from MIRANDA, OR AN ABRIDGED HISTORY OF THE TENTH GRADE
When will our fucking hearts cease to riot?
-- Superchunk
I know I promised you
I wouldn't make a scene
in front of all your friends
but is it so wrong if I write
your name across my shoes
& sit by you at lunch
is it so wrong if I want
to stand next to you in gym
class O your legs remind me
of a river bed I would do
a hundred sit-ups for
you & whisper your name
& kiss my knees pretend-
ing they were you
Lifted from Abjective. Watch out. You'll need a drink of water after you read this by Anne Marie Rooney. And more. She's wonderful!
This very small
by Anne Marie Rooney
Secret in my. Am I a round wet
O? Or am I something lower. He does not know
what. I show him the place to. And then
and and O. What is an O made of.
And if I am. Do I gold myself? Is there another
pocket to press? Preverbal O and licking
O in my O God. Do I rain on like this is
a very small? And if then and hotly O ing
back to it and. I bite into this very small. And his mouth
opening. Outside the window. I am a gold. Sachet
of morning. The O is not. And his shoulders opening.
In my mouth is a. I and unwiring and just.
Is he folding into a letter? Is preverbal and am I.
I lick the. The glue sticks to my.
And when I bite I am hotly.
When I leave I am hotly. I go out in a brown dress
to tell. The smell of gingko on his. The absence of. I grow.
And Gregory Sherl. Rock on, big guy. The one below is from The Nervous Breakdown. And another - this time from Eclectica. Enjoy!
The Oregon Train in the Last Moments Before Dusk
|
flawed perfection. I hunt like a martyr,
begging the forest to take me for what
I am, somewhat of a good man. I strip
down to nothing, less than nothing I
have shed my skin, hung it from a tree
like an idea I was too scared to write
down. We always ford the river, the
water the color of toothpaste, the water
too far to touch my skin—it’s still
hanging from a tree, a ghost in love
with being a ghost. While your mouth
is on my mouth, we are robbed. The last
minutes of light welcome the first
minutes of fear. The robber at the end
of the world rubs his lost apprehension.
His gun is lost shrapnel from a war
I’ll never fight. He wants to know why
the river’s the calmest when you’re not
looking. He wants to know if the stars
will tell on his lack of social skills.
I tell him I don’t know. I tell him
Tonight we’re just trying to get off.