The tides of my time Turned over themselves Again and again As the trees of thought Rotted in the night of my mind, And I was lost and without The will to raise my wings, Blind to the fact That the sun might rise again,
Only she who wore Those moonlight eyes Washed with the blue of the sea Could sharpen the horizon And expose its potential In her milky twilight glow,
For the moon hung lazily By some rusted hook in the sky Wavering with a subtle chill From the quiet wisps of evening wind,
The moon was silent and seeing, Overlooking the stillness of it all, Perched atop some invisible stand Cemented in the stars, Untouchable by hands Far from greatness,
Forever strung from the heavens By some apparatus of fishing line, The moon listened to my sorrows And cradled them gently So as not to damage them, And let me cry away The carvings of indecency I had etched into the loose Fibers of my being,
She was my moon, Grandly lit in the ink of my mind, So desperately trying to light her own, And she called me her angel Whose feathers were always ruffled, Soaked wet with the weight of our dusks, But it seemed to me Her brilliance never flickered or dimmed, Never blurred or shrugged Until the day she sighed, And rolled her eyes And cut my wings away.