Under
Cloudy skies in a serpentine Springtime
I'll cast dice in the alleys I know
I'll take time and I'll tally the faces
and store 'em in my pockets
'til the Autumn unrolls
Wait, now, for the doc's diagnosis
Take my place by his cabinet of potions.
The room's hot, now, and so is my bowl of stew
I'm only out as long as it takes me to eat
Hedge my bets? No, let it ride...
In this vacant space each night...
Until I'm cured.
Across town
Footprints of a girl I met once
Forget names, but remember a face
She counts steps--the ink on the pages runs--
She always goes for walks
and reads books in the rain.
She knows clowns, she hangs out with assassins
Skin's real tough, but she's always laughing
Today's cold, now, but she's bundled up so tight--
Besides, she only ever fucking laughs at the snow.
And when the season laughs right back...
I'll hide my face, she'll change her tack...
Until it's right.
And these sidewalks
might be onto something...
An online repository for the poetry of Kyle Kulseth © 2014-2018 Party Fowl Publishing
Thursday, March 21, 2013
Monday, March 4, 2013
Faces, Legs, & Names
This town is famous
for pretty faces,
broken legs,
and misplaced names--
A sentence penned,
An Oxford comma
dangling off the edge of pages,
setting off appositive phrases,
lighting fuses--accidental--
phasing out of view and staging
tactical retreats
The winds of February mark off
intersections
Dow & Broadway
Midnight laughs echo off stratos
then fall back--
snowstorms at midday.
Caught in the rain on Sunday evening
this place don't stay awake so late.
Except, perhaps, for pretty faces,
misplaced names, or broken legs--
But forget the Oxford comma
retreating, drenched, off of the page.
for pretty faces,
broken legs,
and misplaced names--
A sentence penned,
An Oxford comma
dangling off the edge of pages,
setting off appositive phrases,
lighting fuses--accidental--
phasing out of view and staging
tactical retreats
The winds of February mark off
intersections
Dow & Broadway
Midnight laughs echo off stratos
then fall back--
snowstorms at midday.
Caught in the rain on Sunday evening
this place don't stay awake so late.
Except, perhaps, for pretty faces,
misplaced names, or broken legs--
But forget the Oxford comma
retreating, drenched, off of the page.