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I walked into a cafe on a sunny afternoon, I had a white pen in my pocket, and on the gift counter I found, A red sheet of paper, yellow hearts painted on the corners, I decided I'd write a poem, and I sat there two hours; I had a secret the color of midnight dark, I spilled it in white ink and the words turned gray; Then I stretched and I smiled, And looked at my mischief glow in the evening light; The red and yellow beamed, and between them, My poem, now free, danced in delight. When I got home that night, once again I pulled out the sheet, The glare of my room was bright, And here it dawned that this was a scandal in white! The words stood tall, bold and proud, hoisting my secret to everyone's sight; Even the yellow hearts felt shy, and they melted into the red, Now it was a paper of new color with words that should not have been said; But then, I was distracted by the night breeze that crept in, It tickled a wicked smile from somewhere within, Upon my poem, I gazed sideways, Truth be told, it never looked better, So be it - if this was a sin. I shut the window against the breeze, And then I allowed good sense to prevail; I lit a candle on my table, and held the poem in a roll, The flame spilled into it and my secret waltzed bright orange; I nodded in silence, for truth be told, The poem never looked better than this flaming, liquid gold. I dusted the char, before I shut the lights; As I fell behind sleep's heavy curtain that night, I dreamt my own room and opened the wooden closet, And there it was - as if it always belonged, Red paper, yellow hearts, and the gray words of that poem I wrote; A thrill rose in my eyes and crashed back in little needles; I didn't quite remember, when I woke up next morning, If I picked up that burning candle and set fire in my dream.
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Dec 27, 2017
Dec 27, 2017 at 3:07 PM UTC
The Burning Candle Knows
I walked into a cafe on a sunny afternoon, I had a white pen in my pocket, and on the gift counter I found, A red sheet of paper, yellow hearts painted on the corners, I decided I'd write a poem, and I sat there two hours; I had a secret the color of midnight dark, I spilled it in white ink and the words turned gray; Then I stretched and I smiled, And looked at my mischief glow in the evening light; The red and yellow beamed, and between them, My poem, now free, danced in delight. When I got home that night, once again I pulled out the sheet, The glare of my room was bright, And here it dawned that this was a scandal in white! The words stood tall, bold and proud, hoisting my secret to everyone's sight; Even the yellow hearts felt shy, and they melted into the red, Now it was a paper of new color with words that should not have been said; But then, I was distracted by the night breeze that crept in, It tickled a wicked smile from somewhere within, Upon my poem, I gazed sideways, Truth be told, it never looked better, So be it - if this was a sin. I shut the window against the breeze, And then I allowed good sense to prevail; I lit a candle on my table, and held the poem in a roll, The flame spilled into it and my secret waltzed bright orange; I nodded in silence, for truth be told, The poem never looked better than this flaming, liquid gold. I dusted the char, before I shut the lights; As I fell behind sleep's heavy curtain that night, I dreamt my own room and opened the wooden closet, And there it was - as if it always belonged, Red paper, yellow hearts, and the gray words of that poem I wrote; A thrill rose in my eyes and crashed back in little needles; I didn't quite remember, when I woke up next morning, If I picked up that burning candle and set fire in my dream.
Written by
M/New Delhi
Dec 27, 2017
Dec 27, 2017 at 3:07 PM UTC
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