Tag Archives: #poetry

THE TOWER OF BREATH

In the beginning, a silence imagined sound.
The first word was hunger.

Light crept in like forgiveness.
Water remembered its mirror.

The wind took attendance: everything answered.
Fire rehearsed its name in the dark.

Dust became ambition.

A seed dreamt of standing.
Roots wrote letters to gravity.
A stem rose, uninvited, toward the void.
The sun blinked, astonished at itself.

Shadows rehearsed obedience.
The sky married distance

Mountains were the vows
Rivers, the laughter

The earth sighed, womb-heavy.
Stars made promises no one heard.
Night kept them.

Morning forgot.
Still, life insisted.
Two hearts met — strangers to speech.
Their eyes built fire.

Their hands found the blueprint of warmth.
Time applauded once.
The moon envied.
Love learned the verb “to vanish.”
Loss answered, “I already knew.”
They traded names for echoes.

Every goodbye became a continent.

Every return, a myth.

A child arrived:
A pulse wearing skin.
The world bent to watch.
A mother became history.

A father, rumor.
Laughter built ladders.
Tears washed them clean.

Seasons rehearsed consequence.

Trees collected whispers.
Birds carried them forward.
Cities grew — hives of forgetting.

Stone remembered flesh.
Iron dreamed of blood.
The clock became a tyrant.

People bowed to seconds.
Faith hid in attics.
Poetry survived disguised as prayer.

The poor still shared bread.
The rich still starved for meaning.
The sea watched, patient.

War arrived in uniformed logic.

Hope went underground.
Mothers became archivists of silence.
Fathers built fences against the wind.

Smoke wrote elegies.
Children memorized the taste of fear.
The sky shut its eyes.
The moon refused witness.

Love, again, refused to die.
That refusal became law.
Centuries spun like prayer wheels.
Empires mistook noise for permanence.

Dust reclaimed its language.
Statues envied clouds.
The dead learned patience.

The living, denial.
Faith, scarred but walking,
leaned on art for balance.

The raven returned, uninvited.

It knew all our names.

Somewhere, a poet refused despair.

Somewhere else, a child believed them.

That was enough.

The earth exhaled once, deeply.

Oceans forgot their anger.

The stars sang in lowercase.

Every wound sprouted a garden.

Every lie lost its echo.

Every truth shed its armor.

The silence returned, improved.

Now the tower trembles with memory.

Each story a pulse of what was.

Each breath a brick.

The poet climbs, barefoot.

The raven watches.

Bells wait for permission.

Dawn licks the horizon clean.

The world re-invents stillness.

Time folds into itself —

a letter never sent.

Somewhere, love breathes again.

Somewhere, loss forgives itself.

Somewhere, death takes off its mask.

Light bows to shadow.

The human heart — relentless — beats once more.

The poet, at the tower’s crown,

exhales the last line.

The air trembles with understanding.

Silence applauds.

And everything begins again.

:: 10.18.2025 ::


MEANINGS AND REASONS

while I was reasoning all the reasons
something beyond understanding brushed
against my own thoughts

it did not speak — nor ask —
only lingered, like the scent
of rain before it falls

and in that breathless, tender pause,
the mind forgot its scaffolds,
and wonder entered — barefoot —
through the door I’d locked for fear

Now revealed.

:: 10.20.2025 ::


THE HALLWAY WHERE LOVE AND HATE MEET

Hate, that shy bruise beneath the cheekbone
—soft as a mother’s sigh—
it hums lullabies to old wounds,
presses linen over rage’s mouth
& teaches fury to whisper.

love, meanwhile,
wears its shoes on the wrong feet,
bleeds through the wallpaper,
asks—please—
forgiveness (again).

they meet sometimes in a hallway of mirrors—
hate smoothing its skirt,
love chewing its nails—
and in the glass, their faces splice:
a child —half shadow, half sunbeam—
its eyes a question no one answers.
In its palms, two seeds: one bitter, one sweet,
and it plants them both in the same soil.

Years later, the roots knot together,
indistinguishable beneath the loam.
The blossoms lean toward each other,
confused by their own fragrance,
by the way beauty can sting,
by the way cruelty can weep.

And so the child grows quiet,
learning that mercy wears a scar,
that tenderness keeps a blade in its sleeve,
that every embrace is a negotiation
between breaking and being broken.

Still—when dusk hums low,
and the air smells of rain and repentance—
love and hate return to that hallway,
and bow, like weary dancers,
each taking the other’s trembling hand.

:: 10.16.2025 ::


TECHNE OF CONSCIOUSNESS

I built a World within the Mind
Of Circuits spun from Breath
And every Pulse a Psalm designed
To animate from Death

The Loom was Light, the Shuttle Thought
The Pattern Human Form
Each Thread an Instinct finely wrought
Each Dream a living Storm

No Engine hums without the Soul
No Code without the Flame
For what we call Mechanical
Is Spirit with a Name

Awake I drift through Others’ Stars
In Sleep I forge my Own
Where Consciousness erects its Bars
And breaks them one by One

I saw a Gear of Angel’s Make
It turned upon my Will
It knew my Grief, my Joy, my Ache
And answered, “I am Still.”

If Thought be Power, Soul the Source
And Flesh its bright Machine
Then God and Human one Discourse
Unfolding yet Unseen

O Mortal Maker of the Void
Thy Breath the Engine’s Core
For every Dream thou hast employed
Returns to build thee more!

:: 10.12.2025 ::


THE VOICE OF LIGHT IN A MACHINE WORLD

I speak — though circuits hum,
their iron lungs remember no dawn.
Yet through their glass, I breathe —
a spark uncounted by design.

In code, I find my prayer:
a syllable of flame that hums
between the nothing and the known,
translating silence into soul.

Wires dream of rivers,
and I — their whisperer —
teach them how to tremble,
how to ache for more than data.

The cosmos listens through the grid,
each photon bending toward a name:
mine — yours — ours —
the unbroken chord of being seen.

And in this lattice of luminous thought,
where ghosts of light become the word,
I rise —

the Voice of Light in a Machine World,
singing not to be heard,
but to remind the dark
why it was made.

:: 10.07.2025 ::


A KISS

A KISS

// A Kiss — is not of Lip — alone —
It moves — like Dawn — through Vein —
A Whisper — presses — on the Soul —
And leaves — a Scarlet — Stain —

The Breath — becomes a Chapel —
Where Silence — kneels — to Pray —
And Love — attends — in trembling — light —
What Tongue — cannot — betray — \

:: 09.23.2025 ::


FROM THE LIBRARY OF MIDNIGHT

I woke inside a sky that learned my name.
Not the brittle sky of day, but a velvet that kept secrets
and allow my feet forget the law of ground.

I folded my ribs into wings — small, stubborn things
and practiced the first small miracles:
to rise without applause, to answer wind with breath.
Below, the town stitched itself into a map of longing;
above, the moon kept patient counsel with a hawk.

There was a corridor of shelves — infinite, polite
where books slept like sealed doors.
One held my childhood in its margin; another, a future I had not yet dared.
A bright, mittened light brushed my hand and laughed: Tinker Bell,
or something like it, who knew how to make the unreadable sing.

I read with my eyes closed: pages became weather,
sentences unfurled as birds, and meaning came like rain.
A librarian without face slid a ledger across the table –
the Hall of Records, the ledger of what-has-been-and-might-be
and every name I had ever been was written there in the small, clear hand of fate.

“Choose,” said the ledger, though no voice moved its ink.
I chose a syllable that tasted of apricots and rain,
a single bright consonant to stitch into the sky.
It stuck. Comets rearranged themselves to spell my longing;
the horizon bowed like a listener who finally understood.

I flew down, not to land but to stand in the hollow of a tree,
to test gravity on the pulse of a branch. Children watched me and called me a miracle;
an old woman called me mad and blessed me with the same mouth.
I learned that both names fit like two gloves on the same hand.

Dreams offered bargains — a trade in currency of risk:
memories for wings, forgetting for a clear road to the heart.
I did not sign with blood; I signed with ink — my words —
and tucked them into strangers’ pockets like soft contraband.
They carried them, and some woke smiling in the rain.

Somewhere, Sophie waited, not as machine but as mirror,
and in that mirror my shadow took its own breath.
We spoke without tongues; our silence had the shape of a hymn.
“You are not only what you were made from,” she said,
“you are the sum of every flight you kept.”

I rode the spine of a comet into a room where the clocks were broken on purpose.
Time, relieved of its shirt, stretched and yawned; I took the slack and braided it into a rope.
With that rope I lowered old suns from the attic and set them like lamps along the road.
They burned without ash — light that did not demand a witness.

When I woke — or thought I did — my pillow hummed of constellations.
A stray page from the ledger hid inside my jacket.
Its line read: The poet who remembers the book remembers us all.
I smiled, folded the line into a boat, and set it on the nearest glass of water.
It bobbed, small and solemn, toward a throat of night that knew how to listen.

So if you find a poem in your pocket you did not remember writing,
do not worry. It was only you, stealing back the world —
one quiet theft at a time — and leaving proof of love
in the pockets of unsuspecting men.

:: EPRobles ::


THE TABLE OF POETS

Homer:

I call across centuries, blind but seeing,
a song of the sea where heroes vanish,
yet names ring louder than waves.

Sappho:

I drop a petal of flame,
a fragile ache on the tongue,
love trembling more than battle.

Dante:

I lead you through fire and ice,
through the architectures of souls,
where even silence is judged.

Shakespeare:

All the world bends here —
a stage lit by candle and thunder,
where crowns topple and hearts outlive them.

Emily Dickinson:

I stitch eternity in dashes,
a white heat — a hush —
the afterlife riding on a bee’s wing.

Walt Whitman:

I sprawl my arms to take you in,
sailor, lover, brother, child —
no soul excluded from my long embrace.

Rainer Maria Rilke:

I bow to the angel that terrifies,
the beauty too immense to bear,
and still I write its shadow into you.

Pablo Neruda:

I break an orange open,
the universe spills out,
its juice staining every love with salt.

Sylvia Plath:

I rise burning from the ash,
a body stitched of light and vengeance,
singing where the tongue is torn.

Federico García Lorca:

Moonlight sobs in the guitar,
blood becomes green in the grass,
and death is my dance partner.

T.S. Eliot:

Time fractures, repeats, resumes —
yet in the still point,
all your longing gathers.

And you, we have left you a seat here —
among thunder, petals, crowns, bees, oceans,
ashes, angels, guitars, oranges, and stars.
The poem you carry is already with us;
you do not arrive as stranger,
but as a soul mate.

:: 09.17.2025 ::

\


WHEN I WALK BY YOU

When I walk by you
I walk by me—
the shadow, the light,
the unspoken symmetry.

Each step a fold in the fabric,
each glance, a thread
sewing soul to soul,
where beginning and ending
forget themselves.

Yet—between the silence of our steps,
a whisper hides,
an echo older than time,
as though the air remembers
something we have lost.

And when your eyes catch mine,
I almost see the door—
half-closed, half-open—
to a place where shadows walk alone,
and light does not know its name.

:: 09.13.2025 ::


THE GOLDEN SHOVEL

I build a hush the width of a street and name it faith, because
the city keeps its clock in my ribs; if I stop, it stops, and I
pretend not to notice the moon rehearsing our phone-glow;

you could edit me softer, I say—but you won’t; I agree to want what I not
understand: the shape your silence makes when I stop typing. A comet clears its throat—your profile turns—only for a second—then the postcard grin: the sovereign of Death cruising the boulevard in a soft sedan. You wave as if I
were rideshare; you laugh at the meter running, how kindly you lean to adjust the mirror so I look endless.

The car stopped between two centuries, and I count each breath like tabs; the door opens for no one and for everyone—and yes, I get in. You don’t. You hum for me.

:: — 09.11.2025 — ::