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Viridian Sep 2018
As she shook, smoke wisped from her cracked puckered lips

Spirits soared up and down, drowning her somber with a sting and burn

Denying her lungs the right to heave and supply, necessary to sustain life

Refusing her soul the right to feel and sympathize, necessary to live for the sake of him
Viridian Sep 2018
her
Her body is a temple buried underneath lahar and regret
Her love is a garden unattended and left to burn
Her eyes are a midnight sky dominated by rainclouds
Her happiness is dictated by a bottle and Marlboro Reds
Her heart is an old love song grown bitter to the ear
She has no regard for herself
With no one to worship her temple
To tend to her garden
To gaze upon her sky
To replace her vice with virtue
To sing her song
All she could do now is wait for yet another to come around
And hope for the best that they'll be able to make her feel beautiful
Viridian Aug 2018
I like using fire as an analogy, a metaphor, the punchline for most of my poetry

I often describe the heart as if it were a hearth, while its beats were the heat it radiated

I see it—sometimes a roaring flame, often times a steady bonfire, other times a dying match.

It could scorch you if you aren't careful, but it also provides you warmth and light. A sort of clarity. Comfort.

It allows some of the toughest things on Earth to become malleable and mold itself into something new

It turns the bitter into sweet, the biting cold to teeth-sinking warm, the tasteless into delicious

It allows the spirit to soar with columns of smoke to the heavens while the body becomes fertilizer for daisies

It takes beauty, and burns it black and ash to the point of no recognition

Fire is so precious, and dangerous, and essential, and beautiful, and ugly—just like this hearth of a heart

Tended and regulated well, it's the greatest discovery of mankind

Allowed to burn out quick, or spread out of control, then it's the accident that burned down London in 1666

I believe I should end this by saying: find someone who will tend to your hearth as if it were their last dying light, instead of a person who would simply roast marshmallows with forest fires
is this the part where i say that i'm a bit burnt out?
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