librariesandlemonade:

Do you remember when we met
in Gomorrah? When you were still beardless,
and I would oil my hair in the lamp light before seeing
you, when we were young, and blushed with youth
like bruised fruit. Did we care then
what our neighbors did
in the dark?

When our first daughter was born
on the River Jordan, when our second
cracked her pink head from my body
like a promise, did we worry
what our friends might be
doing with their tongues?

What new crevices they found
to lick love into or strange flesh
to push pleasure from, when we
called them Sodomites then,
all we meant by it
was neighbor.

When the angels told us to run
from the city, I went with you,
but even the angels knew
that women always look back.
Let me describe for you, Lot,
what your city looked like burning
since you never turned around to see it.

Sulfur ran its sticky fingers over the skin
of our countrymen. It smelled like burning hair
and rancid eggs. I watched as our friends pulled
chunks of brimstone from their faces. Is any form
of loving this indecent?

Cover your eyes tight,
husband, until you see stars, convince
yourself you are looking at Heaven.

Because any man weak enough to hide his eyes while his neighbors
are punished for the way they love deserves a vengeful god.

I would say these things to you now, Lot,
but an ocean has dried itself on my tongue.
So instead I will stand here, while my body blows itself
grain by grain back over the Land of Canaan.
I will stand here
and I will watch you
run.

(via whineandbeer)

Comments

Because I mistrust my head & hands, because I know salt

tinctures my songs, I tried hard not to touch you
even as I pulled you into my arms. Seasons sprouted

& went to seed as we circled the dance with silver cat bells
tied to our feet. Now, kissing you, I am the archheir of second
chances.
Because I know twelve ways to be wrong

& two to be good, I was wounded by the final question in the cave,
left side of the spirit level’s quiver. I didn’t want to hug you

into a cross, but I’m here to be measured down to each numbered
bone.

A trembling runs through what pulls us to the blood knot.
We hold hands & laugh in the East Village as midnight autumn

shakes the smoke of the Chicago B.L.U.E.S. club from our clothes,
& you say I make you happy & sad. For years I stopped my hands

in midair, knowing fire at the root stem of yes.
I say your name, & another dies in my mouth because I know how

to plead till a breeze erases the devil’s footprints,

because I crave something to sing the blues about. Look,
I only want to hold you this way: a bundle of wild orchids

broken at the wet seam of memory & manna.

Yusef Komunyakaa, Canticle (via yesyes)
Comments
etiamsi | habitualbliss:

Nace un mundo cuando hablas caen las hojas cuando callas y en tus ojos vive un dios. La belleza está grabada en tu espalda y en tus alas y si caminas arde el mar… 
-Rosa Cedrón, Arde el Mar
On January 26, 2012 at 8:36am

etiamsi | habitualbliss:

Nace un mundo cuando hablas
caen las hojas cuando callas
y en tus ojos vive un dios.
La belleza está grabada
en tu espalda y en tus alas
y si caminas arde el mar…

-Rosa Cedrón, Arde el Mar

Comments
literarycollective:

everything is changing, can’t you feel that?
On December 23, 2011 at 4:00pm

literarycollective:

everything is changing, can’t you feel that?

(via perspectiveacles)

Comments

may my heart always be open to little
birds who are the secrets of living
whatever they sing is better than to know
and if men should not hear them men are old
   
may my mind stroll about hungry
and fearless and thirsty and supple
and even if it’s sunday may i be wrong
for whenever men are right they are not young
   
and may myself do nothing usefully
and love yourself so more than truly
there’s never been quite such a fool who could fail
pulling all the sky over him with one smile

-E.E. Cummings

A long-time favorite.

[via imagineation]

(Source: perspectiveacles)

Comments

When our neighbors died –
one from AIDS
and six months later
his partner, a bartender,
In a head-on with a drunk –

their ashes were scattered in the flowerbeds
in front of their house,
and I suppose you could
discuss the beautiful clichés

but I wonder more about
the couple that bought the house
and the wife in a sundress
on her hands and knees
arranging Richard and Bruce.

Tending The Details by Kent Leatham (via onebadapple)
Comments
The blue river is grey at morning
and evening. There is twilight
at dawn and dusk. I lie in the dark
wondering if this quiet in me now
is a beginning or an end.
Jack Gilbert, Walking at Night (via yesyes)
Comments
Happy Birthday to Mr. E.E. Cummings.
(Who did not, in fact, prefer to have his own name written out in all lowercase letters.)
One of my favorite phrases to describe the excitement of new love: “so quite new a thing,” indeed.

[thegirlwiththelittlecurl]
On October 14, 2011 at 11:22am

Happy Birthday to Mr. E.E. Cummings.

(Who did not, in fact, prefer to have his own name written out in all lowercase letters.)

One of my favorite phrases to describe the excitement of new love: “so quite new a thing,” indeed.

[thegirlwiththelittlecurl]

(Source: hellocaretaker, via sydneychild)

Comments

The library always smells like this:
an ancient stew of vinegar and wood.
It’s autumn again,
and I can do anything.

Dorthea Grossman, In the Library

via

Comments