2011-10-16

THIS IS NOT A POEM

THIS IS NOT A REAL POEM


this is not

chasing the coattails of immature sentences

period and catching on

this is not

breaking the barrier of thinking

in rhythm

and only comprehension is away

this is not

feeling the gritty grime

crust through fingers to the page

and land in a pattern of ugly

that is beautiful

this is not

lying through sharpened teeth

to make a point

that you don’t believe

until it’s there

this is not

real

this is not

whole

this is not

that thing that it is said to be

what it looks like

what it tastes like

this is not

that poison

this is not

anything

that is not what

it feels like being

2011-10-05

The Small People


Started out being inspired by the idea that stars are basically just ghosts.

Unedited, random piece. I like writing in fairy-tale-esque verse.


The sun it cried a bright flame

and with its breath it said,

“This earth, it turns so slowly.

They don’t know that they are dead.”


And he could spin them faster

“I won’t,” his promise tragic.

And on and on he watched them,

and always they were static.


On Earth, they had no knowledge

of pain as bright as this:

the sun the one thing living,

his fire curled in fists.


***


The stars were ghosts of living,

they birthed by death’s bright eye.

They watched the people spinning

and played their part to die.


They knew the mortals’ true flaw

unable to see truth,

the date they should be fighting

mortal claw and human tooth.


From Earth, they knew not sadness

of watching dead men’s lives,

though every night they saw it:

their fate inside the sky.


***


And Earth it cradled softly

its children bright and dying,

a beauty great and horrid

like sun and stars combining.


The world, it spun so slowly.

Time is a mortal thing

that keeps the people blinded

in constant wandering.


And if they spun it faster

they’d fly off in the sky

and shake this curse of living,

the final day to die.


***


The sky, it held them gently.

The universe expanded.

The people lived so small-y

like human life demanded.


The world, it let them go on.

The sun, it cried their fate.

Star-ghosts illuminated

their expiration date.


The mortals nodded brightly;

they felt the sun’s bright ray,

the tears that flew in star dust,

and still, on Earth, they stayed.