I hope you guys all enjoy this thread of poetry The Coldflower Quest Sometimes I'm afraid I'll forget everything. I try to remember, but all I can seem to think about right now, are my bare feet on the cold linoleum. I guess I remember standing in the cold floral section at Jewel. I saw a woman buying flowers and I thought "Who's sick?" but her housedress didn't tell me. She didn't ask me who was sick either. And I guess I remember cutting a soggy path from the shoulder of the road, through the ditch, across the lawn, a patch of snow, to the white screen door, gripping the flowers like a torch that was cold. I think I remeber, but I might be making this up, that no one was sick and you liked the flowers. Your hair was long and reflected lamplight. I said, "I tried to find masculine flowers." You laughed and it was okay I know I left too early and the screen door banged behind me. My car was bright compared to your low-light home, but it was cold.
Back or white Give me some hue, honey I can tell you over coffee The story of someone Who flew too close to the sun: Give me another two teaspoonfuls of sugar Minimal cream What can I say But that I can feel it swaying Underneath me Can't fight a believer Facetious conversations Leads you nowhere Under god and man In space and time Just like heaven sense I am one of the dying Give me one more sip I'll get the tip If you pay me through The gates
It's half-past two It has always been half-past two As much as i will it, As much as i want it, The clock hands seem to have resigned themselves; They are eternally content to lie still, To hesitate unendingly between two numerals. I can hear cats prowling on wooden floors, I can hear the tiniest noise of leaves moving, And the sign of the owl that sways on the tree limb, Night after Night, Outside the darkened window. A floorboard creaks, The wind rushes, And some poor mouse is snatched up, Living just long enough to sense flight, A curious, light sensation, Lending to it a sense of limitlessness, Of power beyond imagination. For a moment, The mouse is the keeper of all the world, It gives meaning and hope, It inspires peace and health and happiness. Then reality returns to the world, To me, the mouse, and the owl. And in the twilight hour the sounds come of quickly crushing bones. Still awake, I resign myself to wait. A dim glow lies across the bed, Moonlight evading the window shade. Only three more hours, Just a little while longer, And then the sun will rise, To replace the cool glow with its warmth. Only three more sleepless hours until the dark recedes While the clock still reads Just half-past two.
I keep expecting to run into myself walking up my December driveway; another cold girl in a gray coat bound for my exact opposite destination- opposite-me, if you will. Only this time we will not brush similar shoulders unnoticing as she heads for the mailbox and I the garage. This time we will look at each other and see our simplest selves: Stick girls in gray coats with line-and-got faces, dimple-less on the icy asphalt. Maybe we will go inside and have stick-girl tea, unrestrained by the stupidity of flesh, or the incongruity of separate minds. When the conversation thins and we share stick-silence, we will both nod and place our tea cups in the sink. Then i will descend the stairs into the basement to look for cross-countryu skis and fate will draw her up into the attic like a kite and she will stand, shin-deep in insulatin with the vague but presistent urge to search for something she can no longer remeber.
The house was old the toilet downstairs gurgled and the steep stairs creaked She showed us around Bringing her scent-Beer and womens shampoo- into each of the dimly lit rooms The fireworks outside were loud and the lake was like an old mirror reflecting sudden flashes of light but too dusty to show detail like the smoked that seeped into the night the mountians in the distance reflected the noise growling softly in the distance and our faces reflected color sunburned cheeks turned blue green and orange I sat on the hill, skirt tucked around my knees, scratching mosquito bites and listening to the sky
I loved what i saw when you cracked wide open and your babyblue exterior lay in a crumpled heap on the scratched wood floor I saw you scared and lonley saw the Indian-brown of your chest color burned into you by the sun of eightteen summers it was hot to my fingers and smooth you cried into your hands covered your face with the deep green quilt I held you as you burned Indian brown blood shook with the force of your tears
8/9 of the way to Colorado, we stopped at a fruit stand where they sold produce and tie-dyed t-shirts. The fruit sat in white cardboard boxes smudged with dirt. It was hot The mountains on the horizon looked smudged too. The woman running the register didn't speak English very well. She had purple acne scars in the hollows of her cheeks. She looked about 8/9 of the way through her pregnancy. I bought cherries and a tie-dyed shirt, then put my change in a jar marked "por Roberta y baby gracias" It was 8/9 of the way empty
She cries raindrops, with hints of laughter. Scotch tape holding together the pieces of her insanity not yet gone. She doesn't wake up to smell the coffee, but lies in bed dreaming about it. Insane tactics as her paper doll world comes crashing down. Lightheaded visions of vintage days As the broken film plays non-stop in her mind.
On a tan stained matted down carpet Sits a box Poorly managed form years of wear and tear The now discolored red box Overflowing with memories of you sits untouched I stand hovering over the box lost in thought I reach deep in my torn jean pocket And pull out a pack of Oasis resturant matches I effortlessly strike one against the old red box And clumsily drop it in the abyss of now past keepsakes
Every Friday, a woman in search, Out of depression, born from endless loneliness, Opens herself up, To find that one that will occupy this night. He is found, the search is over. Now the game begins. It's not a game really, They both know how this game ends. He gives her roses, She notices the one wilting, Dying, As the exchange is made. The day is fading around them, This one beautiful sun, Having made its trek across the unique sky, Rests eternal beyond the horizon. Dinner is bought, flirtious glances fly wild, Sent and received endlessly by both male and female. In the care, the decision is made, The drive home leads to the point of no return, And the line that never should have been crossed, Is passed over without a thought. Voices arise from the ground Screaming at her "Stop, don't do it!" But they can't be heard, The mouths that utter those words Are six feet under. Forever silenced by losing the game, The man and woman are playing now. They head for the bedroom, tonight's game is over. The dice are rolled Chance is left to be tonight's master She hopes he doesn't have it. Who knows? She sure doesn't. It's over he puts on his shoes. She adjusts her make-up, And fixes her bangs, Always out of place. This deed done, They both lost more than they could ever imagine. When the girl looks back at the bed, She remembers what happened there. One more tongue has been silenced on that bed, And that tongue is her own.
i love these poems.....i tell ppl to be more original....but i think you are the most original writer.....ur poems are great, keep writin
Interesting stuff, but I wish you would have worked a bit more on the format of some of your stuff. Meaning make it more easily readible with breaks here and there.
Thanks louray....i don't think poetry has many rules because its a form of expression..I like to write about things people wouldn't normally write about...i like begin orginal..and fresh Kittenx...thanks for posting feedback...but i'm not sure if i understand exactly what your saying?...i'm new on hipforums..and if your talkin about all my poems looking the same its because i'm having some trouble useing the formating tools when posting....I'm used to my poetry in notebooks...never really put them onto a computer...so formating is all fucked up....sorry there is no varity...but in reality there is...
I woke up this morning in a Hilton Hotel in Springfield the smell of hotel jarred me awake and I was surrounded by the coldness of those blank, dry sheets these sheets that had known so many bodies tasted their skin slightly nightly only to be whisked away by hurrying hands robbed, bleached of any memory of the fingers and toes and legs and backs they'd known and I was just the next body they'd never remember That they'd never know to miss I felt that blank would enguld me if I didn't get up that instant, that somehow that sanitary soul I had let lie on my skin would wiggle its way into my pores So i jumped up and ran to the window away from that nothingness vacuum pulled back the curtian and stoff in front of the window in my underwear let the sun sock me in the eyes I forced my eyes open to look my attacker in the face and saw that beat up blea jean town feet up boots off unscrupulously sprawled out over the vast flat expanse of lands green sitting out on a Midwest front porch smoking a cigarette exhalations making overcast swirls across the sky I pressed my skin to the warming glass squinting, staring at the big brown body of the world that lay before me wanting to know every bone in that body, to taste the blood pumping through her veins but brought to my knees by the leisurely splendor of it all And I wanted it to see me exposed in my morning glory wanted that sun to burn away the film the sanitary abyss the hotel bed had left on my skin I felt the morning pour herself into like a pitcher of fresh squeezed orange juice into a thirsty glass I leaned forward and kissed the window leaving a faint twinge of morning breath and orange pulp on the window pane And I knew down to the marrow of the bones in my toes that this sun-kissed morning was the beginning of a new sort of day
I lie in bed Across the room from my grandmother Who's breathing, wheezy, into the stillness That feels heavy, pressing my body into my mattress I lie knowing that she's awake Because she's stirring Getting up and getting grandmother things Like tissues and nasal spray But I don't talk to her Because she's not wearing her hearing aids And because the few feet between us feels like the hundreds of highway miles that are usually between us I lie ashamed Because of ways i don't know my grandmother Who she is and why she reads check-out line romances I am selfish for the way I think of her That I'll have to stay home when she's visiting, or change the sheets for her, or make the bed without any wrinkles I wish that I knew my grandmother better That I didn't just think of her sadly, That her knees ache, or her house is empty It's sad that the years of knowing my grandmother Have silenced me towards her
So there she was- with chai crowned hair and ginerbread breath from a coffee mug mouth We drank to our health with green tea warmed hands gave tryptophane hugs after honey trickle pauses
I waited in the kitchen where the overhead lights are pentagonal and bright mist floated through the screen and the windowsill was wet with rain your hair was blond and looked out of place in my dark cavernous living room your smile wasn't quite right it trembled at the edges you had just shaved your face was smooth so that your chin ran into your lips
Nice collection you have here! There's a couple of type-os in one or two you might want to fix, but I know exactly what you mean about the formatting. Of all you've posted so far, the outstanding ones, in my mind are "Coldflower Quest", "Open" and "August" - these were really enjoyable. Look forward to reading more!
i also liked a few of these... the last one and one or two more... mostly they are too wordy for me, i know some people like that so i wouldn't say it's necessarily a bad thing but...
Love your collection here, very good imagery going on in every piece and each one seems to have a living, breathing identity if you know what I mean? these take on a personality, and that's great to see.