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I was given, at my first birthday party, a gift sublime, a lovely, lush garden I played among its fonts and flowers, traded baseball cards with Atlas and Athena, rolled in high grass with iridescent dragons Then one fine day through leaflets high, I spied a fat juicy fig, haloed by Summer sun The tree was poison, I knew, its sweet fruit most likely bad as well, but in my arrogance I climbed the trunk, got tangled in its branches I lost control, lost something never truly held, and fell, through viney snarls and vicious thorns Fell farther than I ever rose, to putrid death, moldered slime beneath the canopy of verdant paradise on gentle hillside above I crawled about in mud and earthen warrens Slowly, year by year, learned to walk again But arrogant I remained—had not my lesson learned, and so I doubled-down, made mockery of this chance for redemption All the sweet virgins did I **** and teach our children sin, in crystalline waters I did shat on mulched fields, amber and green, with cigarette butts and baggies blowing listless on Autumn winds When Winter finally came, as winters must, to **** off weakened souls, and make the garden ready for new attendants, I did not learn, I did not take the blame... It's Him, I cried, I have not power to do this! But then my youngest daughter sobbed She watched, sadly, out clouded, grimy windows and, looking up at my limpid, sullen eyes crawled into my arms one last, lonely time to face what I could not... Behold, the Silent Spring
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Aug 19, 2014
Aug 19, 2014 at 11:16 AM UTC
Original Sin
I was given, at my first birthday party, a gift sublime, a lovely, lush garden I played among its fonts and flowers, traded baseball cards with Atlas and Athena, rolled in high grass with iridescent dragons Then one fine day through leaflets high, I spied a fat juicy fig, haloed by Summer sun The tree was poison, I knew, its sweet fruit most likely bad as well, but in my arrogance I climbed the trunk, got tangled in its branches I lost control, lost something never truly held, and fell, through viney snarls and vicious thorns Fell farther than I ever rose, to putrid death, moldered slime beneath the canopy of verdant paradise on gentle hillside above I crawled about in mud and earthen warrens Slowly, year by year, learned to walk again But arrogant I remained—had not my lesson learned, and so I doubled-down, made mockery of this chance for redemption All the sweet virgins did I **** and teach our children sin, in crystalline waters I did shat on mulched fields, amber and green, with cigarette butts and baggies blowing listless on Autumn winds When Winter finally came, as winters must, to **** off weakened souls, and make the garden ready for new attendants, I did not learn, I did not take the blame... It's Him, I cried, I have not power to do this! But then my youngest daughter sobbed She watched, sadly, out clouded, grimy windows and, looking up at my limpid, sullen eyes crawled into my arms one last, lonely time to face what I could not... Behold, the Silent Spring
Rivenheart
Written by
Aug 19, 2014
Aug 19, 2014 at 11:16 AM UTC
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