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The moon dripped silver on the pool, Where lotus sighed and waters cooled; The night was silk, the air was wine, And she — a flame in wet moonshine. Her anklets murmured on the stone, Each step a kiss the earth had known; Her bare feet slid through rippling light, Each toe a whisper, soft and white. She came — her saree clinging thin, Each breath unveiling folds of sin; The silk, once proud, now begged to fall, From aching ******* that answered all. The breeze, a thief with trembling hands, Tugged loose her veil's modest bands; It slipped — then caught upon her curve, A sigh escaped the watching stars. Her ******* half-bared, half-shamed, half-bold, Shifted with breaths too sweet to hold; Their trembling crowned with dusky tips, That pressed like prayers against her slips. Droplets clung to her shivering skin, Mapped secret paths from breast to chin; A single bead hung at her throat, A kiss unsent, a lover’s note. Her hair, a wet and breathing tide, Clung heavy to her gleaming side; It framed her navel’s secret gleam, Where all the mortals forgot their dreams. Her glance — suggestive, but knowing well, The endless thirst her body spelled; Her laughter, ripe with lush delight, Promised both mercy — and the night. Her saree slid, a lover's tease, Falling lower with every breeze; A shoulder bare, a trembling hip, A gasp half-formed upon her lip. She turned — the water kissed her thighs, The moon lay broken in her eyes; Each step a moan, each breath a song, Each sigh a place where dreams belong. The sages prayed to stone and sky, But none could tear away their eye; For in her sway, in flesh, in flame, All scriptures crumbled, wept her name. The sage, who carved his soul in prayer, Felt every vow dissolve in air; His beads fell silent from his hand, Forgotten on the trembling land. He rose — not saint, not god, but man, Drawn helpless to her scented span; Each step he took through the dreamy mist, Was one more heaven he had missed. Her smile, half-moon, half mortal sin, Beckoned him closer, pulled him in; Her saree trembled against her thighs, As rivers burned in both their eyes. The world spun slow — the stars withdrew, As flesh remembered what was true; In that one touch, that final sigh, Even salvation learned to die. She opened arms of mist and flame, And called him softly by no name; No heaven higher, no bond more sweet, Than where her skin and his breath meet. Susanta Pattnayak
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Apr 28, 2025
Apr 28, 2025 at 9:54 AM UTC
The Sage and The Spell
The moon dripped silver on the pool, Where lotus sighed and waters cooled; The night was silk, the air was wine, And she — a flame in wet moonshine. Her anklets murmured on the stone, Each step a kiss the earth had known; Her bare feet slid through rippling light, Each toe a whisper, soft and white. She came — her saree clinging thin, Each breath unveiling folds of sin; The silk, once proud, now begged to fall, From aching ******* that answered all. The breeze, a thief with trembling hands, Tugged loose her veil's modest bands; It slipped — then caught upon her curve, A sigh escaped the watching stars. Her ******* half-bared, half-shamed, half-bold, Shifted with breaths too sweet to hold; Their trembling crowned with dusky tips, That pressed like prayers against her slips. Droplets clung to her shivering skin, Mapped secret paths from breast to chin; A single bead hung at her throat, A kiss unsent, a lover’s note. Her hair, a wet and breathing tide, Clung heavy to her gleaming side; It framed her navel’s secret gleam, Where all the mortals forgot their dreams. Her glance — suggestive, but knowing well, The endless thirst her body spelled; Her laughter, ripe with lush delight, Promised both mercy — and the night. Her saree slid, a lover's tease, Falling lower with every breeze; A shoulder bare, a trembling hip, A gasp half-formed upon her lip. She turned — the water kissed her thighs, The moon lay broken in her eyes; Each step a moan, each breath a song, Each sigh a place where dreams belong. The sages prayed to stone and sky, But none could tear away their eye; For in her sway, in flesh, in flame, All scriptures crumbled, wept her name. The sage, who carved his soul in prayer, Felt every vow dissolve in air; His beads fell silent from his hand, Forgotten on the trembling land. He rose — not saint, not god, but man, Drawn helpless to her scented span; Each step he took through the dreamy mist, Was one more heaven he had missed. Her smile, half-moon, half mortal sin, Beckoned him closer, pulled him in; Her saree trembled against her thighs, As rivers burned in both their eyes. The world spun slow — the stars withdrew, As flesh remembered what was true; In that one touch, that final sigh, Even salvation learned to die. She opened arms of mist and flame, And called him softly by no name; No heaven higher, no bond more sweet, Than where her skin and his breath meet. Susanta Pattnayak
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