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I came from the old times dancing on a hillside which toppled into lakes, tipping down into endless valleys of green and blue, my hands in the palms of a stranger. I kissed him under fog as the oil rigs skittered across the water, finches swooping to protect their young. As a laughing melody hummed between us, electric and satisfied, I felt our hands shining so brightly in the darkness around. I sang an old song in the woods and it echoed back to me. Roots run deep and wild. At first they lay quiet, toes buried in moss, and I wondered if the leaf felt my touch as silken, smooth as water, or jagged as the stones beneath it. And then they were livid, raging, boiling under the surface as I stood above screaming water, churning the earth from the edges of the river, eating away at the land I was bound to. Desolate and sodden, I faltered on the borders of my home town, longing for the heaviness of salt to catch on my tongue once more. And then I changed, or grew, and forgot what it was I had lost. Now, looking down upon empty forests, I no longer remember the song they are singing, yet I hear the scent of a dead earth, the sound of a mushroom breaking at the stem. Lying on lamenting sands, I feel a droplet land on my cheek and, for a moment, feel a whisper of home. Carrying my feet from the meadows, I'll mutter softly, singing my melody alone.
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Aug 25, 2019
Aug 25, 2019 at 5:00 AM UTC
Breaking at the Stem
I came from the old times dancing on a hillside which toppled into lakes, tipping down into endless valleys of green and blue, my hands in the palms of a stranger. I kissed him under fog as the oil rigs skittered across the water, finches swooping to protect their young. As a laughing melody hummed between us, electric and satisfied, I felt our hands shining so brightly in the darkness around. I sang an old song in the woods and it echoed back to me. Roots run deep and wild. At first they lay quiet, toes buried in moss, and I wondered if the leaf felt my touch as silken, smooth as water, or jagged as the stones beneath it. And then they were livid, raging, boiling under the surface as I stood above screaming water, churning the earth from the edges of the river, eating away at the land I was bound to. Desolate and sodden, I faltered on the borders of my home town, longing for the heaviness of salt to catch on my tongue once more. And then I changed, or grew, and forgot what it was I had lost. Now, looking down upon empty forests, I no longer remember the song they are singing, yet I hear the scent of a dead earth, the sound of a mushroom breaking at the stem. Lying on lamenting sands, I feel a droplet land on my cheek and, for a moment, feel a whisper of home. Carrying my feet from the meadows, I'll mutter softly, singing my melody alone.
scarletniamh
Written by
Aug 25, 2019
Aug 25, 2019 at 5:00 AM UTC
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