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Beneath burdened skies,
over boiled earth,
breathing of toxic mystique;
we or I,
all the same die-
-the world won't end, regardless.
upon reflection, the universe is a suicidal *******
wrought
torn, painfully borne
a sea of flame named Love.
I could rhyme each word, every one absurd,
Licking and kicking and assiduously drinking myself down
nonsensically.

But that is not I, who loves the dis-
-jointed feeling of reading people;
those broken souls,
poetic blows,
heralds of laughter and pain.
-spoke:
"You are king. That means something."

"Does it?" I asked aloud, wondering if:
"It must," my sister asserted. I-
-disagreed with a flattering hum,
rejoining, "So you say-"
-for:
"So I do. So did Mother and Father. So did your children."
"So did your wife and citizens, too."

I knew, "I know," and she laughed bellsome tears,
sounding of rain and lilies o'er my favourite bridge.
They splattered the Eos, overlooking our city, run red by the dawn.

"Hah!"

My sister's favourite was Nyx, a shadowed thing-
-brick and mortar, and rarely touched;
it sat far below, and stretched half as much;
a bridge of ill repute.

"Do you think it true?"
"Your honesty is real?"
"Always and forever," my sister replied,
half in and out my ear.

I let loose a lax breath, streaks ran down my face,
dawning red, featherlight lace.

Nyx was known for dying, darkened by the river,
furiously cleansing itself,
flooding tearful currents towards our city dear.
Dead bodies were common sights from those swept off its thick;
our people, dead bodies, gone like morning mist.

'How terribly morose on such a blessed day.'

I thought of other things, roughly hewn.
I sighed, and my sister sighed too.
Together we looked upon our city,
feeling old, far from youth.

I loved our people, like I did my bridge.
The world went quiet, the world went dim…

"If king I must be, then rule I shall," and my sister-
-ever clever
said:
"Very well,"
"What is your first-"
"Edict?" I asked, and wonder oh wonder,
for I spoke first and fast,
she was rent speechless, wordless phantom of the…

"Hah," I laughed,
"My sister is dead!"

Like Mother and Father, my wife,
and them:
My children many.

Down I looked, upon my ruin.

Further down sat Nyx, and below my feet Eos,
Both of them strong, unlike I,
king of a broken people,
leaping without fear.
Red and splattered bone,
I-
Fun fact: this is the longest poem I've ever penned. It's not great, but I'm attached to the idea of its existence.
The bone breaks loudly,
Outdone only by her son.
Still, the woman strides.
This is the highest truth:
Pleasure, tender and sweet;
love, warm and complete;
either or neither, both or extremes;
with two hands or none,
'neath moonlight and sun,
for all and for one,
consent sits supreme.
"No," is always enough.
Information suppression and oppression go hand in hand,
The tools of tyrants and bullies the world over.

They've no care for your triumphs, your ennui, or your rage-
Die and weep, laugh and smile, we're all the same;
just another cog in Their machine of conflict and capitalism.
-there are always more children.

A vicious cycle repeated throughout history:
"We the People!" given life anew.

The answer is obvious; the right and wrong plain:
Black Lives Matter, among other equally clear issues.
Yet, people have chosen a side bereft of love;
a misaligned mob, uninformed and angry.

It's a migraine - a growing pain and self-surgery more so, this division
where sons and daughters and those undefined rail against 'tradition'.

Mayhaps that's the due,
The price of our condition...
Or so I might have said, once upon a time.
I've since learned to live, and better learned to rhyme.

The fight is continuous, and the price always paid.
I'd rather it us, a generation razed.
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