For I'm not afraid of death, dearest-
But of dying.
Of losing you among the stars,
Which had caught me spying.
And I don't pity my soul, oh,
For it is faint and wasted
But yours, which I have loved,
And breathed in and tasted.
Oh, I don't live to spread and seek
But to know love.
And every soul that loved me back,
Is lost to the stars above-
Which blaze above-
Us all.
For I don't want your blood, dearest-
But your ink.
And taint your heart and pick you up
From fires in which you sink.
And I don't cherish the dead, oh,
But them that they call living.
Some of them do rave for love,
But none of them do sing.
Oh, I see the container of these lives,
But I don't see your face.
Aren't you here with me-
To cure this dying race?
This fading race-
Of the living.
For I know I'm not alone, dearest-
But a stranger in this crowd.
A crowd that doesn't stop and admire-
The beauty of its sound.
And I think of dying, bound in chains-
You never came and broke.
I think of those sweetest words-
You never really spoke.
Oh, I'm ignorant. But I don't want knowledge.
If knowledge means losing you.
But you are lost among those words-
And sketches that I drew.
That I etched upon every heart-
That I found longing with thirst.
So when I pass to quietus,
I know this heart won't burst.
For death is but another adventure of life-
Another way to breathe you out-
And breathe you in-
And love you back-
And drown to hear you shout-
To hear you scream out-
To this infinity.
YOU ARE READING
Contemplations of a Disturbed Soul
PoetryHighest rank #83 in poetry (24 jan 2018) #3 in abstract (1 sept 2018) Some pieces of my heart that I found lying all around you. Which I picked up and tried to burn. Some did. These remained....