“What type of poem am I?” I am as formless as the clouds, and as elegiac as the silence, in the itinerary of the noise.
I am not a classic written by the author, God. The rhythms of my verses are supplied by the parable of their tears.
I am not in me, though I abide within myself. I am but a colour, whose colours have worn away.
Maybe I was written as an ethical effect of modern art. Or maybe I was not written but just replicated from the lives of others.
I wish I could read the critics’ minds. Is it true that a poem cannot read anyone? I loathe the way they recite me, pretending to understand me.
Maybe I am the monologue of my rhymes. Or maybe I am the narrative of my own life.
However much they hate me, I am that poetry they can’t write. I am the phantom of the world crawling, with a rose in the hand in the boulevard of the thorns.
However much they praise me, I am only a drop of verse drawn up by time to become the formless clouds in the wilderness of the literary sky.
O Poet! O my maker! What type of poem am I? O strangers! O my readers! What sort of poem am I?
I wish I could read myself and discern my spirit. Is it true that a poem cannot read a poem?
“Am I a poem?” or am I just a rhymed hoax?
This cyclic curiosity goes on eternally. I am lost in a synthesis between the dualism of my readers and the monism of my maker.
No one knows what it is like to be a poem. No one knows how vague its core is. There is nothing as genuine as me. There is nothing as deceptive as me.