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    poetry


    --Elite Writer
    Alias: AlyRose
    Name: Aly Rose
    ASL: 21/f/the desert
    Website:[ Website ]
    Days Away: 0
    Life Story: I am.
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    Favorites: 24
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    Signup Date: 138 D
    0.38 Years 0.04 Decades
    4.6 Months 19.71 Weeks
    1.380000e+7 Heart Beats
    -There you go eggman
    Quote:
    All my lights go dark. I fold into black stone.- Roethke

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    pretty much the same by isabella
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    Currently Stalking: LucyDiamond, Lady of Shalott, EmpathicAya, Runes

    Journal:
    -------------------------------------------
    Mood: The Usual
      
    She hurries from the house, wearing a coat too heavy for the weather. It is 1941. Another war has begun. She has left a note for Leonard, and another for Vanessa. She walks purposefully towards the river, certain of what she’ll do, but even now she is almost distracted by the sight of the downs, the church, and a scattering of sheep, incandescent, tinged with a faint hint of sulphur, grazing under a darkening sky. She pauses, watching the sheep and the sky, then walks on. The voices murmur behind her, bombers drone in the sky, though she looks for the planes and can’t see them. She walks past one of the farm workers (is his name John?), a robust, small-headed man wearing a potato-coloured vest, cleaning the ditch that runs through the osier bed. He looks up at her, nods, looks down again into the brown water. As she passes him on her way to the river she thinks of how successful he is, how fortunate, to be cleaning a ditch in an osier bed. She herself has failed. She is not a writer at all, really; she is merely a gifted eccentric. Patches of sky shine in puddles left over from last night’s rain. Her shoes sink slightly into the soft earth. She has failed, and now the voices are back, muttering indistinctly just beyond the range of her vision, behind her, here, no, turn and they’ve gone somewhere else. The voices are back and the headache is approaching and it seems (is she or is she not conjuring them herself?) that the bombers have appeared again in the sky. She reaches the embankment, climbs over and down again to the river. There’s a fisherman upriver, far away, he won’t notice her, will he? She begins searching for a stone. She works quickly but methodically, as if she were following a recipe that must be obeyed scrupulously if it’s to succeed at all. She selects one roughly the size and shape of a pig’s skull. Even as she lifts it and forces it into one of the pockets of her coat (the fur collar tickles her neck), she can’t help noticing the stone’s cold chalkiness and its colour, a milky brown with spots of green. She stands close to the edge of the river, which laps against the bank, filling the small irregularities in the mud with clear water that might be a different substance altogether from the yellow-brown, dappled stuff, solid looking as a road, that extends so steadily from bank to bank. She steps forward. She does not remove her shoes. The water is cold, but not unbearably so. She pauses, standing in cold water up to her knees. She thinks of Leonard. She thinks of his hands and his face, the deep lines around his mouth. She thinks of Vanessa, of the children, of Vita and Ethel: So many. They have all failed, haven’t they? She is suddenly, immensely sorry for them. She imagines turning around, taking the stone out of her pocket, going back to the house. She could probably return in time to destroy the notes. She could live on; she could perform that final kindness. Standing knee-deep in the moving water, she decides against it. The voices are here, the headache is coming, and if she restores herself to the care of Leonard and Vanessa they won’t let her go again, will they? She decides to insist that they let her go. She wades awkwardly (the bottom is mucky) out until she is up to her waist. She glances upriver at the fisherman, who is wearing a red jacket and who does not see her. The yellow surface of the river (more yellow than brown when seen this close) murkily reflects the sky. Here, then, is the last moment of true perception, a man fishing in a red jacket and a cloudy sky reflected on opaque water. Almost involuntarily (it feels involuntary, to her) she steps or stumbles forward, and the stone pulls her in. For a moment, still, it seems like nothing; it seems like another failure; just chill water she can easily swim back out of; but then the current wraps itself around her and takes her with such sudden, muscular force it feels as if a strong man has risen from the bottom, grabbed her legs and held them to his chest. It feels personal.

    Michael Cunningham

    how much longer?


    ...Created 2009-10-31 17:25:23     [ View Past Journals ]

    [ View as Blog ]

    dotsLast 20 Submissionsdots

     Fossils
    :|| V: 70 | C: 6 ||:
    ::Misc : Class : Poetry :
     Hanging Laundry (revised)
    :|| V: 27 | C: 3 ||:
    ::Serious : Class : Poetry :
     Frida
    :|| V: 59 | C: 5 ||:
    ::Misc : Class : Poetry :
     Welcome to the Funny Farm
    :|| V: 74 | C: 6 ||:
    ::Serious : Class : Poetry :
     I Knocked Myself Out
    :|| V: 34 | C: 2 ||:
    ::Misc : Class : Poetry :
     Hanging Laundry
    :|| V: 81 | C: 7 ||:
    ::Longing : Class : Poetry :
     Chrysalis
    :|| V: 37 | C: 1 ||:
    ::Depressed : Class : Poetry :
     Gradiva
    :|| V: 77 | C: 2 ||:
    ::Misc : Class : Misc :
     Rock
    :|| V: 67 | C: 2 ||:
    ::Nature : Class : Poetry :
    List All...





    ||| Messages |||
      
    just a heya. hope all is well in your world.
    | Posted on 2009-11-17 11:42:44 | by isabella - [ Reply to This ] -
      
    Aly,

    Thanks for coming back to that.
    Self-destruction is such a hassle. Eh. I've always been like that. What can you do?

    Appreciated, truly.
    | Posted on 2009-11-17 06:07:58 | by trinityfinger - [ Reply to This ] -
      
    I noticed. It's the best response I could have asked for. :)
    | Posted on 2009-11-14 17:25:28 | by O - [ Reply to This ] -
      
    Hi, Alyrose,

    Thanks very much for your comments on "Emotional Misconceptions".

    I only wish I could still tap into the driving force I used when writing poems such as this. I was a lot younger then, half my current age, really, and I internalized things differently. Sometimes things would happen, and it was almost like my tender young soul could not process it all at once. Then it would come back later, with redoubled force, but only in words. There were stages to the way I processed things. I used to write poems I knew I would not understand until later. "Thoughts for the future."

    The way I write now is a lot less unhinged, and I am usually not as happy with the results. This is an example of writing completely out of mind. I guess I can now see why so many poets and musicians use drugs and alcohol to fuel their creativity. To tap into this same unconscious well while not under the influence of something is a lot harder, and from my experience, takes years to refine. I'm still working on it.

    Although I have often felt the way I describe in this poem, I believe I was actually thinking of a certian person and event when I wrote this. I had this friend who always seemed to be both determined and confused at the same time. He fidgeted mercilessly, was constantly kicking or pulling at something, and was always full of nervous energy. I remember him one night punching a stack of beer bottles. The reason was really rather dumb and not worth mentioning, but I guess it stuck in my head. It seemed to almost happen in slow motion. First, there was his rage, and then the sound of breaking glass, as it sprayed in fragmented shards and descended to the floor. I remember watching him pacing in his long, abrupt gait, the blood pouring out of his hand. He seemed oblivious, but had cut himself quite badly.

    It is in this way that I think men have it harder than us. They are not supposed to show emotion, and when they do, they usually feel a need to save face somehow. On the other hand, women are not supposed to show anger. It gets suppressed, or chanelled into other "more feminine" emotions. But it has to come out sometime! I think men and women can learn from eachother. Men can learn from women about how to express emotion, and women can learn from men that sometimes it feels good to respond physically instead of mentally. Not that we should walk around punching things, but I was once on a demolition crew, and it really felt good to pick up a crowbar and smash into something.

    Thanks again for your thoughtful feedback:)

    soul-hugger
    | Posted on 2009-11-13 11:38:17 | by Soul-Hugger - [ Reply to This ] -
      
    I'm a dork. Sorry. I wasn't able to read your comment 'til just recently. Thank you for the feedback. I'm glad you enjoyed the piece.
    | Posted on 2009-11-13 08:29:32 | by ANGELO - [ Reply to This ] -
      
    Hello. Thank you for adding "Master of 'You" to your favorite list. I appreciate it.
    | Posted on 2009-11-13 08:24:57 | by ANGELO - [ Reply to This ] -



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