry, "Not so!"
0
13.4k
Back From Vacation
I see you, monster... In your sockets bore dead, dark eyes They hold the blackest of stares Nebulous swirling pits of demise Thin lips would spout the most sibilant of hisses Every so often would curl into a snarl Dry and chapped, almost unworthy of kisses Large, rough snout, jutting out like a crag You sniff around tirelessly for easy targets Preying on the unsuspecting minds of those under your flag Tapering chin, sprouting strands of coarse hair Unkempt and gritty from your last meal Decaying teeth, crooked due to little to no care Your face is cratered; tales of trying adolescent years Wearing a face only a mother could love Expressionless but it screams out your fears Ugly jointed limbs that grew out of sync Disproportionate, misshapen, grotesque Little noggin with sparse hair, packed within, a brain that thinks I hear you, monster... As you stalk your sleepless nights Nocturnal ambience be your playground Lurking in the dark; places with no light Bulky, heavy feet but deft and silent Can barely notice when you're up and about As if cloaked yourself stealthy, with steps ever transient Respire you do, exhaling breaths so gnarly Ingesting good air, converting into fervid, loathsome notions With which you paint a portrait so ghastly I feel you monster... Deep within the recesses of my heart Destroying and distorting all that was pure Testing my will till I should fall apart You're but the twisted manifestation of conscience Feeding on my trials and nurturing them into vile abominations I despise that of you but I seem to have developed dependence I see you, monster... You're horrid and beastly, an embodiment of absolute horror I await the day that you would finally dissolve For I am weary of seeing you staring back in the mirror
0
Sep 18, 2014
Sep 18, 2014 at 9:23 PM UTC
Monster
I see you, monster... In your sockets bore dead, dark eyes They hold the blackest of stares Nebulous swirling pits of demise Thin lips would spout the most sibilant of hisses Every so often would curl into a snarl Dry and chapped, almost unworthy of kisses Large, rough snout, jutting out like a crag You sniff around tirelessly for easy targets Preying on the unsuspecting minds of those under your flag Tapering chin, sprouting strands of coarse hair Unkempt and gritty from your last meal Decaying teeth, crooked due to little to no care Your face is cratered; tales of trying adolescent years Wearing a face only a mother could love Expressionless but it screams out your fears Ugly jointed limbs that grew out of sync Disproportionate, misshapen, grotesque Little noggin with sparse hair, packed within, a brain that thinks I hear you, monster... As you stalk your sleepless nights Nocturnal ambience be your playground Lurking in the dark; places with no light Bulky, heavy feet but deft and silent Can barely notice when you're up and about As if cloaked yourself stealthy, with steps ever transient Respire you do, exhaling breaths so gnarly Ingesting good air, converting into fervid, loathsome notions With which you paint a portrait so ghastly I feel you monster... Deep within the recesses of my heart Destroying and distorting all that was pure Testing my will till I should fall apart You're but the twisted manifestation of conscience Feeding on my trials and nurturing them into vile abominations I despise that of you but I seem to have developed dependence I see you, monster... You're horrid and beastly, an embodiment of absolute horror I await the day that you would finally dissolve For I am weary of seeing you staring back in the mirror
Continue reading...
40
Hues of violet As the azure meets the reddened sun Sparse deflated clouds Floated quiet as into each other, the colours run Lavender streaks Trail far into the horizon Tracking the sunset As the hour struck seven Purple gladioluses Bowed to the evening sea breeze As if mourning the departure Of the day's warmth with silent pleas The orb finally sank Beyond my sight could reach Disappeared from here But rising over someone else's beach Last dregs of light Slowly swallowed, giving birth to indigo This night would last long Before the first rays of tomorrow...
0
Mar 26, 2015
Mar 26, 2015 at 8:24 AM UTC
Spectrum Violet
Waiting for spring to return this winter’s day. Straining to touch warm breezes of the past. Caught in this prison of gray and white. Wishing to break these dark chains that hold me. Remnants of fall, crumpled like brown paper on the ground. Straws of pale brown growing up through the snow, ******* it dry. Seeds and freeze dried fruit lay scattered about under trees. Bare limbs and stalks drip with liquid glass. Trees hanging bare, gray in lifelessness. Winter birds call out, single in their pursuit of leftover meals. Tracks of animals unknown dot the landscape with patchwork. Waves of ridges etched in white lead off to nowhere. Sparse, sun filled days bring brief glimpses of hope. With the promise of warmth waiting to banish the cold that holds me to my past and this existence; waiting for spring to return and thaw this frozen heart.
0
Aug 20, 2012
Aug 20, 2012 at 9:29 PM UTC
WAITING FOR SPRING
Lie beneath the galaxy in a cathedral silence, Stay up till the moon dives behind the beige mountains. Rest on your beast, let the valves take a break, Treat yourself with a feast, its the only time in your fate. Slithering into my sack I rest under the canvas, How peaceful it is far away from all the ruckus. The monk's prayers bid me with good luck, I'm off riding in the sparse cold desert. I stop with the view of a disputed lake, Miles long the jade blue reflects the golden tops. In refuge at a monastery, fuel is a luxury, I'd give up everything for a piece of this little heaven.
0
Dec 9, 2014
Dec 9, 2014 at 8:19 AM UTC
Ladakh
The whole concept of adulthood is one that seems to trespass from the ever-anticipated world of the theoretical, just to barge into your life one night like an uninvited drunken friend. It will never really “hit you,” but it’ll come **** close the first time your aunt offers you a glass of wine as she and your mother gossip frankly about your father’s mistress— you sip on cheap Chardonnay and pretend to be used to the taste, as they talk with a middle-aged bitterness of the man you were raised to believe was too virtuous to be in debt for some glitzy engagement ring that he bought to restart his life with a woman he left your mother for shortly after the pandemonium of a guiltless affair. The man whose brutishness you were told to overlook, cradling the sparse memories of when he’d tuck you too tightly into bed, or when he’d tell you that he loved you even though half the time you really didn’t believe him— The man whose love confused you, whose clumsy attempts of fatherhood kept the heart of a young girl perpetually guarded by a cautious skepticism— The man who brought you into a world he found absurd as carelessly as he raised you to face it, torn apart like every illusion that makes a child, the ashes of which that slip through your fingers inevitably declare you another bitter adult. More wine will reveal that your beloved father is a controlling ****** and his relationship with that ***** the whole family hates only appears to be functioning because she lets him have all the control he couldn’t exert on your mother, even though you’ve had dinner with the two of them a couple of times and if you had met her under any other circumstance (though you’d feel like a traitor if you said it aloud) you wouldn’t think she was all that bad. In red, declarative letters I want to write to any children I may ever bear into this bittersweet game of ******** we play that we’ve since called ‘life,’ that when they first gaze with awe at the unattainable grace with which every grown-up seems to navigate the world they created, with all the pain of tax-paying and womanhood, I want to scream that we don’t know what the hell we’re doing either and if at any point I try to convince you otherwise you should tell your mother that she’s full of ****
0
Nov 12, 2013
Nov 12, 2013 at 3:25 PM UTC
"Adulthood" (revised)
The whole concept of adulthood is one that seems to trespass from the ever-anticipated world of the theoretical, just to barge into your life one night like an uninvited drunken friend. It will never really “hit you,” but it’ll come **** close the first time your aunt offers you a glass of wine as she and your mother gossip frankly about your father’s mistress— you sip on cheap Chardonnay and pretend to be used to the taste, as they talk with a middle-aged bitterness of the man you were raised to believe was too virtuous to be in debt for some glitzy engagement ring that he bought to restart his life with a woman he left your mother for shortly after the pandemonium of a guiltless affair. The man whose brutishness you were told to overlook, cradling the sparse memories of when he’d tuck you too tightly into bed, or when he’d tell you that he loved you even though half the time you really didn’t believe him— The man whose love confused you, whose clumsy attempts of fatherhood kept the heart of a young girl perpetually guarded by a cautious skepticism— The man who brought you into a world he found absurd as carelessly as he raised you to face it, torn apart like every illusion that makes a child, the ashes of which that slip through your fingers inevitably declare you another bitter adult. More wine will reveal that your beloved father is a controlling ****** and his relationship with that ***** the whole family hates only appears to be functioning because she lets him have all the control he couldn’t exert on your mother, even though you’ve had dinner with the two of them a couple of times and if you had met her under any other circumstance (though you’d feel like a traitor if you said it aloud) you wouldn’t think she was all that bad. In red, declarative letters I want to write to any children I may ever bear into this bittersweet game of ******** we play that we’ve since called ‘life,’ that when they first gaze with awe at the unattainable grace with which every grown-up seems to navigate the world they created, with all the pain of tax-paying and womanhood, I want to scream that we don’t know what the hell we’re doing either and if at any point I try to convince you otherwise you should tell your mother that she’s full of ****
Continue reading...
85
The cave opens it's great crumbling maw, streaks of light fall on the sparse green blades, which dot the floor, mushrooms push forth from the ground, like fingers reaching to air, the gurgling of a stream, dances along a riverbed path, paradise enclosed, by earthen walls and canopy, the glen lit by diffused and dappled sun.
0
Apr 16, 2015
Apr 16, 2015 at 10:13 AM UTC
Valley in the Cave
Big ships, small ships, yachts and dingeys Floating across the mighty sea Carving their way, displacing their weight To keep afloat the Captain and First mate. Old ships, new ships, schooners and cruise liners Have crossed paths throughout the ages old Once to explore, make claim, pirate and fight Now to wine and dine on a luxurious bite Salted beef, rock hard bread and weevil-friendly biscuits A 3 course meal fit for Old Salts alike Weevils & worms and bugs of all kind Along with sparse portions of meat, you might find French wine, filet mignon, sushi and pastries Buffets and fine dining, variety is key All you can eat, whenever you'd like No chores, no work, just eating all night' What a contrast exists between these two worlds Only 2 to 300 hundred years apart Once grimy, risky, arduous and fraught Now fancy, lazy, and much to be bought What if the Old Salts could teleport to today And live aboard our floating hotels? With no masts to climb or sheets to tend Would they break or would they bend? I suppose that switch would be easy enough But send us back to Pirate-ridden waters You'd be sure never to hear from us again Swabbing the deck would **** us alone Not to mention the food and disease of back when. - BPW  Dec. 11, 2013
0
May 15, 2014
May 15, 2014 at 4:29 PM UTC
The Old Salt's Strength, a Tribute
Empty skies embrace Sparse cloud formations The blues fade and overlapped hues Sparkles crested in fickle delight Lazy outstretched yawns of natural light Sun’s glare glazed under Moon’s appearance Embossed against the translucence of blue space Everything up there is calm today No rush or race or interference Gentle indifference drifts to the West. Staying dry for us The beautiful simplicity of being Sky. Stop and look around. Cyclists trickle on painted pathways Student groups pontificate about life and the lecture they should all be at, Lunchtime sprawls and ********** never ending spurts of schoolchildren delirious for sausage rolls and E numbers. Everyone in a rush to be someone Going somewhere with purpose, and yet, Be indifferent to each other. The bland complexity of being modern People.
0
Nov 10, 2012
Nov 10, 2012 at 12:53 PM UTC
Sky / People
From the time I fell for you, I knew to me you meant something more, Like your every little thing I've come to adore, By my side, you are a strength I lack alone, Having known your grace, Without you is all but an existence. Of late I realise I tend to live in an illusion, Like how I put you on a pedestal, When all you wanted was to be by my side, I regret to think I was wrong about being right, I do keep hurting you, don't I? This sparse acknowledgement you make of my existence, Will always remind me to look before I fall again.
0
Nov 23, 2012
Nov 23, 2012 at 12:13 PM UTC
Estranged
After a great while the paper elephants march In their sparse herd they lumber along One by one, their thick legs slam into the earth Like pennies on a timpani Leaving slight imprints in the dust No one is quite sure where they come from All we know is they just are there Some raise their children before witnessing the elephants A lucky few will even see them a second time at the end of their lives It is not uncommon for generations to pass without the paper elephants Sometime the periods between their journeys are so long the elephants are dissolved into folktale The paper elephants are bestowed an almost supernatural quality The stories are birthed in secrecy between the lights of candles In the ears of the men in the corner From the hushed lips whispered in acquiescence. Every story is different Every story has the same ending Every story has the same moral You do not touch the paper elephants Perhaps the stories have some truth If anyone knows the validity they have been dead for quite some time No matter, man’s superstitious nature will see to the protection of the elephants The paper elephants are called “paper elephants” because it describes them quite nicely From a distance they look just like normal elephants Lumbering over from side to side But their skin is like paper Their essence is like paper They travel together Even the old and young When it rains the young hide under the larger elephants Lest they get wet and melt into the earth It is not uncommon to find the soaked remains of an elder elephant Crumpled by a sad consequence It always serves as a reminder The old exist to protect the young Most likely the elephants can be found roaming through our graveyards Here their pace noticeably slows down Often enough, they can be found sitting next to a tombstone Resting their trunks over the epitaphs Strange things happen when the elephants are in the graveyards Sometimes laughter can be heard Sometimes sobbing As the elephants rest the blue mist rises from the graves The blue is the most reassuring shade The misty fog rises and fills the entire yard Until it is absorbed by the paper elephants With a long sigh the elephants continue their journey After many such stops The elephants arrive at the tree Gnarled and ancient, it welcomes the elephants with silence As it has for years and years past It is here the elephants have yearned to arrive Under the knobs and strikes of its branches They bend the knee The young watch to learn The adults look up to the sky And release all that they carry The hopes, dream, and memories of those long gone Ascend to the heavens The paper elephants collapse exhausted but content And look upon their children one last time They weep before leaving this world Not for their children’s sorrow But because there are no paper elephants to carry them to the next world
0
Jan 16, 2012
Jan 16, 2012 at 3:37 AM UTC
The Paper Elephants
After a great while the paper elephants march In their sparse herd they lumber along One by one, their thick legs slam into the earth Like pennies on a timpani Leaving slight imprints in the dust No one is quite sure where they come from All we know is they just are there Some raise their children before witnessing the elephants A lucky few will even see them a second time at the end of their lives It is not uncommon for generations to pass without the paper elephants Sometime the periods between their journeys are so long the elephants are dissolved into folktale The paper elephants are bestowed an almost supernatural quality The stories are birthed in secrecy between the lights of candles In the ears of the men in the corner From the hushed lips whispered in acquiescence. Every story is different Every story has the same ending Every story has the same moral You do not touch the paper elephants Perhaps the stories have some truth If anyone knows the validity they have been dead for quite some time No matter, man’s superstitious nature will see to the protection of the elephants The paper elephants are called “paper elephants” because it describes them quite nicely From a distance they look just like normal elephants Lumbering over from side to side But their skin is like paper Their essence is like paper They travel together Even the old and young When it rains the young hide under the larger elephants Lest they get wet and melt into the earth It is not uncommon to find the soaked remains of an elder elephant Crumpled by a sad consequence It always serves as a reminder The old exist to protect the young Most likely the elephants can be found roaming through our graveyards Here their pace noticeably slows down Often enough, they can be found sitting next to a tombstone Resting their trunks over the epitaphs Strange things happen when the elephants are in the graveyards Sometimes laughter can be heard Sometimes sobbing As the elephants rest the blue mist rises from the graves The blue is the most reassuring shade The misty fog rises and fills the entire yard Until it is absorbed by the paper elephants With a long sigh the elephants continue their journey After many such stops The elephants arrive at the tree Gnarled and ancient, it welcomes the elephants with silence As it has for years and years past It is here the elephants have yearned to arrive Under the knobs and strikes of its branches They bend the knee The young watch to learn The adults look up to the sky And release all that they carry The hopes, dream, and memories of those long gone Ascend to the heavens The paper elephants collapse exhausted but content And look upon their children one last time They weep before leaving this world Not for their children’s sorrow But because there are no paper elephants to carry them to the next world
Continue reading...
64
Dear Arjana, Isis told me that you left your paradise for love in disguise  Camouflage love  Erroneous love  Inaccurate love  Artificial love  Mimic love  Man-made love  ... Substitute love ... I can't trust the "fact" that you wanna desert me only to hydrate a man who's life is so sparse with affection  Can't you tell by how devoid his life is of women?  He can't storm into your life and bring forth lush  He can't be your sunshine and make you feel tropic  He can't have you sprung and spring you out of your glacial phase  ...Smh  Bottom line Arjana babe  Is that he cannot draw the line between your north and south poles where it's typically warm when I'm around and rock your equator wild as a 200 miles per hour cyclone Lol!!! ... He just can't  And I could  So why do you even give G-Gwa-Gwala a chance?  However you say his name!  You need to come back home to your paradise  Before you end up a dystopian  Please reply =-| Sincerely Masika "Zola" Oluchi
0
Jul 19, 2013
Jul 19, 2013 at 4:55 AM UTC
Letter to Promise Land
The whole concept of adulthood is one that seems to trespass from the ever-anticipated world of the theoretical, just to barge into your life one night like an uninvited drunken friend. It will never really “hit you,” but it’ll come **** close the first time your aunt offers you a glass of wine as she and your mother gossip frankly about your father’s mistress— you sip on cheap Chardonnay and pretend to be used to the taste, as they talk of the man you were raised to believe was too virtuous to be in debt for some glitzy engagement ring that he bought to restart his life with a woman he left your mother for shortly after the pandemonium of a guiltless affair. The man whose brutishness you were told to overlook, cradling the sparse memories of when he’d tuck you too tightly into bed, or when he’d tell you that he loved you even though half the time you really didn’t believe him. The man who brought you into the world as carelessly as he raised you to face it, torn apart like every illusion that makes a child, the ashes of which that slip through your fingers inevitably declare you another bitter adult. More wine will reveal that your beloved father is a controlling ****** and his relationship with that ***** the whole family hates only appears to be functioning because she lets him have all the control he couldn’t exert on your mother, even though you’ve had dinner with them a couple of times and if you had met her under any other circumstance (even though you’d feel like a traitor if you said it aloud) you wouldn’t think she was all that bad. In red, declarative letters I want to write to any children I may ever bring into this ******** little game that goes by the name of “life,” that when they first gaze with awe at the unattainable grace with which every grown-up seems to be navigating the world they created, with all the pain of tax-paying and womanhood, I want to scream that we don’t know what the hell we’re doing either and if at any point I try to convince you otherwise you should tell your mother that she’s full of ****
0
Aug 17, 2013
Aug 17, 2013 at 6:21 PM UTC
"Welcome to Adulthood"
The whole concept of adulthood is one that seems to trespass from the ever-anticipated world of the theoretical, just to barge into your life one night like an uninvited drunken friend. It will never really “hit you,” but it’ll come **** close the first time your aunt offers you a glass of wine as she and your mother gossip frankly about your father’s mistress— you sip on cheap Chardonnay and pretend to be used to the taste, as they talk of the man you were raised to believe was too virtuous to be in debt for some glitzy engagement ring that he bought to restart his life with a woman he left your mother for shortly after the pandemonium of a guiltless affair. The man whose brutishness you were told to overlook, cradling the sparse memories of when he’d tuck you too tightly into bed, or when he’d tell you that he loved you even though half the time you really didn’t believe him. The man who brought you into the world as carelessly as he raised you to face it, torn apart like every illusion that makes a child, the ashes of which that slip through your fingers inevitably declare you another bitter adult. More wine will reveal that your beloved father is a controlling ****** and his relationship with that ***** the whole family hates only appears to be functioning because she lets him have all the control he couldn’t exert on your mother, even though you’ve had dinner with them a couple of times and if you had met her under any other circumstance (even though you’d feel like a traitor if you said it aloud) you wouldn’t think she was all that bad. In red, declarative letters I want to write to any children I may ever bring into this ******** little game that goes by the name of “life,” that when they first gaze with awe at the unattainable grace with which every grown-up seems to be navigating the world they created, with all the pain of tax-paying and womanhood, I want to scream that we don’t know what the hell we’re doing either and if at any point I try to convince you otherwise you should tell your mother that she’s full of ****
Continue reading...
78
every morning i walk my terrier through a winding half-mile, but i think he’s the one walking me: he’s always in a sprightly haste. i don’t know how many tail wags i miss in between slow, drowsy blinks. elsewhere, the earth is walking her moon, both zipping around their own usual orbit. in the city, the suited adults manoeuvre sidewalks, dispensing brief greetings, sparse on chatter. punctuality is a battle through suitcase-wielding phalanxes. overlooking the bustling crossroads, a greyed man sits, ****** from cigar compounding existing inertia. limbs in inactivity, mind far from monotony, slowly drifting towards a familiar wraith in a different hurry: the one for reunion. i think about us and wish the same.
0
Jun 23, 2013
Jun 23, 2013 at 2:16 AM UTC
hurry
Arriving in Japan the clouds were Sparse and peaceful, all resting on the invisible flat barrier that divides earthy from divine, The sun set in a deep orange glow, changing the white peaceful clouds to powerful black shadows, Behind the vista of Tokyo city lay a pristine, lone peak, one that evokes a specific wonder in the simple form of Triangle
0
Jan 20, 2015
Jan 20, 2015 at 8:05 PM UTC
Arriving in Japan
The gloo, gullet, bottle Of the bubbling sea With its waves and the wind spreading out. The sea - its sparse immensity, Which rounds the headland heading home, And hungry - my body, Which slips into its liquid cool, With a twisting, turning, arc 'n curve, As i go under, Where the white-fibred shadows Of the cerebral dance of sunlight Flit the sandy floor, Where i scrape the barrel of the ocean's bones, The grit and gravel, Then the bursting lungs Falling out on the evening air, In love, With the silent walker's seashore path, The trailing dog, and the city lights.
0
Apr 6, 2016
Apr 6, 2016 at 4:53 AM UTC
Sunset Swimming
This is the time lean woods shall spend A steeped-up twilight, and the pale evening drink, And the perilous roe, the leaper to the west brink, Trembling and bright to the caverned cloud descend. Now shall you see pent oak gone gusty and frantic, Stooped with dry weeping, ruinously unloosing The sparse disheveled leaf, or reared and tossing A dreary scarecrow bough in funeral antic. Then, tatter you and rend, Oak heart, to your profession mourning; not obscure The outcome, not crepuscular; on the deep floor Sable and gold match lustres and contend. And rags of shrouding will not muffle the slain. This is the immortal extinction, the priceless wound Not to be staunched. The live gold leaks beyond, And matter’s sanctified, dipped in a gold stain.
0
3.3k
Sundown
Who can tell? Whether malice has its own purity? If odor has its own fragrant smell? Does right wrong right Or wrong right wrong? Could darkness have its own light? What do you know? Guilt might have its own innocence For all you know Humility and modesty Could just be a show This is how life is You either laugh hard Or you cry in pain You love too much Or you die in vain If you don’t make someone smile You end up being a bore If you dress up too guile You are tagged a ***** You may be very pretty but deceitful in act You may be called ugly but are beautiful in fact In sadness you’re creative In happiness well that is tentative and yet sans it too you may appear narrative If you know too much you realize how less you knew If you are too ignorant you realize that all lies are just few Humor shames trivialities Irony is the truth about absurdities We scorn at all harsh realities So we smile at its mockeries Could love really be true? And hatred absolutely false? Is sadness a gloom Covered in joy so sparse like a dull audience forced in its applause? Without a doubt A truth has a lie hidden Simply because The mirror isn’t clear It hides many flaws and your aesthetic sin deep within If you counted the seconds and minutes and the hours Will you still be wasting time? Or would you still have to make an orange juice out of a dainty lime? What’s rhetoric if a question has an answer if silence it’s own message and guns and bullets its own power? What’s the point If you’re devising a plan for your future to become a big man And you still say that you don’t know what might happen tomorrow That it all looks bleak and dark And you sit there not working hard you crib and worry and fake a smile to everyone you appear as blithe as a lark We dwell with glee In a world where two extremes meet Order deals with its chaos And chaos struggles for order Everyone fights for the latter And to straighten an imbalanced balance and dispel a dulcet clatter.
0
Aug 15, 2018
Aug 15, 2018 at 6:26 AM UTC
Nebulous.
Who can tell? Whether malice has its own purity? If odor has its own fragrant smell? Does right wrong right Or wrong right wrong? Could darkness have its own light? What do you know? Guilt might have its own innocence For all you know Humility and modesty Could just be a show This is how life is You either laugh hard Or you cry in pain You love too much Or you die in vain If you don’t make someone smile You end up being a bore If you dress up too guile You are tagged a ***** You may be very pretty but deceitful in act You may be called ugly but are beautiful in fact In sadness you’re creative In happiness well that is tentative and yet sans it too you may appear narrative If you know too much you realize how less you knew If you are too ignorant you realize that all lies are just few Humor shames trivialities Irony is the truth about absurdities We scorn at all harsh realities So we smile at its mockeries Could love really be true? And hatred absolutely false? Is sadness a gloom Covered in joy so sparse like a dull audience forced in its applause? Without a doubt A truth has a lie hidden Simply because The mirror isn’t clear It hides many flaws and your aesthetic sin deep within If you counted the seconds and minutes and the hours Will you still be wasting time? Or would you still have to make an orange juice out of a dainty lime? What’s rhetoric if a question has an answer if silence it’s own message and guns and bullets its own power? What’s the point If you’re devising a plan for your future to become a big man And you still say that you don’t know what might happen tomorrow That it all looks bleak and dark And you sit there not working hard you crib and worry and fake a smile to everyone you appear as blithe as a lark We dwell with glee In a world where two extremes meet Order deals with its chaos And chaos struggles for order Everyone fights for the latter And to straighten an imbalanced balance and dispel a dulcet clatter.
Continue reading...
87
From a young age, I always felt stifled I wasn’t allowed to be me so I was muffled Mother insisted at my school I be held back in first grade Principal said no, she insisted and in her hands he played She said I'd be better off ******** because someone could do something with me then Because the way I was, I was unable to learn, refused directions again and again Mother said I came from a loving caring family that I treated terrible I just don't know how to appreciate, and made others lives unbearable. Being me was really not acceptable So I always felt quite skeptical Everything I did, wanted to do, said or liked Was considered bad, wrong, sinful and disliked My having fun was not allowed For I’d embarrass them in a crowd I never knew what I was allowed to do Because of that I never really had a clue Never knowing what to do, say or how to act Since all my actions against me were attacked My mother said one thing to me and did another I knew she favored others over me so why did I bother? My entire life has been quite a farce Attention I wanted from her were sparse Always pretending to be such an outstanding mother To impress the friends and family she shouldn’t bother Mother said I couldn't work because I can’t get along with anybody Making me dependent on her in every way, she said I was shoddy. While mother was pretending to me that she really loved me She was going around bashing me to any family she’d see I’d complain that other family members treated me bad She said all you  do is cause trouble and make me mad If you could just grow up and learn to behave Then everyone would be nice and about you rave I trusted my mother when she said I was born bad, told her I  see She asked the doctor for help but said nothing was wrong with me. Mother spoke with fork tongue;  sold me out, lied to me constantly Leaving me to wonder how to survive without her cautiously I'm afraid to have fun, I'm always afraid someone will be cranky When I did things I'd pay for it because mom would be very angry Afraid to be me, don't know how to act, who I am, or what to do. Today I feel the same and for that reason I will always be blue At the age of almost 60 I'm finding out things were never my fault I'd like to take all those bad feelings, and lock them in a vault Copyright 2017 All rights reserved
0
Sep 12, 2017
Sep 12, 2017 at 8:40 PM UTC
Stolen Identity
From a young age, I always felt stifled I wasn’t allowed to be me so I was muffled Mother insisted at my school I be held back in first grade Principal said no, she insisted and in her hands he played She said I'd be better off ******** because someone could do something with me then Because the way I was, I was unable to learn, refused directions again and again Mother said I came from a loving caring family that I treated terrible I just don't know how to appreciate, and made others lives unbearable. Being me was really not acceptable So I always felt quite skeptical Everything I did, wanted to do, said or liked Was considered bad, wrong, sinful and disliked My having fun was not allowed For I’d embarrass them in a crowd I never knew what I was allowed to do Because of that I never really had a clue Never knowing what to do, say or how to act Since all my actions against me were attacked My mother said one thing to me and did another I knew she favored others over me so why did I bother? My entire life has been quite a farce Attention I wanted from her were sparse Always pretending to be such an outstanding mother To impress the friends and family she shouldn’t bother Mother said I couldn't work because I can’t get along with anybody Making me dependent on her in every way, she said I was shoddy. While mother was pretending to me that she really loved me She was going around bashing me to any family she’d see I’d complain that other family members treated me bad She said all you  do is cause trouble and make me mad If you could just grow up and learn to behave Then everyone would be nice and about you rave I trusted my mother when she said I was born bad, told her I  see She asked the doctor for help but said nothing was wrong with me. Mother spoke with fork tongue;  sold me out, lied to me constantly Leaving me to wonder how to survive without her cautiously I'm afraid to have fun, I'm always afraid someone will be cranky When I did things I'd pay for it because mom would be very angry Afraid to be me, don't know how to act, who I am, or what to do. Today I feel the same and for that reason I will always be blue At the age of almost 60 I'm finding out things were never my fault I'd like to take all those bad feelings, and lock them in a vault Copyright 2017 All rights reserved
Continue reading...
44
Love is for the poor, and money for the rich but wisdom is reserved for those who caught the itch of curiosity for the fact that they exist. Those sparse few who dare to put their faith into people but expect not to see the eyes of god inside of another man’s cathedral. Knowing well that these lies and laws could never guide us past the flaws of good and evil. Only believe in the dreamer who refuses the role of a follower and shuns the idea of a leader. Be not deceived by status or acclaim because it only makes you a disciple of a product and a name. Hold in high regard the tired hikers born to the depths of the deepest valleys and yet they rise before the light of dawn like a striker to set ablaze the malaise of these pedestrian days that mock our souls with monotonous toil. This life is but an eternal recurrence therefore every morn we are born anew and that potential is a shot at transference into something more eminent than you. Become the bridge my friend because there is no future in being an end.
0
Oct 28, 2013
Oct 28, 2013 at 2:11 PM UTC
Wisdom is Reserved
seeds lie barren on the hardpan of a soul craving seek absolution on scarred knees search for bliss in the brief bloom after sparse rain believe these offerings are not in vain seeds lie dormant awaiting grace
0
Jul 28, 2016
Jul 28, 2016 at 10:57 AM UTC
The Water
There once was a girl Who gave herself a name Different to her own And dyed her brown hair Blonde And said it was her natural colour. She lived in a flat Far away from home And though she paid the rent On the first day Of every month She never felt it was her own. There was a forest Near the home that wasn't hers Sprawled across a valley Though she never said it And rarely thought it She longed to get lost in it someday. But she didn't She got lost in nine to five She was a waitress Earned the most from tips From men who liked her attitude And her long blonde hair. Lovers were sparse But never unpleasant And she thought about revealing Something more Than the superficial But always changed her mind in the morning. And she never had regrets Even when a yellow cab With a sleeping driver Sent her up into the air And she took one last look At the unfamiliar sky above her. And though a few people From the town she never lived in Said it was a tragedy It was maybe for the best Because her dark roots Had just begun to show.
0
Jan 21, 2013
Jan 21, 2013 at 1:18 PM UTC
The Blonde Girl
To the melody of "Sheng Sheng Man" I pine and peak And questless seek Groping and moping to linger and languish Anon to wander and wonder, glare, stare and start Flesh chill'd Ghost thrilled With grim dart And keen canker of rankling anguish. Sudden a gleam Of fair weather felt But fled as fast -- and the ice-cold season stays. How hard to have these days In rest or respite, peace or truce. Sip upon sip of tasteless wine Is of slight use To counter or quell The fierce lash of the evening blast. The wild geese -- see -- Fly overhead Ah, there's the grief That's chief -- grief beyond bearing, Wild fowl far faring In days of old you sped Bearing my true love's tender thoughts to me. Lo, how my lawn is rife with golden blooms Of bunched chrysanthemums -- Weary their heads they bow. Who cares to pluck them now? While I the casement keep Lone, waiting, waiting for night And, as the shades fall Upon broad leaves, sparse rain-drops drip. Ah, such a plight Of grief -- grief unbearable, unthinkable.
0
2.7k
Sorrow