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an evening, a morning, a coughing grandfather sighing with all the weariness of a dimming afternoon. raining, windy, the old flower-tree of grandmothers tap-tap-tapping against the window. late spring roses dropping dew and dropping petals lodging their greenish stem-thorns in boiling bloodstreams hooking their way into the red-thick muscles of hearts biting paler lips and weaker tongues, signing songs of dusk and coughing, coughing in the afternoon in their shallow slumbers of evenings. call on me weakly, carry me not into the evening of love, dimming lamps and fleeting, snoring breaths call on holy mothers with no more silence than the tap-tap-tapping of those flowered grandmother trees. a morning, an evening, parallels of forced breaths and sighing leaf-whispers, the childish way of half-falling off beds, shallow, deep, ragged, grumbling inhalations of neveragain places, dreams of highlands and weepings of meadows and woodsmoke in summers. weep not for life, weep not for death, weep not for the salty tears in your mouth weep silent, weep quiet, weep beautiful and stoic, weep as pretty as those flowered window-tapping trees in wind and rain, bite your pale rose-lips like those greenish stem-thorns. and in the morning, and in the evening, sleep deep, sleep deep, sleep deep but do not weep.
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May 3, 2015
May 3, 2015 at 8:54 AM UTC
a morning, an evening
an evening, a morning, a coughing grandfather sighing with all the weariness of a dimming afternoon. raining, windy, the old flower-tree of grandmothers tap-tap-tapping against the window. late spring roses dropping dew and dropping petals lodging their greenish stem-thorns in boiling bloodstreams hooking their way into the red-thick muscles of hearts biting paler lips and weaker tongues, signing songs of dusk and coughing, coughing in the afternoon in their shallow slumbers of evenings. call on me weakly, carry me not into the evening of love, dimming lamps and fleeting, snoring breaths call on holy mothers with no more silence than the tap-tap-tapping of those flowered grandmother trees. a morning, an evening, parallels of forced breaths and sighing leaf-whispers, the childish way of half-falling off beds, shallow, deep, ragged, grumbling inhalations of neveragain places, dreams of highlands and weepings of meadows and woodsmoke in summers. weep not for life, weep not for death, weep not for the salty tears in your mouth weep silent, weep quiet, weep beautiful and stoic, weep as pretty as those flowered window-tapping trees in wind and rain, bite your pale rose-lips like those greenish stem-thorns. and in the morning, and in the evening, sleep deep, sleep deep, sleep deep but do not weep.
gracen
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May 3, 2015
May 3, 2015 at 8:54 AM UTC
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