1347 5 1
|
you'd do him more of a favor to kill him, than place upon him the burden of such an abrupt change in travel plans.
|
1347 1 1
|
Clouds quickly appeared, in a perfect peach sky. Big, puffy clouds, moving together, formed the shape of a heart.
|
1347 5 2
|
If there was another way to describe emptiness, I'd word the endlessness of the sky, of the ocean at low tide.
|
1347 4 5
|
After my mother died, my father shipped me to my uncle's. He hadn't told me she was dying, so he could just mourn alone.Lena lived next door, Italian, my age -- which was ten -- beautiful. She was watched by goons in black suits. Her parents owned a restaurant. Across the…
|
1347 18 11
|
|
1347 5 3
|
God’s hearing aid is missing
And apparently needs an enormous battery
But no one has the
heart to tell Him
because who wants to be
shouting at God?
|
1347 5 3
|
At times we rarely desire to be where we are at home quite as much as we desire to be where we are no longer.
|
1347 5 4
|
Uzma dashes up the stairs ahead of me . . .
|
1347 3 2
|
He painted a woman on them, identical to the woman that kneeled by his bed.
|
1347 11 9
|
A cheap pocket knife was the only sharp I carried in my backpack and they allowed me that. The man with the pot tattoo on his neck said, “All of us here needs some type of knife. You gotta cut up your food. We don't…
|
1347 7 5
|
The nerves are birds that guide us to feeling the loop and lift of reverie.
|
1347 10 8
|
That TV you got me? Ruined. And the ionizer fan? Ruined too. All your clothes you left over here, all my work scrubs and weekend dresses too, soaked with that river stink water. I kept thinking bout all the dead creatures.
|
1346 10 11
|
I fall in love with a second cousin at the picnic. I make sure I sit next to her.
|
1346 8 8
|
We're killing off the elephants. We're killing off the tigers. We're killing off monarch butterflies. We're wrecking the coral reefs. Big sad gorillas don't feel at home in their own homes. And all instead of learning to live in some…
|
1346 8 5
|
"the dark velvet slide of the tongue."
|
1346 6 4
|
The heart would have unnatural reverence, exalted, bursting with evil, rolling in sloth, if it did not at once reveal its innocence. I saw you again, on the morning of the sun. It was you, or your double, or a son you might have had. Your beautiful bloo
|
1346 3 2
|
Scientists have discovered what I already did once on dope
way back in the Sixties.
There are so many other earths out there
that they are almost infinite.
Now in our other lives we have to
shuttle from planet to planet
reading our poems. And o
|
1346 11 7
|
She had just done it in the backseat with the man she decided would be her father. Or maybe it was the cast of his eyes under the dim bar lights. Maybe she insisted that this had to be done, to relive the night under the stars, under a dented roof of a station…
|
1346 3 2
|
We were talking in the dark in my room. He lay on a mattress on the floor. He came for a sleepover.
|
1346 9 5
|
I never meant to shipwreck you,
I didn't even know I was singing out loud.
I just stood on my rock a little too boldly,
and hummed a tune you wanted to hear.
|
1346 6 2
|
your light is gonna
last me
through the week
|
1346 4 2
|
i saw a sign and it read A PERSON THAT IS MEAN TO THE WAITER IS A MEAN PERSON i thought of you with your high cheekbones, the sense of entitlement unparalleled, the superiority complex that hid much you had a gig and it had probably…
|
1346 4 1
|
|
1346 2 1
|
But behind the shops (and the many pubs), at the back of the narrow cottage fronts which line the wynds are secret courtyards, surprising gardens and more light than ever imagined.
|
1346 15 10
|
in which a man who is bored with years of retirement poses a threat to himself and others
|
1346 11 8
|
They could occupy the space//
left by creatures larger and more/
evolved.
|
1346 2 0
|
I can’t deny you’re beautiful, though it’s unsure how many of your defects are fudged by my myopia.
|
1346 11 6
|
fanned lashes on rouged cheek
a glamorous sea creature
in violet perfume
|
1346 12 9
|
Enumerate the small delights/ this bright first morning
|
1346 2 0
|
Now it's late. I am hanging upside down from a rope coiled around my crushed left ankle, the pain too sharp to be really felt, as the excess blood to my head makes my thoughts fuzzy. I am almost two meters from the rock face, thirty-five hundred meters above sea-level, the…
|