08-18-2004, 05:55 PM | #1 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Space, the final frontier.
|
Just some shit from the Prophet
Strangers
I stood all alone in the crowded room. Surrounded by strangers with no faces using words I could not comprehend. And I was afraid until it occured to me, I was home. The first of what I hope to be many more.
__________________
"The death-knell of the republic had rung as soon as the active power became lodged in the hands of those who sought, not to do justice to all citizens, rich and poor alike, but to stand for one special class and for its interests as opposed to the interests of others. " - Theodore Roosevelt Last edited by The Prophet; 08-18-2004 at 05:58 PM.. |
08-18-2004, 09:04 PM | #2 (permalink) |
Drifting
Administrator
Location: Windy City
|
It's amazing how sometimes we can feel more at home in a sea of strangers than in a familiar place. Welcome to the Literature Thread - I look forward to seeing your many more works
__________________
Calling from deep in the heart, from where the eyes can't see and the ears can't hear, from where the mountain trails end and only love can go... ~~~ Three Rivers Hare Krishna |
08-20-2004, 04:12 PM | #3 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Space, the final frontier.
|
of words of Death (for Jesse)
To use the word - Death - alone is just that – alone and empty, scratches on paper having no meaning. To tell death’s tale, surround it with life make it harsh and honest, sincere and genuine Tell me of Death, but please, make it real Show me death and pity- show me the fourteen-year-old black youth in a pool of blood on the cold dirty concrete at the bottom of his stoop with his sister and his mother crying clenching to each other while crystal clear drops of poverty and welfare stream down their dirty faces. Show me death and loneliness- explain the scene of a nineteen-year-old track star from Dubuque sitting in a muddy hole hurriedly dug in the fresh rich soil of a French farm field of summer rye that waves in the late-spring breeze while his red-headed, pig-tailed high-school sweet heart writes him love poems in his absence and in her own anticipation as he lies cold, scared and so alone watching an even younger soldier fresh from state-side in his first call to the front line lay face-down beside him with his blue eyes wide open and with his last whistling breaths blow bubbles and foam of snot and blood through the ragged hole that doesn’t belong where it is or any where else in the God damned world. Tell me of the young mother hot and sweaty in her thin pink night-gown with her dirty blond hair matted to the side of her face in her tiny, dirty, two-room apartment with no windows and no husband walk across the smoky room to the Goodwill crib in the corner with the plastic fish mobile and the dirty pink blanket with the brown pony appliqué half torn off and the silky trim all tattered and stained reach in and lift the cold, stiff infant and smile before she realizes what is wrong Don’t spell Death abstract paint it truthful and real. Let me feel Death’s terror. Let me feel Death’s sick repulsion as the younger sister stands and stares at the smooth, heaving chest of the past-out drunken brother knowing in her mind that what she does will not fade the memories of his cold and calloused hands on her young, smooth, hard-fleshed hips with his Levi’s at his ankles and her soft, pitiful moans singing gentle harmony to the sound of his belt buckle tapping rhythm on the cold linoleum while she feels with crystal clarity the weight of the pistol in her tiny, shaky hand and steps back in surprise when the recoil hurts her wrist and the roar of the muzzle deafens her ears even more than her own shrill scream. Write of Death Honest, hard and brutally true. Write of Death for the sake of the life it takes.
__________________
"The death-knell of the republic had rung as soon as the active power became lodged in the hands of those who sought, not to do justice to all citizens, rich and poor alike, but to stand for one special class and for its interests as opposed to the interests of others. " - Theodore Roosevelt |
08-20-2004, 04:19 PM | #4 (permalink) |
Tilted
Location: Space, the final frontier.
|
Black Tights
When I was in first grade, she was in third and she wore black tights that fit tight around her knobby little knees, but loose at the ankle. She wore red dresses, always, and cute little shoes black and white saddle or Buster Brown with a buckle and her black tights, loose at the ankle. Short bobbed, brown hair and dimples and her black tights with a hole where her white calf showed through all smooth and pretty. She had a shiny new red bike with tassels and a horn with a basket for her doll. She wore her black tights and I always thought I would like to know her better. - the Prophet
__________________
"The death-knell of the republic had rung as soon as the active power became lodged in the hands of those who sought, not to do justice to all citizens, rich and poor alike, but to stand for one special class and for its interests as opposed to the interests of others. " - Theodore Roosevelt |
Tags |
prophet, shit |
|
|