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Starlit nights bring a sense of tininess. The vast soot-stained cloak of the sky, pierced with so many tiny scintillating spots of vim opalescent flares, is a heavy intoxicant. It contains a thing most panache. A girlish teetotaler beside me says, "We're like those stars, distantly inflamed, lost in a void of what we cannot know." She is most apt in her contrivance. I wish to be castellated, terraced with Byzantine buttresses and towers-tops. I want a portcullis for my portico that is made mostly out of gold, an inner bailey where the stars can sleep and the wine may flow. I want the wine most metaphysical, the type that flows and churns, perning inside the inner sanctum of the mind.
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Sep 28, 2012
Sep 28, 2012 at 2:04 PM UTC
The beginning of a longer poem
Starlit nights bring a sense of tininess. The vast soot-stained cloak of the sky, pierced with so many tiny scintillating spots of vim opalescent flares, is a heavy intoxicant. It contains a thing most panache. A girlish teetotaler beside me says, "We're like those stars, distantly inflamed, lost in a void of what we cannot know." She is most apt in her contrivance. I wish to be castellated, terraced with Byzantine buttresses and towers-tops. I want a portcullis for my portico that is made mostly out of gold, an inner bailey where the stars can sleep and the wine may flow. I want the wine most metaphysical, the type that flows and churns, perning inside the inner sanctum of the mind.
christopher-howard-gorrie
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Sep 28, 2012
Sep 28, 2012 at 2:04 PM UTC
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