Posted by Barely Knit Together on Nov 28, 2009 in
Poetry
The wind dries our bones,
leaves hollows, marrow
sapped,
fallow no more.
Inside
in the paths,
circuits, neurons spark and
go
along sear,
synaptic lines.
What once lit and danced
now
sits shelled.
Lovers linger
under dying vines outside
cafes.
They hold no sway over us
Old Folk.
And the fair kiss
they trade
we know will fade
and pitiless winter
come again.
Tags: poem, Poetry, winter, youth
Posted by Barely Knit Together on Oct 15, 2009 in
Poetry
I helped bore holes into the body of the truck that we would later make love in, in a field by a pond with tall grasses and moonlight.
It made me feel big and important, the way a little girl might feel working beside her father, but I understand that’s not the right way to feel.
Perhaps [...]
Tags: being human, memory, poem, trucks