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Sepals to skeletal fingers, to yellowed limbs sunken She watched the moon, all hazy and small. So rugged its whites as sheets with times stained Watched it on she did. (So dusty the skin) Oh, I had loved you Tens a monsoon’s rosy day; had loved you dry, as the suns danced and danced— So shallow the gaze and the dark’s quiet tusks So deep she into her noisy withins. The forth storey roof with its precarious railings and the pitiful, grey street, a wound below. Its drains and gutters all sawed open and naked— In the sudden, spinning fright I almost held her; a palm or a palm or an arm I almost held— I knew you so ample. Whispers of touch, and ballads such and such rolled so effortlessly now on the tongues of memory As birth her I though tens a monsoon’s rosy prayer Bead on bead falls in this wretched, unending rosary (With drought-coated of lips) I had loved you a petal so chaste and unbloomed and a sepal you had— Not a blossom I, still she held, as the winds As vultures reeled around our beds So frail our bodies so terrified and alive, As dirt bowed, and leaves bowed and all to the vultures mad Two lambs us, yet gods we stood 'til whites of her wilted to gold to rust to dust, and slipped through the cracked of my hold, Through a thousand guarding winds and tens a vacant sepal (As crowns and cages of blossoms wilted unused, they stood) So shallow a gaze and the dark’s quiet tusks— Wade I, swim I, in the caverns of me where an echo breathes, and drown I, undying. Such windless a serenity As damp of monsoon’s mornings rosy, I had loved you a vulture mad, but dare I—
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Sep 2, 2021
Sep 2, 2021 at 4:38 AM UTC
A vulture mad
Sepals to skeletal fingers, to yellowed limbs sunken She watched the moon, all hazy and small. So rugged its whites as sheets with times stained Watched it on she did. (So dusty the skin) Oh, I had loved you Tens a monsoon’s rosy day; had loved you dry, as the suns danced and danced— So shallow the gaze and the dark’s quiet tusks So deep she into her noisy withins. The forth storey roof with its precarious railings and the pitiful, grey street, a wound below. Its drains and gutters all sawed open and naked— In the sudden, spinning fright I almost held her; a palm or a palm or an arm I almost held— I knew you so ample. Whispers of touch, and ballads such and such rolled so effortlessly now on the tongues of memory As birth her I though tens a monsoon’s rosy prayer Bead on bead falls in this wretched, unending rosary (With drought-coated of lips) I had loved you a petal so chaste and unbloomed and a sepal you had— Not a blossom I, still she held, as the winds As vultures reeled around our beds So frail our bodies so terrified and alive, As dirt bowed, and leaves bowed and all to the vultures mad Two lambs us, yet gods we stood 'til whites of her wilted to gold to rust to dust, and slipped through the cracked of my hold, Through a thousand guarding winds and tens a vacant sepal (As crowns and cages of blossoms wilted unused, they stood) So shallow a gaze and the dark’s quiet tusks— Wade I, swim I, in the caverns of me where an echo breathes, and drown I, undying. Such windless a serenity As damp of monsoon’s mornings rosy, I had loved you a vulture mad, but dare I—
19/08/2021 How is 'unbloomed' not a word!?
Ayesha
Written by
21/F/Pakistan
Sep 2, 2021
Sep 2, 2021 at 4:38 AM UTC
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