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mariadt Sep 2019
The bravest of us all, was indeed
the queen of Carthage. Who all at once,
became a unity of her own.
A woman alone, drowned by the subtle gust
of pain from her fleeing love
gave her own breath, they say,
to pave a holy lineage.
The sword in her sternum the centre of a compass,
and there blew the stench of her
sacrifice to guide her love further adrift.
In her death, she did not require
the ******* of the son of Rome.
His fate swayed between the coasts
of the Tyrrhenian, but hers - a lovely and furious force,
a collision sharper than the
teeth of Scylla, a riot of the elements.
Dido did not sacrifice
her life for the pilgramage of Aeneas,
the ash that was once her skin
returned to the soil of her city, the vapour
of her spirit entwined within the winds.
And although her very being burnt
in glimpses of orange and red, I like to think
that her soul swam besides the vessel
of her downfall. Not to forever be beside
the man of her enticement,
but to surpass the will of fate
and find herself in the sway of the waves.
I like to think
that as she overtook the man and his crew,
into the open arms of beauty and possibility,
knowing the hope
the adventure
that awaited her,
she knew the power of a city
could not be contained within the shell of a man.
mariadt Mar 2023
it was hard when the world went still
but i think a special kind of love bloomed from it
a love i would never have found if i wasn't forced to care for myself
i find myself appreciating the small things far more often
the yellow flowers beneath the kitchen window
the way the light hits the chemistry building in the distance at around 8:30 pm every night
setting the exterior alight
a burning orange that glows just for me

there is an eery stillness of inanimate objects
they sit and stare, waiting to be used
frozen to a surface until brought to life by touch
i think this is how i have let myself live for a while now
coming alive only when desired by another
i think that i will be that other
for myself
for the rest of my days
because if need me, then i will always have purpose
mariadt May 2020
I think a year has passed
since I felt the first flicker of rage.
The spark that forced a home in the tense of my shoulders;
the small of my back; each fragment of my skin that tingles
when it remembers how a mattress can sting.

I watched you tie your laces
and told you I would see you tomorrow,
and I did. The day that followed too.
If I shroud myself in ignorance, I thought,
perhaps I can forget that it was me under your torso that night.

And the shroud kept me safe
for a few days, at least.
But after I saw you for what I didn't know to be the final time,
I reached for a warmth to pull around my shoulders –
and I felt you, for what I knew then, would not be the last.

I tried to teach myself to cope,
but the films I sought resonance from scolded me;
for not being the perfect victim;
for not setting my hatred alight as soon as I saw that look in your eyes;
for telling you I'd missed the embrace I should have resented.

I am angrier than I used to be.
Our friends remain yours, and I moved schools.
There is a cluster of horizons on my thighs, from nights I punish myself for the pain you ignited.
And now it takes just under half a bottle,
to feel with somebody new.
mariadt Jul 2020
linearity— what a concept
you want me to have, so badly
does this desire consume you
that you are unable to differentiate
your description of me

clever
funny
nymphomaniac
i play the game of feigned offence
manipulative?
no, sweet
****** up

there is a way you spit
at my lack of linearity unless
i am rubbing it in circles per
your instruction
underneath your torso
tense in anticipation

if you had seen me as a supplicant to pleasure
this time last year
begging to relish in submission, rather
than recoil in obedience
you would not question the pride i hold
at my ability to ******
mariadt May 2020
I read a story once,
about the Strait of Messina.
And two beautiful women
who made a home between the waves.

The gods and their children
envied the ferocity of the women.
So in one fell swoop,
they snatched the earth from beneath their toes
and banished them to the only place they believed deserved them.
And so it was.

While earth picks at the cracks of its surface,
tearing itself limb from limb,
conflicts in the ocean merely strengthen the wave
soon to return to the rhythm of the sea.

How foolish the gods must have been,
to pour such power and lust
into the wildest weapon of all;
one that could sink its quarrel into the fractures of land they called home – if it so wished.

Men sang fear into their legacies,
the same men that raided villages for kleos
robbed mothers of their children,
and girls of their free-will.

But of course – the women within the waves were the monsters.
mariadt Sep 2019
I remember despising myself that afternoon, when we shared five seats between the eight of us and borrowed collective nostalgia off one another. Not as a feeble attempt to cling onto the recklessness of our youth whilst life bared it's ugly teeth to us one by one, but rather an instinctive need to remember who we once were. The naivety of our shared memories held us as willing captives on those bar stools, pulling us so tightly that our knees touched and we did not notice the absence of seats.

I don't want to be able to explain to you why I cannot remember the things I still laugh about with you all. I am engulfed not by your desire to relive these moments, but somber acceptance that you will never feel quite so alive again. In these moments I find myself able to replace my absence of memory with the image of you lost in delirium of somebody else's reminiscence triggering a drunken mistake you thought missing a long time ago. I follow the movement of your eyes from person to person. How I would **** to be your gaze: omniscient of the past and omnipotent of the table.

I am selfish, I think. Sometimes I wish somebody had ever so gently knocked on my skull and whispered: "wake up, you're going to want to see this." But they didn't, and I hold nothing against it aside from the infrequent desire to have really been seen, and not just accounted for.

I wish I was party to your secret history that will only leave our table of eight when relayed as gin-fuelled anecdotes at parties we are no longer too yong to be expected to attend. And you think I was there, I suppose I was. You see no difference between me and your left and right. I live on intrinsically as an accessory to your glory years, but I relish in the hope that mine are yet to begin.

I have no memory of brushing my hair past my ribs, but I catch a glimpse of the person you saw me to be whenever your phone screen lights up. I will always be able to picture seven heads of hair and the crooks of your neck, even though these days you can’t straighten it without a click or two pink tablets on an empty stomach.

I am selfish, I know. I could relay the dilation of seven pairs of pupils when we all first got high together, but I couldn’t tell you what part of me went numb, even though I know you couldn’t feel your left big toe for three whole hours.

But for now we will sit, and I won't immerse myself in my routine of self-deprecation until I am sure that I remember the seven meals that surrounded me tonight. For now we will smile and share this table that could never be too small, and you will unwittingly drown me in a life I could only be living here, now, and every Christmas to come of which I am party to the past, even though I was never really there at all.
mariadt Nov 2018
The exploration of womanhood,
viewed by a child, who had failed to birth an heir
and was auctioned amidst a war,
to lay beside the man who Lyrnessus heard before it saw,
and felt, before they felt nothing at all.

Plucked from childhood to motherhood,
failed motherhood, into obedience and slavery,
despised by her husband's mother for the absence of life she yearned to grow.
Then veiled in a soft pearlescent,
that blurred, but did not hide, the reason she survived,
and her brothers and husband did not.

Her barren belly proved a blessing when the girls in tents sprouted kleos from their swollen stomachs,
to carry the son of foreigners, bloodthirsty for their native home.
These girls, they are just girls, brainwashed by glory and trauma,
carry children that will slaughter their brothers of blood,
in the name of a woman seen only as a measurement of egotistic revenge.

And what of Briseis?
Aristos Achaion, they cried.
To them, he will always be: the best of the Greeks,
even after Apollo favours the hand of Paris and forges fate to impale the accidental hamartia.
What is her legacy?

Aristos Achaion, they cry.
As the boy who carries his blood rises from the fire and carries forward after his father's body hit the ground.
In response to Homer's Iliad, inspired by Pat Barker's Silence of the Girls
mariadt Apr 2020
I like to watch a plea compile between the furrow of a brow,
like the indents of age that shot across the forehead of Odysseus
as he stood before his father and asked:
This place I've reached, is it truly Ithaca?
On the face of Laertes' child,
longing stung like a bolt from Zeus
wishing to belong within a home once overrun by memory,
now ruled by the shell of a war-torn son.

I see this look as your body drapes over mine,
skin honeyed with pleasure and fatigue.
Your eyes darken into a question you never ask,
tracing the remnants of the pain I felt a year or so ago
scarred into skin sweet only to your touch.
It does not take a sword to wound, and the mind can feel the blood-thirst of a thousand men.

Frequently, I have felt akin to the battleground of Troy,
not the warriors themselves, but the soil beneath their feet
the ground that saw hope die with the sting of metal.
I would be a fool to believe the war does not silently wage on, years after the last sight of a blade.
We lie side by side, and I will try to not disturb you as I toss and turn,
I reach for you but your body, in its coldness, awaits the pyre I pretend is not there.

In their eternal bed carved from life,
I imagine Penelope
wide-eyed and hungry. As the man she waited for
recalls the one-eyed giants
or that sweet, tempestuous song of the Sirens.
And I wonder how he musters the strength to sail by untouched,
forced each night to face the ones that did not return
and worse; the parts of himself he will never feel again.
mariadt Aug 2019
I have consistently felt a fraud in describing myself as 'determined', or 'driven'. Not due to any quarrel with my faith of ability or self-esteem; myself and my worth quite frankly stand side by side, in quietly ferocious agreement of what I can and will achieve. But, for the days that I find myself debilitated by this intruder, inhibition, I seem to find it much easier to succumb to a detour I have been prudently avoiding for the sake of progress. It is these days I cling onto during my most self-critical moments. As this invasive oblivion washes over me, I cannot fathom desire or purpose in anything of passing. The built up flecks of dust that quiver in the dim gap of the curtains adjacent to my bed make me sneeze, and act as an unbearable physical reminder of the overwhelming force that has seized any means of motivation. I bathe myself in a self-pitying despair, noticing my reflection in the crisis act of a drama, then turning off the TV before I can take heed of any resolution. Memory infatuates itself with devastation and regards love as a courteous aftermath of guilt. Then comes this hurtling, unapologetic force of liberation; a rush of self-destruction or anger, it doesn't matter, it is energy and it is mine. It's the only emotion I have experienced so far in my life akin to electricity. Poets write about how being loved by another is electric, a wave of newness whenever their skin brushes against yours, becoming real and sincere as it travels through your nervous system and synchronises the flow within your veins to their power source. That is until this surge of hunger rises in my throat, begging for an action. Passivity sinks deep, I come to terms that it will reignite, but for now I find myself enamoured with a need to create; to create beauty in my surroundings. This is the drive and determination I had inadvertently deprived myself of; steered by passion and leaving no trail, because there does not have to be material evidence for progress. It may falter into a wandering delirium, but I cannot describe to you the beauty seeped in knowledge of return.
mariadt Oct 2019
did it make you feel
closer
to me?

my breath
caught between you and that broken mattress
the one we flipped and turned
and slept on like kids
pillows at the wrong end
dreams left wandering

in your eyes
there was this surge
a rage
filled with possibility
in the absence of my free will
my body
immovable under you knees
my words
lost
in the ringing of desire
bouncing
back
and forth
defending the sudden deafness
of your senses

you are now
closer to me
whether that was indeed your intention
you trace me
despite purposeful lack of communication
i feel the weight of your breath
and the sting of your torso
when i lay very still
or grasp at my sheets
as the sun rises
occupying the loneliest single bed i've ever known
since that night
when you dictated my fate
and i lay
counting the planes that flew overhead
until it was over
mariadt Nov 2020
Before I choked the air with weightless comfort,
I felt the buoyancy of unrequited love;

this heaviness of life so unfamiliar to me.
I have only ever seen the laments of the living, never touched,

and how their faces distort in a twist uglier than the wind
that carries ash and soul to rest.

How ignorant to believe that my ferocity was by chance,
the queen of Carthage built her demise

to loom over the love of her city.
Very quickly, I could tell no difference between the arch of

her spine and that of a warrior's. How naive of me
to have felt proud, as she used me to gaze upon

her legacy. I could not see the content in her eyes, and it was too late
when I felt a piece of me splinter and become one

with her sternum. If I could cry out, please know I would.
I crush my anguish into flame and warp the vapour of

her being to wipe your tears but you choke.
The only solace I can offer is the gentle caress of her spirit

as I carry her, as if she is Moses and I the Nile,
passing through to wrestle Hades for the reins of Hell.
The death of Dido in Virgil's Aeneid from the perspective of the funeral pyre.
mariadt Nov 2018
It’s the silence of a room
Combined with the absence of rationality
That dips a finger into my brain
And swirls the chemicals until they overflow

Two states of inanimate nothingness
Allow my body to drown
But I don’t want to admit
That nothing mixed with everything, debilitates my very being
mariadt Nov 2018
Stars flood the room
When your tongue filled with the knowledge I kissed into you
Passes the nerve
That makes me moan thistles and thorns
You plant seeds beneath my pores
And my body blossoms
When you shower my skin with love
mariadt Nov 2018
On both of my arms, above the elbow and beneath the shoulder
Are nail dent sized scars
Scattered
Littered
Protruding from my skin

They are nothing of pride or honour
But chronological constellations, forming diagrams of directions
For the next butcher to try their hand

Even my blood and veins carry a stubbornness that not even a scalpel can dissect
They refuse help and will not admit defeat
Until my body is burning and my lungs are lurching for a breath that will not keep me up at night

And just like that
They flow
mariadt Feb 2019
Your condemnation
of hands around my throat,
swept my consciousness underneath your pillow
and let my body drift arount your word.

On more than one occasion,
I was excited by the attention you gave my worth
and let my achievement dance around your tongue,
my belonging hung off of every word you offered.

Hands behind your back,
you choked the ambition from my throat
and pulled me closer with every tongue that uttered the four syllables of my name,
until they forgot how to fit me into a sentence.

Twice I frayed the knot you tied around my neck and down my back,
and at my strongest, you recalled the crease in my side that made me double over in laughter until it hurt,
and it hurt.

For the best part of what I thought to be my best days,
you forced my head to stay above the water so that you could balance on my shoulders,
and see your world from a pedastal,
while I drowned, and saw it as my only support.
mariadt Apr 2020
for a little while
i felt as though i had gotten away with something
very large
a flesh eating habit
that had taken bites out my thigh
to subdue the stinging in my head
mariadt May 2020
When a rose does fester in the soil that kept her sweet,
Lilies and hydrangea left unscathed,
Should the hand that caressed her petals soft
Be plucked from the wrist it is rooted upon?
Were the fingers that introduced the rose to the sun,
To blame for the torrent that gave too much?

All the rain knows to do is pour; Zeus taught his sons his rage
And his daughters to consume.
So the rose did what she was told,
She submerged herself in the downpour of fury
Absorbing all that would brighten her beauty,
For what is the purpose of a rose, if it is not choked by its own glory?

— The End —