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I. The Boy With The Cuckoo Clock Heart Born with a frozen heart, abandoned in Edinburgh. One kind physician laid her hands upon him, in a bit of medicinal salvation, by placing a cuckoo clock inside his chest. Now an orphan, among peculiar friends: tear-filled flasks, eggs containing memories, and a man with a musical spine. There's but one catch for this boy: his heart is fragile, he must never, ever fall in love. Existence is undoubted. But without this one emotion, can he really live? Love is a bitter token. II. The Girl With Glass Feet "It was a humid night, later to become a hated night." Upon an island sound, feet first, she is slowing turning into glass. By sheer happenstance, she meets a shy boy who lives there with an extreme fear of being touched. As she slowly disappears, she untethers herself from self-pity, by teaching the boy the value of interaction. Inchmeal, he begins to reach out and feels everything she has lost to the night. Love is a bitter token. III. The Snow Child "November was here." A married couple, in Alaskan remote, suffering from one great sadness: no child of their own and unable to talk of it. He's buried by the weight of the outer ice, she's crumbling from inner despair. And so on a rare friendly day trek, they built a child out of snow, outfitted with mittens and scarf. A day later it is gone, remembered only in absentia, yet there appears a beautifully arrayed creature of winter, a little, lissome girl in the woods, hunting with the red fox. In wishing to understand these encounters, the couple come to love the child as their very own daughter. Yet will she ever accept them as they do her? Or see them merely as snowdrops? Figurines frosted over by the harsh landscape they each wander? Love is a bitter token.
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Jun 9, 2020
Jun 9, 2020 at 8:24 PM UTC
Love is a Bitter Token
I. The Boy With The Cuckoo Clock Heart Born with a frozen heart, abandoned in Edinburgh. One kind physician laid her hands upon him, in a bit of medicinal salvation, by placing a cuckoo clock inside his chest. Now an orphan, among peculiar friends: tear-filled flasks, eggs containing memories, and a man with a musical spine. There's but one catch for this boy: his heart is fragile, he must never, ever fall in love. Existence is undoubted. But without this one emotion, can he really live? Love is a bitter token. II. The Girl With Glass Feet "It was a humid night, later to become a hated night." Upon an island sound, feet first, she is slowing turning into glass. By sheer happenstance, she meets a shy boy who lives there with an extreme fear of being touched. As she slowly disappears, she untethers herself from self-pity, by teaching the boy the value of interaction. Inchmeal, he begins to reach out and feels everything she has lost to the night. Love is a bitter token. III. The Snow Child "November was here." A married couple, in Alaskan remote, suffering from one great sadness: no child of their own and unable to talk of it. He's buried by the weight of the outer ice, she's crumbling from inner despair. And so on a rare friendly day trek, they built a child out of snow, outfitted with mittens and scarf. A day later it is gone, remembered only in absentia, yet there appears a beautifully arrayed creature of winter, a little, lissome girl in the woods, hunting with the red fox. In wishing to understand these encounters, the couple come to love the child as their very own daughter. Yet will she ever accept them as they do her? Or see them merely as snowdrops? Figurines frosted over by the harsh landscape they each wander? Love is a bitter token.
BLT's continued challenge - to write a poem using the Merriam-Webster word of the day, lissome. It's in there somewhere.
Carlo-C-Gomez
Written by
56/M/The Exclusion Zone
Jun 9, 2020
Jun 9, 2020 at 8:24 PM UTC
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