Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
just a girl with an odd skin disease should i cry should i laugh opera houses and speckled faces with masks on covering your face in a banal masquerade while you're looking like an actor with an  odd skin disease perfect in  your on ways with glitter on your face no one else sees as a music box nearby sings a dreamless tune opens up the case with dangling jewels for you to caress on your skin the last rays of the sun touches upon you from the windowpanes, allowing the radiance within shine for one last moment until night falls and the dangerous erroticism of the sun finally releases as it nears the horizon like the necessary evils of the full moon as it draws in the horrors of the night a child you once were with less worries now beckons the dark in your jewels glittering in the dark stranded, alone and yet free of the banal masquerade. maybe they'll watch you maybe they won't, in your parade towards the clouds.
0
Nov 24, 2012
Nov 24, 2012 at 2:28 PM UTC
Norah
just a girl with an odd skin disease should i cry should i laugh opera houses and speckled faces with masks on covering your face in a banal masquerade while you're looking like an actor with an  odd skin disease perfect in  your on ways with glitter on your face no one else sees as a music box nearby sings a dreamless tune opens up the case with dangling jewels for you to caress on your skin the last rays of the sun touches upon you from the windowpanes, allowing the radiance within shine for one last moment until night falls and the dangerous erroticism of the sun finally releases as it nears the horizon like the necessary evils of the full moon as it draws in the horrors of the night a child you once were with less worries now beckons the dark in your jewels glittering in the dark stranded, alone and yet free of the banal masquerade. maybe they'll watch you maybe they won't, in your parade towards the clouds.
waveringtags
Written by
Nov 24, 2012
Nov 24, 2012 at 2:28 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem