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"One is at last killed by what one loves violently." --Guy De Maupassant During the nights when I cannot seek the sanctity of sleep,for it does not come over me until the deadly light of daybreak; I listen to the still, small voice calling out from the cracked, crumbling and falling plaster firmament hanging over me-- a proverbial coffin-lid threatening to close in over me, nailed tightly shut with antique copper spikes to keep the good dreams out. I am so often told in tones echoing sad and silent in the O Holy Night, to write the elegy of insanity creeping up from my feet beneath these ***** blankets, seeping, working its way to my throat where lies my stifled cries that engulf the labored breathing as my tender, simple heart threatens to explode. Tossing a pillow against the peeling, painted wall, I utter a course ************ to the weathered, unwashed window by my head that pounds; needing the soothing song-sounds of whiskey, scotch or lukewarm beer to revive my sinking, burning soul as *i lay me down to die, i pray to nothing and embrace the lies* O, the lies... I can scarce recall a time of peace and bliss, laying lonely in your arms, with regret I had to kiss your sour lips perfumed bitter with stale smoke, ***** and other such things like this... ...this nowhere outside goiing, going gone: The Wheel of Misfortune, the agony of armies in retreat, the ****** of the mind, the birth of Jesus, Muhammad, Krishna and the plastic Elvis Presley poking up off your dusty dull-blue dashboard like the other man's ***** you left for mine. Yes, on these and every sleepless forever nights I know, I show that O, still, small voice the things we refuse to see, and maybe after it's all over it will sing myself to sleep.
0
Jun 4, 2010
Jun 4, 2010 at 1:59 AM UTC
O, still, small voice
"One is at last killed by what one loves violently." --Guy De Maupassant During the nights when I cannot seek the sanctity of sleep,for it does not come over me until the deadly light of daybreak; I listen to the still, small voice calling out from the cracked, crumbling and falling plaster firmament hanging over me-- a proverbial coffin-lid threatening to close in over me, nailed tightly shut with antique copper spikes to keep the good dreams out. I am so often told in tones echoing sad and silent in the O Holy Night, to write the elegy of insanity creeping up from my feet beneath these ***** blankets, seeping, working its way to my throat where lies my stifled cries that engulf the labored breathing as my tender, simple heart threatens to explode. Tossing a pillow against the peeling, painted wall, I utter a course ************ to the weathered, unwashed window by my head that pounds; needing the soothing song-sounds of whiskey, scotch or lukewarm beer to revive my sinking, burning soul as *i lay me down to die, i pray to nothing and embrace the lies* O, the lies... I can scarce recall a time of peace and bliss, laying lonely in your arms, with regret I had to kiss your sour lips perfumed bitter with stale smoke, ***** and other such things like this... ...this nowhere outside goiing, going gone: The Wheel of Misfortune, the agony of armies in retreat, the ****** of the mind, the birth of Jesus, Muhammad, Krishna and the plastic Elvis Presley poking up off your dusty dull-blue dashboard like the other man's ***** you left for mine. Yes, on these and every sleepless forever nights I know, I show that O, still, small voice the things we refuse to see, and maybe after it's all over it will sing myself to sleep.
D. Conors (checking my dusty files for a draft that may have a date. I think this was composed in the late 1980's)
Written by
American
Jun 4, 2010
Jun 4, 2010 at 1:59 AM UTC
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