“All the world is birthday cake, so take a piece, but not too much.”
— George Harrioson (Feb. 25, 1943 – Nov. 29, 2001)
“All the world is birthday cake, so take a piece, but not too much.”
— George Harrioson (Feb. 25, 1943 – Nov. 29, 2001)
I dreamt of this poem
on the plane coming back from
la ville lumière.
I begged you and the tree leaves
and her and the glory in his gaze
to be(come) my inspiration.
I came from uncertainty
where there was no remedy.
I flew back for more;
for the ultimate.
I am now back my friend,
inspired, as I am.
By the rain coming down hard
on the same cobblestones of the old town
and the smoke in the air
coming out of the cigar, blending
with the scent of the fresh rosewater.
By the smell of the café crème.
and the baguette crumbs in the same old place;
by the small coins and the big smiles
waiting for garçon de café;
by the shine on his moccasin in burgundy.
By the heart of the poor;
by the frown of the killer
and the dusted books on the shelves.
By the golden antique ring shining
on her chip-nailed fingers.
By the light at the end of the tunnel;
and the unfinished stories
still hanging in the history that we both belong to.
By his emptiness;
by her being who she is inside
and by my own refreshed heart and soul.
Sweetness,
I will be back
with more;
for more
and
much
more.
S
Tonight the moon wasn’t at its fullest
and I finally felt close to its emptiness.
Tonight I stood tall in front of the lights
witnessing poetry, dancing to the unspoken words;
jumping high, reaching for the starless sky
and miles away, her bones and skin mourn
for him, whose patriot heart stopped
beating against brutality.
S
– Have a good night.
– I’m getting off too.
Zooming up to the sky,
and the fake stars
are spinning around
her blemished eyes.
She draws a giant circle
above them all,
fills it up with
the whitest white
and grayish dots.
Begging to forget
the agony of
the bastard
sad songs.
She smiles and frisks
then frankly lies;
sings along,
getting high.
She flies and
falls deep in heart;
inks her soul with
butterflies
and paper cuts.
Feels them all
and buries them
in sleep, in a life
ever after.
S
“It is difficult in life to be good,
and difficult in art to portray goodness.
Perhaps we don’t
know much about
goodness.”
Rewind.
I find myself among a million non-existent lovers,
rushing to their beloved or to the rainbirds, and
I’m standing in stillness, admiring the yellow line,
minding it beneath my mind’s shutter.
Where will I stand in the next
forty eight hours?
Fast forward.
Confessions, tears, strangers,
heartbeats – the heart hoards its beats.
Elegance, surprises, adults,
let’s go wild – in to the wild,
et cetera,
et
cetera
Play.
The moon didn’t hide that night;
the sun won’t ever hide my love,
the truth – once again –
beat the lies.
Stop.
S