Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
. Hello    **archangel, fallen goddess behind my morgue.     Whose complexion equaled the moon, craters and abysses,     cascading like salt on an empty**     wound. **With the crosshairs of nicotine a mirage on her cracked lips;** “Leave me,     lowly poet, Your pity is unbecoming. I am the 13th fallen sister,     so linger here no longer.” “Death is an old friend,     I fear not his company, nor his demise.” **I’ve never seen such eyes; glass-stained, divine & unpredictable.** “I’ll **** you.” “Darling, I’m already dead.” **Her monologues could summon the dead, she preached of the lovers who bore no fruit and the heartless that lay eternal in the eyes of her dalliance. I’d often find myself yearning at the pebbles at her gravestone, impatient, to be graced by her ink soul and**  rhapsodic  presence. “Are you my friend, poet?” “No, I am much more.” **And for centuries of cracked dawns and folded nights, shallow moons & crippled suns, we’d meet--- poet to god, at her morgue.** “Poet, why must the most beautiful people die?” **She once asked me. Alured, I answered:** “When you’re in a garden, which flowers do you pick?” “...The most beautiful ones.” **I’d spend my seconds ‘neath the gallows, among the bones of her brethren, all had fallen before her, from the house of god. I bargained my soul with Ursula, my sins with Lupus,     I ignored their tempertantrums & discord. That very evening I stitched a universe, upon her shoulder-blades.** “What are these?” “Wings.”
0
Jun 4, 2015
Jun 4, 2015 at 8:28 PM UTC
The Morgue.
. Hello    **archangel, fallen goddess behind my morgue.     Whose complexion equaled the moon, craters and abysses,     cascading like salt on an empty**     wound. **With the crosshairs of nicotine a mirage on her cracked lips;** “Leave me,     lowly poet, Your pity is unbecoming. I am the 13th fallen sister,     so linger here no longer.” “Death is an old friend,     I fear not his company, nor his demise.” **I’ve never seen such eyes; glass-stained, divine & unpredictable.** “I’ll **** you.” “Darling, I’m already dead.” **Her monologues could summon the dead, she preached of the lovers who bore no fruit and the heartless that lay eternal in the eyes of her dalliance. I’d often find myself yearning at the pebbles at her gravestone, impatient, to be graced by her ink soul and**  rhapsodic  presence. “Are you my friend, poet?” “No, I am much more.” **And for centuries of cracked dawns and folded nights, shallow moons & crippled suns, we’d meet--- poet to god, at her morgue.** “Poet, why must the most beautiful people die?” **She once asked me. Alured, I answered:** “When you’re in a garden, which flowers do you pick?” “...The most beautiful ones.” **I’d spend my seconds ‘neath the gallows, among the bones of her brethren, all had fallen before her, from the house of god. I bargained my soul with Ursula, my sins with Lupus,     I ignored their tempertantrums & discord. That very evening I stitched a universe, upon her shoulder-blades.** “What are these?” “Wings.”
This was a commission, for an old friend. I'd already used one of my popular sayings in my other poems. © Copywrited
Skaidrum
Written by
Jun 4, 2015
Jun 4, 2015 at 8:28 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem