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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
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Within sunlit shores,
fallen feathers, black and white
entwine helplessly.
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Sleeping silver clouds
along rivers of sweet skies
The evening chimes
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
11
Tears fall desperately
trapped in our sweet memories,
and I watch you fade
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Silent petals fall
upon your glassy oceans
those decadent years
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Hopeless melodies
from an everlasting ball-
he cries in twilight.
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Sing me to roses
Red and black upon the vines,
in the autumn night
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Tenderly calling
the whispers of a lover;
crimson from his heart
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Innocent promise
calling for sweet gracefulness
A child's lullaby
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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With her sweet sorrow
bells chime in ghastly moonlight,
singing for her peace.
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Withered petals fall
upon their thorns' sanctity,
their sweet scents fading.
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Quell your lust from night
while singing for the callous,
the cruel, the silent
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
2
White skies caress ice,
and lachrymose from angels
like tears from white buds
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Caressing a light
nightmares from a nursery
now humbled by dreams
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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A poet's sweet words
endlessly calls for the world
to see its beauty.
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Tears from morning dew,
beloved nightingales sings-
symphonies of life.
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Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
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Bitter gales resound
with chimes of a silver bell-
warmth of childlike hearth.
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Robin Goodfellow Sep 2016
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Siren wanderlust
calling from Earth's majesty
whisper remedies.
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Robin Goodfellow Sep 2016
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Watching the weary
rising from graves like candles
in shallow water.
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Robin Goodfellow Nov 2016
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The fall of humans
leaves only the earth to weep
for what could have been.
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Robin Goodfellow Nov 2016
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Mother Earth’s sorrow
cries for her wayward children,
and I see your tears.
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Robin Goodfellow Nov 2016
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Walking sanity
along the boundaries of hell,
a song for heaven
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Robin Goodfellow Dec 2016
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Timeless lullabies
from an ancient pendulum
screams for the dreamer.
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
3
Evening rainstorms
callously screaming anger
though gentle rains cry
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Weeping o'er the dark
Black oceans caress the pain,
of a loved one lost
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Silver lullabies
with warm candlelight nearby
for Earth's clockwork night.
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Drops of golden ice
Silver streams of silent dreams
mourning withered buds
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Elegies from hymnals
grace in nightingale cages-
songs for a loved one
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Of philosophies
dead branches of withered nights;
rotting memories
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Wide, innocent eyes
Dreams and nightmares fall for you
like lovers in time
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Falling in love with
Death and his clockworks, though you're
still clinging to life.
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Listen to heartbeats
of the time I spent with you-
remorse and regret.
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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I hated your smiles,
screaming, shouting, angrily
shattering my mind.
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Winter sleeps in peace.
Magic slipping through the wind;
warmth of the humble.
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
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Soft, moonlight kisses
along dark, graceless waters
beckons for no one.
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Enchanting azure
caress withered sighs broken-
Humanity's hearth
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Singing for the lost
while praying they'd come back home
to a lonely nest.
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Robin Goodfellow Jan 2017
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Through your white nightmares
and your lover's looking glass;
sighs from reflections
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Robin Goodfellow Jun 2017
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Nymphs grace the woodlands,
silver flutes in hand, the moon
within lonely skies.
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Robin Goodfellow Jun 2017
44
Sleeping flowers fall
past soft leaves, the morning light
greeting velvet dew.
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
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Sleeping silver clouds,
along rivers of sweet light-
the evening chimes.
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
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Velvet, moonlit skies,
caress dancing warm embers
pure, unsullied snow
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
7
Darkness surrounds light
frozen autumn winds drift by
from tonight’s madness
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
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Clinging desperately
quiet shadows dwelling near,
the last, withered leaf
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Robin Goodfellow Jul 2016
9
Clinging desperately
quiet shadows dwelling near,
the last, withered leaf
Robin Goodfellow Oct 2016
I watch the light from your eyes,
the memories along those distant tides,
through the rivers and icy lies,
I sing to you,
and give you the moon.

Vines and willows brush you face,
caressing the seasons and changing grace
while sleeping in fields, the leaves now lay,
I sing to you,
and give you the moon.

Loveless songs by eve of night,
among the seas of candlelight,
the dreamers dance to sounds of midnight,
I sing to you,
and give you the moon,

Flowers along those broken bends,
the celestial petals the blossoms tend,
you murmur the names of lovers and friends,
I sing to you,
and give you the moon.

I lull you to sleep with your hands in mine,
as shadows befall through the thickness of time.
I watch your breaths fade from everlasting sighs.
Still, I sing to you,
and give you the moon.
Robin Goodfellow Nov 2016
Soft sunlight drifts through
a sea of melancholy,
while shadows of time fade
to decadent memories.
Stars shine amongst nostalgia,
beauty hidden in twilight,
as I stood there watching
the seconds fleeing night.
The frosty breeze against me,
I wander to the next life,
when I hear something strange,
a flicker of hope within my strife.
A man came to my pendulum,
with wrinkles beneath his eyes.
Hollow smiles grace his lips
though he still wanted his life.
He came to me in the dark,
as dim fires behind me wept,
and he told me his stories,
his dreams he preciously kept.
He told me his life,
both dying and living,
with the name of his beloved,
his heart never lying.

He tells me a time
of when innocence had flourished,
of when he played with a girl,
their love he happily nourished.
A young, tiny girl,
who was fragile and small,
but he still lived with her,
and gave her his all.
He showered her with promises,
with books and with words,
with fairytales and limericks,
where they dreamt evermore.
Sometimes they slept,
other times they were awake,
but he led her through adventures,
through truth and his own mistakes.
He could only smile,
as he held her hand for forever.
A white dress, a white rose,
to be separated, they would never.
Family gathered, and friends crowded
the boy and the girl, with laughter.
Walking along heaven and earth
they happily gathered.

But there in the meadow they stood.
They hugged, and they cried.
The girl had to leave,
but the boy did not want to say goodbye.
The boy takes her rose,
plucking it from her hair.
He carves a ring,
though the thorns rip and tear.
He slips the ring on her,
and asks her to come home

that day.

Bells chime for midnight,
the evening slipping from daylight;
he waited through the spite of life,
never confusing the centuries with time.

I search through his memories,
as the old man crumbles to dust.
I stare at him for a while,
and my silver clock’s rust.

I remember his smile and face,
when he asked me to be his friend.
I remember the tales he spoke of,
and a happiness that would never end.
I remember the clock ticking,
the minute and hours of hopeless time,
and the riddles slipping from your mouth,
as we giggled at your foolish rhymes.
I remember Mama and Papa chuckling
at our quiet, blossoming love.
I remember their blessings,
their prayers from above.
I remember the day in the fields
when I told you I had to leave.
I remember how much you cried,
through your agony and pleas.
Still, you stole my white rose,
in those loving, soft meadows.
You made me promise
that we’d see each other tomorrow.

It all kept replaying
in the corners of my mind;
our blissful words and affections,
ticking the rhythm of our lullabies.

I miss you,

not knowing what else to do,

while the pendulum swings

between us.
Robin Goodfellow Aug 2016
Before you come away
from the day’s soft rays,
sing with me by candlelight
for your dreams, through the night.

Pray for stars to caress your tears,
and the moon to erase your fears,
of the monsters hiding in your heart,
the quiet from the morning lark.

Whisper to me your childish tales
of fairy dances and ships that forever sail,
of happy endings and fond farewells,
while we listen to the evening bells.

Sing to me your nostalgic memories,
of when you slept on happily,
of when you were but a small babe,
indulging in the sweets you once craved.

Let me see through your eternal dreams,
of times I carried you through the seams,
when I adorned you in benevolence,
and peaceful silence.

And as I watch you,
the light upon the fading moon,
I take your cold hand,
and whisk you away to the fairylands.
Robin Goodfellow Mar 2017
I don’t know when it started.

I don’t know when it ended.



It began when they started shooting.

It began when they started rioting.



We ran for cover under bullet fire and fear.

We listened to our screams as mobs sneered and jeered.



Terror captivated us when they slammed us to the ground.

Horror gripped us when they became bloodthirsty hounds.



Familiar slurs echoed through our hearts and minds.

They kept throwing punches, blurring our moral lines.



Helpless when they smiled their cruel smiles.

Helpless to preserve the peace for a while.



Beaten down by the ones who were supposed to protect us.

Beaten down by the ones we were supposed to protect.



Then they started shooting again.

Then they started shooting again.



We have to protect ourselves, to fight for what’s right.

We have to protect ourselves, to fight for what’s right.



Give into our righteous sins.

Embrace primitive instincts from within.



Turn ourselves into demons.

And pretend we weren’t heathens.



We can’t afford to listen.

Or watch fallen tears glisten.



Sing to our loved ones a song of pain.

Weigh our hearts for those we’ve slain.



Hope for the days when we can love each other again.

But for now, we need to pray for the freedoms we still defend.
A poem about police brutalities and racism/excessive patriotism/isolationism between ethnic and racial tensions. This poem is how I feel about it.
Robin Goodfellow Feb 2017
What is the magic
the aristocracy was entitled
to rule over us?
Binding us to society and
the rules of the unknown
and the unimportant,
the weak and the lost
only allowed to suffer.

What is the magic
where the thieves and fools
fight for bloodless gold?
Lulling my darkest
silence to slumber, lest
the compassion shatter
like glass slippers that
slay soft flesh.

What is the magic
of those forgotten words
of corrupt innocence?
Where birds were birds,
monsters were monsters,
the notion of humanity
slipping away from my
happy beginning.

What is the magic
that forces me to lust over
every failed perfection?
Prayers unspoken and
thoughts from promises
I’ve only begun to

remember.

But we can never go back to those times so
long before.
I can only hope that you’d come quietly in
through that chained door.
Robin Goodfellow Dec 2016
Golden wings flutter lightly across the back of my hand, relaying to me traces of dreams only their feeble minds could capture. Soft, flickering melodies descend through their grey, wintry-like gazes, as their quiet thoughts echo through their silent, fragile words. Endless emotions reverberate from the walls of their minds, as I gaze at their rapid movement, endeavoring to weave their tales together. Still, reality and fantasy keep swimming aimlessly across my brain until finally, finally, I stroke the blank page with my pen.
  One by one, those butterflies stop, as they scrutinize the wondrous obsession which led to my desire, my passion. They watch as my fingers drum impatiently against the page, somehow sensing the troubled confines of my imagination. It wasn’t long before they stop floating by. Instead, they begin to watch me, with those intelligent, naive eyes of theirs. Whether it be from confusion or amusement, I couldn’t tell.
  Still, even with my now small audience gathering near, I am left only with a memory of what once was my own. I could only pick up my pen, and write down their movements, their thoughts and emotions, the curiosities and sanities that possessed them to be near me. I wrote down the beauty of their strong, fragile wings, all the while keeping their quiet sonnets to myself. I read and reread, write and rewrite, until there was nothing left of the forgotten, neglected space I once dreamt of.
  And so, I could only gaze back at the butterflies from my own madness, all the while looking back at the page I filled with my own words. Black words, golden words, words that carried both blessings and curses, words that tore my heart asunder, while keeping my sanity whole. Then, in that same breath, I shoo my butterflies away.
  I begin my story.
Because characters are people too, and they can be so very annoying.
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