Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
We were seventeen and I carved your silhouette like Michaelangelo carved David -- but instead of leaving your statue in a museum, I nailed it to my mind. This way, the guards wouldn't run toward me every time I tried to touch you. Three years have gone by and the summer has ended, but I haven't found the strength to dismantle your statue. When I walk through the hallways of my mind it's always the first thing I see, morning or midday or night. Sometimes I'm surprised to see your marble eyes staring back at me, and for a moment I'm amazed that I once had the imagination and artistic ability to build you from nothing. You are the statue of David. I am ready to take a hammer and tear you down, to let dynamite explode next to you. But something stops me every time. Because how can I destroy such a masterpiece? A work of art that I've put months and years into? So you remain an exhibit, glorious. So you remain a distraction. Because every time I walk by you, no matter where I'm headed or how much of a rush I am in to get there, I'm compelled to stop and stare. You are the statue of David. And I am a seventeen-year-old girl who was once kicked out of the museum for getting too close.
0
Mar 9, 2014
Mar 9, 2014 at 3:58 AM UTC
ruins
We were seventeen and I carved your silhouette like Michaelangelo carved David -- but instead of leaving your statue in a museum, I nailed it to my mind. This way, the guards wouldn't run toward me every time I tried to touch you. Three years have gone by and the summer has ended, but I haven't found the strength to dismantle your statue. When I walk through the hallways of my mind it's always the first thing I see, morning or midday or night. Sometimes I'm surprised to see your marble eyes staring back at me, and for a moment I'm amazed that I once had the imagination and artistic ability to build you from nothing. You are the statue of David. I am ready to take a hammer and tear you down, to let dynamite explode next to you. But something stops me every time. Because how can I destroy such a masterpiece? A work of art that I've put months and years into? So you remain an exhibit, glorious. So you remain a distraction. Because every time I walk by you, no matter where I'm headed or how much of a rush I am in to get there, I'm compelled to stop and stare. You are the statue of David. And I am a seventeen-year-old girl who was once kicked out of the museum for getting too close.
apollo
Written by
Mar 9, 2014
Mar 9, 2014 at 3:58 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem