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From the swing; the playground, when the mind is clear as honeyed water, there, ever on the road goes, slithering into the shadows of the sleeping horizon, and when my feet were big enough to fill the muddied shoes, I sauntered, then walked, then trudged, until my toes were nailed to the asphalt, until I came upon where the road has crumbled, its debris scattered. And stood this body, two sizes too big for this tiny soul, swathed in layers of expectations, dragging sagging lumps of age around past this old carnival. Forsaken years in the rear view mirror once painted with life, proud stallions here, stand still and gray, golden poles tarnished, Their hand crafted eyes wide-open, staring through the smudged glass mirror at the lives they missed. while the music box wheezes— a slowing tune, a dying sound, as shadows lengthen on this fairground. Deep in my pocket, my fingers exhume yesterday’s cold corpses no longer jingling, just grating tired, clutched a handful of these tokens—forgotten currencies, now just pieces of obol for the eyes, obsolete, for games whose booths have long since shattered. The Ferris wheel creaks, half-dismantled, Its empty seats Swinging in the twilight’s breeze, crying tears of rusted nuts and bolts, groans high above my head, emitting light a weaker pulse against the night. As if they were embers holding on to their glow, if for a moment until the breeze snatches their soul out of their ashy bed. I stand beneath it, feel the wind brush past And wonder if I’ll ever climb again, or if this ride has ended with the spark of something breaking, and like with most it is something I can’t fix.
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Oct 18, 2024
Oct 18, 2024 at 10:47 PM UTC
Fairground
From the swing; the playground, when the mind is clear as honeyed water, there, ever on the road goes, slithering into the shadows of the sleeping horizon, and when my feet were big enough to fill the muddied shoes, I sauntered, then walked, then trudged, until my toes were nailed to the asphalt, until I came upon where the road has crumbled, its debris scattered. And stood this body, two sizes too big for this tiny soul, swathed in layers of expectations, dragging sagging lumps of age around past this old carnival. Forsaken years in the rear view mirror once painted with life, proud stallions here, stand still and gray, golden poles tarnished, Their hand crafted eyes wide-open, staring through the smudged glass mirror at the lives they missed. while the music box wheezes— a slowing tune, a dying sound, as shadows lengthen on this fairground. Deep in my pocket, my fingers exhume yesterday’s cold corpses no longer jingling, just grating tired, clutched a handful of these tokens—forgotten currencies, now just pieces of obol for the eyes, obsolete, for games whose booths have long since shattered. The Ferris wheel creaks, half-dismantled, Its empty seats Swinging in the twilight’s breeze, crying tears of rusted nuts and bolts, groans high above my head, emitting light a weaker pulse against the night. As if they were embers holding on to their glow, if for a moment until the breeze snatches their soul out of their ashy bed. I stand beneath it, feel the wind brush past And wonder if I’ll ever climb again, or if this ride has ended with the spark of something breaking, and like with most it is something I can’t fix.
Erwinism
Written by
Oct 18, 2024
Oct 18, 2024 at 10:47 PM UTC
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