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We look past meaning, still blinded and dreaming of riches, Which leads us toward track homes and condos, cruel chapels While the hapless live in the world’s mansion: the most open convent And what we don’t see is sometimes the crux of our content The streets offer a morose array of the discarded They, the wise and most wretched, who humbly suffer Are perhaps the truest, comely Christian-hearted men and women They bless the day as they pray to the ground Where cracks become twisted crucifixes upon which The most selfless are displayed for public derision. Ironic is the formula written with precision on the tome of our existence Iconic moments of pain bloom into the banks that loan out inspiration Each electron is one thousand eight hundred thirty-sixth of its proton And this proportion, though grandly and numbingly unimpressive Is the basis upon which we live and whir and spin as matter does Coincidence is a lie in the face of the certainties within what we cannot see For, though one decade separated the births of Crockett and Bowie And, though their names might conjure knives larger than pockets And hats, stolen from conquered bandit-faced creatures’ tail ends It was on the same 1836 day that they evolved from flesh into legend. Joy is a strange element that seems to come and go without a plot Yet some know how to wield their emotions with little thought As if joy and love were as a hammer worn neatly at the belt So, I yearn for one day to grasp a handle in a hand that has never felt The shape of certainties, once discerned as chance and circumstance And when the hammer falls, I hope it breaks a twisted crack into my heart I hope to, from my reflections, thus bereft, Find some perfection hidden deep in death As one might decipher, through foreign language, A light that warms within a sonnet In a way, I think my life depends upon it.
0
Feb 19, 2013
Feb 19, 2013 at 4:35 PM UTC
The Hammer
We look past meaning, still blinded and dreaming of riches, Which leads us toward track homes and condos, cruel chapels While the hapless live in the world’s mansion: the most open convent And what we don’t see is sometimes the crux of our content The streets offer a morose array of the discarded They, the wise and most wretched, who humbly suffer Are perhaps the truest, comely Christian-hearted men and women They bless the day as they pray to the ground Where cracks become twisted crucifixes upon which The most selfless are displayed for public derision. Ironic is the formula written with precision on the tome of our existence Iconic moments of pain bloom into the banks that loan out inspiration Each electron is one thousand eight hundred thirty-sixth of its proton And this proportion, though grandly and numbingly unimpressive Is the basis upon which we live and whir and spin as matter does Coincidence is a lie in the face of the certainties within what we cannot see For, though one decade separated the births of Crockett and Bowie And, though their names might conjure knives larger than pockets And hats, stolen from conquered bandit-faced creatures’ tail ends It was on the same 1836 day that they evolved from flesh into legend. Joy is a strange element that seems to come and go without a plot Yet some know how to wield their emotions with little thought As if joy and love were as a hammer worn neatly at the belt So, I yearn for one day to grasp a handle in a hand that has never felt The shape of certainties, once discerned as chance and circumstance And when the hammer falls, I hope it breaks a twisted crack into my heart I hope to, from my reflections, thus bereft, Find some perfection hidden deep in death As one might decipher, through foreign language, A light that warms within a sonnet In a way, I think my life depends upon it.
This poem is comprised of 1836 characters.
devin-weaver
Written by
American
Feb 19, 2013
Feb 19, 2013 at 4:35 PM UTC
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