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Like a candle once bright, its wax pooled at the base, the flame leans low, then gives itself to night. So love, left silent, keeps the shape of warmth long after light is gone— a room grown cold around what used to burn. What once was sweet grew hard upon the tongue; promises thinned to words no longer kept. What remained was not silence, but the weight of it: two chairs facing one another, and nothing crossing the room.
0
4d ago
May 31, 2026 at 1:00 PM UTC
Love Left Silent
Like a candle once bright, its wax pooled at the base, the flame leans low, then gives itself to night. So love, left silent, keeps the shape of warmth long after light is gone— a room grown cold around what used to burn. What once was sweet grew hard upon the tongue; promises thinned to words no longer kept. What remained was not silence, but the weight of it: two chairs facing one another, and nothing crossing the room.
The poem compares a dying relationship to a candle whose flame lowers and gives itself to night. Though the light is gone, the shape of warmth remains, leaving behind a cold room haunted by what once burned. As love grows silent, sweetness hardens, and promises lose their weight.
MarkD
Written by
61/M/Daytona Florida
4d ago
May 31, 2026 at 1:00 PM UTC
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