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Thursday 28 August 2014

A poem about lost love by David Tombale: Smoke

Written for the prompt Smoke.

Smoke

And then we were like smoke,
like forest fires, like tears within
the rain, we were beautiful like
reflections of the moon within
a pool, we were like perfection,
like the sounds of jazz on a lazy
Sunday afternoon.

We were smoke and flame
and some days I wish you’d come again,
I wish you’d happen by to see me,
knock on Number 24 and smile like
it was accidental, like the winds
had deigned to carry you to where
I am, but the sight of smoke is
lifting, dissipating into air and
my heart can’t take much more
so I won’t open up this door. 


Monday 25 August 2014

A poem about love and travelling by David Tombale: Past the open gate

Written for the prompt Home Behind.


Past the open gate


Out beyond the open gate the
world has beckoned, it will not
wait, the miles and years have
called me and I being a gentleman
will not tarry here, so past the
hills and across the meadows
steeped with green and purple
buds I’ll venture out to chase
my fate and when my feet have
wearied of sea and shore,
the taste of dates, the love of home
will take me back into the arms
of rose and stone, the bundled
warmth of covers in yonder home.

Thursday 21 August 2014

A poem about life and hope by David Tombale: Live


Live is about celebrating life through the simplest acts.

Image credit- eelx


Live

Live out your dreams in stolen moments

beneath the evergreens and let free the

music that soars in you, that screams,

the drumbeat of dancing feet, baby girl

I’m watching you and all night you dance,

dance for Marvin, baby dance for me,

make these hours count, make this little

house bounce, make the cobwebs tear,

make that radio our stair, we wind and

dance our way into a better life or stay

dreaming while our skin throbs,

while your hair falls in drops of sweat,

live out your dreams and make my

mama stare, make her love the way

you tear up this room.
 
 


 
 

 

Tuesday 19 August 2014

A poem about death and love by David Tombale: Before the dawn


The question of death is this poem is written from the position of one who is in love enjoying the brief moments he can share with the one he loves.

Before the dawn

Tonight I’ll lay my promises down,

tonight I’ll lay my body beneath the ground,

I’ll dine with ground worms as time

lifts up the scalpel to cut my spirit free,

perhaps to soar or drown, to be set loose

that I may rest in words, in deeds,

in the tongues of old loves and new,

good friends and righteous enemies,

tonight I’ll lie beside you and be young again,

I’ll touch you slowly as you lay your lips against

my cheek and swear to keep me and my secrets

long into the night and before the dawn.

Sunday 17 August 2014

A poem about life and guilt by David Tombale: In the love of strangers


Sometimes an overwhelming urge to escape from our mistakes can come over us so this piece is all about running away.
 
 
 
In the love of strangers
A half-forgotten candy bar rests inside
my cupboard shelf next to books I swear
I never read, next to letters from absent
friends.
 
I’ve packed a bag full of winter clothes,
fur jackets and heavy boots,
I take no photos with me,
they’re too weighty, too much like carrying a shrine along,
too much like carrying my memories with me.
 
The scent of spring is in the air,
the odor of rain that might one day fall but
I won’t be waiting by my window to watch it
strike these trash strewn streets.
 
My guilt will not let me lie,
it raids my dreams and leaves its
footprints in my mouth,
it casts its shadow in my tears,
in my frown.
 
I can’t stay here,
can’t bear to rest my head when
the walls fall down,
I think I’ll take my book of letters,
my faithful compass, and climb inside this
truck on a voyage I must take,
far from seasons, far from roads,
far from the plastic sheen of my telephone.
I’m headed somewhere where the crowds
don’t know me, where the years will pick me
clean and leave me soaking in this sea of sanity,
in the hostile love of strangers.
 
 

Friday 15 August 2014

A poem about friendship and disappointment by David Tombale: The promises we made

Life offers us lasting friendships and some that turn out to be quite brief but each in its own way shapes the way we view the world. 

The promises we made

Love is fleeting like summer rain,
like August, leaving nothing in its
wake but words that sit so wrong
with us, that humiliate the promises
we made as friends.

Love is fleeting like the flare of flame
that turns to grey, that crumbles softly
into ash.

Love is fleeting and the storms have
slain the forests, have torn out roots and
left us naked, standing amidst the corpses
of fallen oaks and this is so familiar,
so damn similar to the way we talked,
without fury or passion, without sorrow,
mere emptiness, mere formality,
the stiff way two old bucks must bow
only to pace out into the green outdoors,
neckties and suits, until all of it is just some
tale we’ll tell our kids when we can.

Tuesday 12 August 2014

A poem about misery and memory by David Tombale: It's like misery


Misery is one of those common human experiences so maybe in this piece there lies something familiar and comforting.
 
 
 
It’s like misery
 
It’s like misery,
 the cold burn of past days that
 lead these thoughts astray,
 when you and I are two
 words together, two comets passing
 in the blackness of the night,
 when I won’t miss you,
 when your name doesn’t hang upon
 my lips like grapes upon the vine,
 sitting fat and black and waiting to exhale.
 
 It’s like misery,
 the way you’re leaving,
 the way you look at me like
 the inches have grown to miles,
 the miles to seas and seas to oceans.
 
 But I won’t miss you because
 the days have talked to me,
 they’ve reminded me that we
 don’t exist, we are two wanderers
 in an endless pool of majesty that
 nobody understands.
 
 

A poem about heartache and loss by David Tombale: Mourning


We all grieve in our own ways when we lose someone and there is no right or wrong to it just sorrow and perhaps a celebration of a life well lived.
 
 
 
Mourning
 
The skyline’s ringed with lights of
 white and purple exploding like fireworks
 beneath a scarlet moon.
 
 The city cries tonight,
 there is an echo of sorrow in the way
 the cars crawl, the horns blare.
 
 The skyline is a pent up breath that
 will swallow you, letting loose these gusts
 of wind, a last release of a winter breeze.
 
 Our tears fill the first signs of rain clouds,
 fill the bottomless wealth of empty dams.
 We mourn like unruly children trying to
 harass the heavens to give Him back.
 
 

Thursday 7 August 2014

A poem about nature and spirituality by David Tombale: Drive


Drive explores the connection between nature and spirituality.
 
 
 
Drive
 
I drove down this highway on a fast trek
 into the wilderness, I am searching for
 God amongst the beasts, the lions, the
 guinea fowls.
 
 I drove down this highway to watch
 the stars go down, white showers of
 starlight fall to lay a crown around a
 mountain’s head, gone yellow as autumn
 comes, as the winter threatens.
 
 I drove down this highway and ignored
 the road signs and speed limits,
 it’s my heart that tracks the needle,
 going sixty, going eighty, one twenty now
 and still headed west.
 
 I want to watch the sun set,
 I want to see these seas of fire
 burn the bushveldt,
 I want to be there when civilization ends,
 I want to drive this old jalopy into the falling
 halo of the sun.
 
 

Wednesday 6 August 2014

A poem about life and suffering by David Tombale: In spite of us

In spite of us is about looking at the struggles of daily life around the world through the lens of poetry.

In spite of us


In spite of us the days drag on
and the misery slowly grows,
the footsteps on the carpet,
the artillery in the air.

In spite of us a child goes on
in his struggles all alone,
the concrete walls, the stink
of slime, the howls of feral cats.

In spite of us the jungles burn,
the streets turn black and our
people lose their souls.

In spite of us the broken doors,
the screams, in spite of all of us
inside of all us is this yearning
to be free.


Tuesday 5 August 2014

A poem about longing and love by David Tombale: Jazz


There are some people who become as necessary to your wellbeing as the air in your lungs and that’s what Jazz is meant to capture.
 
 
 
Jazz
 
A need for you lingers in the way I write
 the letters of my name, up and down with
 this leaky pen like somehow I could capture
 the momentum that takes me past the cold
 environs of our past,
 like if I run enough I might one day fly past Italy
 and into France,
 but loving you is still the music I wish to play,
 kissing your lips is still like jazz to me,
 a song I play in the jukebox of my mind so often
 I don’t even want to dance but while lying here
 counting ceiling tiles and tracing the outlines
 of my ribs I realize there’re no more ricochets,
 no more loud bangs to do me in,
 lying against this window I breathe a fog of
 damp air so I can write inside the glass,
“Meet me here.’