Leaning on the step-brother of an open window
The young marble vase gleamed with sadness:
The drops of the rain filled its heart
With sprinkles of its holy water.
“Do not help me
I was supposed to be filled
With blood.”
Really:
Blood,
or Flood?
Is it Good?
Goodbye,
then.
And to the thunderstorm outside
The hanging lamps sways
And laugh:
A tragic suicide of cupped glass and weary light
In their own personal smoky sunset.
And that is alright.
At least for them.
What is expected then, from a bottled hope:
If what is taken has leaped in loyalty?
And what is expected from saviors and their teacups
If the one who took away demands harmony?
The three-legged chair hummed quietly
Of the joy it gets when it gets nowhere;
the old table insisted
For it to stay by the open door.
The open door wondered
And the windowed step-brother cursed;
About the vase and the light bulb
Also about the wrinkling crooked chair.
The reasoning behind their dedication:
The light to the lamp
The vase to the blood
And the seat to weary hearts.
Why, do you a—
Ah,
I forgot to get you
The soaked rope
That bonds us together.