Miles Goetz
06-17-2013, 06:51 PM
I had awakened to find myself still adrift, the ringing of memory’s bell still strong.
The night still kept aloft, the light imprisoned in my palms like a cup with which I drink the milk of the clouds: all the faint musings of a blinded eye, the eye still bound to sleep.
Here is the floor, and around myself is wrapped a limp sheet. Beyond the plaster wall there is the shell of a storm still brooding, over the heads of the innocent and below the gaze of the strong.
I hear the sorrowful bend of the oaks in the gale; their song is played along the wretched strings of an instrument crafted from foul dreams.
Yet even in this horror I find peace. For what is a storm but the heralding of sweet songs through a voice so loud and brazen?
Come to me, sunlight, wine, and passion. Lift from the water its blue, and from the storm its grey; take us into the dawn from which all dreams took flight.
The night still kept aloft, the light imprisoned in my palms like a cup with which I drink the milk of the clouds: all the faint musings of a blinded eye, the eye still bound to sleep.
Here is the floor, and around myself is wrapped a limp sheet. Beyond the plaster wall there is the shell of a storm still brooding, over the heads of the innocent and below the gaze of the strong.
I hear the sorrowful bend of the oaks in the gale; their song is played along the wretched strings of an instrument crafted from foul dreams.
Yet even in this horror I find peace. For what is a storm but the heralding of sweet songs through a voice so loud and brazen?
Come to me, sunlight, wine, and passion. Lift from the water its blue, and from the storm its grey; take us into the dawn from which all dreams took flight.