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The Man who never brought hell home was wise beyond his years. He suffered long but lived it loud imprisoned by his fears – and those were thus: that those before him came and went with nothing left but pain and name and more of same who went and came from seed in soil to root and stem, to fallen branches, time again: a family tree to fuel the flames on cold and lonely nights. Embodied by the coat of arms he wore, this Last to hold his name, he swore, – in vain, perhaps – to stand at ease no more. The Man who never brought hell home encased himself in spite and spirits; ghosts of generations gone, encroaching deep within. He sought for answers, fought for reasons, questioned why his bloodline grew to fall and rise and curse and **** with secret lies and stolen rights and ties he could not sight. The Man who never brought hell home had died the moment he arrived – or so he thought – he always said, with eyes in search of something else . . . perhaps that love that once he’d felt, despite the years of crime he lead. And what is left, again, but holes to fill with buried woes and broken war-like games and shattered dreams and darker still yet, nothing. Nothing, as it always seems. Not a sliver shall him by, it pass, of hope, of love, of peace . . . Not until the very last, this Man who never brought hell home. And so, this Man, with blind belief declared his story would be brief, atoning for the sins he cast in other’s lives in years that passed, and spent his days in self destruction, free from want, control, and need, biding time with bated breath like men, before, who longed for death, entrained in mind and soul, until one day, the hell that never came, came whole. For every man, and son of man that once there was, who sharpened knives and counted tools and cleaned his guns, and polished pride, his moral compass by his side, who now lives to wake and wakes to die: repelling faith, repelling truth, and cussing lies, this Man has died.
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Jul 10, 2015
Jul 10, 2015 at 7:25 PM UTC
FOR EVERY MAN
The Man who never brought hell home was wise beyond his years. He suffered long but lived it loud imprisoned by his fears – and those were thus: that those before him came and went with nothing left but pain and name and more of same who went and came from seed in soil to root and stem, to fallen branches, time again: a family tree to fuel the flames on cold and lonely nights. Embodied by the coat of arms he wore, this Last to hold his name, he swore, – in vain, perhaps – to stand at ease no more. The Man who never brought hell home encased himself in spite and spirits; ghosts of generations gone, encroaching deep within. He sought for answers, fought for reasons, questioned why his bloodline grew to fall and rise and curse and **** with secret lies and stolen rights and ties he could not sight. The Man who never brought hell home had died the moment he arrived – or so he thought – he always said, with eyes in search of something else . . . perhaps that love that once he’d felt, despite the years of crime he lead. And what is left, again, but holes to fill with buried woes and broken war-like games and shattered dreams and darker still yet, nothing. Nothing, as it always seems. Not a sliver shall him by, it pass, of hope, of love, of peace . . . Not until the very last, this Man who never brought hell home. And so, this Man, with blind belief declared his story would be brief, atoning for the sins he cast in other’s lives in years that passed, and spent his days in self destruction, free from want, control, and need, biding time with bated breath like men, before, who longed for death, entrained in mind and soul, until one day, the hell that never came, came whole. For every man, and son of man that once there was, who sharpened knives and counted tools and cleaned his guns, and polished pride, his moral compass by his side, who now lives to wake and wakes to die: repelling faith, repelling truth, and cussing lies, this Man has died.
© Tamara Natividad www.pisceanesque.com Written 11 May, 2013 -
pisceanesque
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Jul 10, 2015
Jul 10, 2015 at 7:25 PM UTC
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