Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
Simon Monahan Mar 2018
Oh, corpse! Yet not a corpse at all
Though from the bleak tree you did fall
And though no breath now swells your lungs
Your voice, once praised by mortal tongues
No longer sounding in our ears
Bloodless lips kissed by women’s tears
All blood exhausted from gashes
From blows and nails and vile lashes

But what a secret lies here; hark!
This bruisèd frame the promised ark
A chamber where all souls are hid
Hell trembles at his love-mad bid
For while grave death his chamber keeps
His flesh unsouled, he merely sleeps
Mark, dear heart, where the Master lies
This wounded flesh, it aches to rise
Traci Sims Oct 2020
The stars have gone out and I look at the distant shore hoping for some sort of crazy meaningless distraction to push me away from your sapphires and mouth smiling wide I want to float into the stratosphere and forget you went dark and I was both dammed and ****** trying to crawl out from under the wet blanket of your silences onto dry land I will always want you poison sweet and tempting like the flower Persephone knew she shouldn't pick but did anyway like the pomegranate she ate that bound her forever.
I am unsouled.
I am unsouled.
Simon Monahan Nov 2017
Who will mourn a rodent’s death?
Who will bend heart-strings to raise a strain,
Commemorating the passage of an unknown mouse
To eternal fields and the dusty rest of disintegration?

I shall sing to mark his heart’s last beating;
I will pluck the ghost of his last breath from the air
And bury it with dignity in a hymn
To acknowledge what was his, now alas! revoked.

Do not despise the meanness of his place,
Nor think to regard him condescension,
Nor dare to suppose his portion of no account,
Nor strip him unfeeling of his minute glory.

His nerves’ last firing is like the dying of a star,
His limbs, grown rigid, mime the world’s decay,
His unsouled eyes dictate the puzzle of life’s end,
His finality recalls the secret questions of mortality.

This rogue once flew on wings of shadows,
Darting adventurous from hiding to hiding,
Erecting a home for his kin in laborious nesting,
Warming sons and son’s daughters and their sons with his love.

This noble rascal lived in breakneck boldness,
Life-risk embraced for morsels of fruit and curds,
Supping on scraps ‘neath the menace of capital danger,
Fear his companion, his bread, and his bed of rest.

The ending of this story is the close of a legend,
The silence of his voice is the dying of a song,
A universal hymn whose harmony depended on his part
Is changed to a dirge marking the end of his verse.
"Jeremy" is the name that was summarily given to a mouse a friend of mine found dying in a parking lot

— The End —