Thursday, August 10, 2006
poetry thursday
what I would have said
I see them down a long hallway,
doors shut tight against the words
I did not say. Behind them are worlds
I will never glimpse. The keys rest
in my belly, swallowed long ago
and left to rust.
Regret is an inimitable sorrow,
that whispers in your ear;
possibilities unclaimed,
opportunities overlooked.
It recalls for me the slight slope
of your shoulders, your hair
brushing your collar,
the back of your blue shirt
that grew smaller as I watched you go.
My tongue was a gold bar
heavy with potential.
With it I could have bought
a human heart, but it lay behind my lips
cold and thick. Silence flowered
from my mouth, formed a thorny bower,
lush and impenetrable. Sturdy vines
crept down the hall, covered the door
and obscured the threshold of hope.
I did not say your name,
but kept it, a gilded briar
as shiny as a new key.
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4 comments:
This is a wonderful poem! Also, I looked around your other site a bit, too. These are great posts, fantastic pictures! Good job.
Great poem D! Great picture as well.
Really, excellent work.
((smile))
K
Wow - I love the details here; too many to mention, but especially:
The keys rest
in my belly, swallowed long ago
and left to rust.
AND
My tongue was a gold bar
heavy with potential.
A really nice poem.
Really good poetry, glad I stopped by :)
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