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  Oct 2014 snarkysparkles
ck
*******.

The end.
snarkysparkles Oct 2014
Her figure was slumped against the mausoleum
When she saw him standing there-
A stranger whose shadow covered her like a blanket
His figure tiptoeing on air.
"Come to watch" she whispered drunkenly,
And stared as he sat down.
He'd come to watch her die, of course
To sink
To bleed
To drown.
He made no sound, as he crouched down,
His shoulder grazing hers.
Her fingers numbing from the cold
Were warmed by woolen blurs.
He held her hand by the graves that night,
And she didn't pull away
"Who are you," she asked with trembling lips,
"Does it matter, as long as I stay?"
The tears fell down, and the bottle fell,
And she collapsed into the grass.
Her scars were ripped and opened again
With words and broken glass.
But he held there, he stayed, not making a sound
Just holding her in his embrace-
But when, the next morning, she woke in her bed
She had nearly forgotten his face.
He was a stranger to her, and she never found out
Who her savior had been that night.
But his heart had been damaged and bandaged, like hers
Nearly lost in the broken grey light.
But his voice was familiar and full of his strength,
When he gently lowered the knife
And whispered "this storm, no matter how rough, love,
It isn't worth taking your life".
snarkysparkles Oct 2014
I'm terrified of nights
Because they lead into (bleed into)
(Fade into) dawns
And there's little separation between
Today and tomorrow
I have to stay awake and dread the dread, the
Connotation being that
There's little hesitation
Between what I could do right now
And what I could be in the morning.
snarkysparkles Oct 2014
I've realized that I seldom title my poems
With capital letter at all (or any punctuation)...
Maybe this expresses how afraid I am
Of truly committing myself to anything-
And how much easier it is
To write a story without a clear ending.

How tragically poetic.
snarkysparkles Oct 2014
I love you so much that I want to stab you.
snarkysparkles Oct 2014
Against my better judgement, I'm trying to help you
Even though I know it's better for me to stay away
I'm drawn closer to you like a reluctant magnet
Voices in my head telling me to stay
I can't stand to see you falling down
When the storm's passing over for me
Wish I could drown the tears from your eyes
Maybe then you could finally see
That the struggles you face make you stronger, and I
Just wish I could let you know
That even when you keep yourself from
Getting
Back
Up
We will never let you go
  Oct 2014 snarkysparkles
Carl Sandburg
WHAT does the hangman think about
When he goes home at night from work?
When he sits down with his wife and
Children for a cup of coffee and a
Plate of ham and eggs, do they ask
Him if it was a good day's work
And everything went well or do they
Stay off some topics and talk about
The weather, base ball, politics
And the comic strips in the papers
And the movies? Do they look at his
Hands when he reaches for the coffee
Or the ham and eggs? If the little
Ones say, Daddy, play horse, here's
A rope-does he answer like a joke:
I seen enough rope for today?
Or does his face light up like a
Bonfire of joy and does he say:
It's a good and dandy world we live
In. And if a white face moon looks
In through a window where a baby girl
Sleeps and the moon gleams mix with
Baby ears and baby hair-the hangman-
How does he act then? It must be easy
For him. Anything is easy for a hangman,
I guess.
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