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Rated: · Poetry · Other · #1847618
A story of death, and an amour with life.
I am not a morning person.
Not in reluctance of a new horizon,
But in defeat
For in the waking world, I find
again, I've lost
Surrendered a third of my time to unwholesome unconsciousness.

I'm a human.
Unique--
like everyone else.
In that, I'm ashamed of this poem.
An injustice.
A loss.
That little white lies that grabs and twists.
For no person can say they know themselves whist telling the truth.

I'm a singer
but I'll never sing a eulogy,
for Death might make songs of us all,
given the chance.
He'd stow us in the hidey-holes of hearts,
locked away so that one might not spill--
might not recall what's lost
despite all that was gained.
It doesn't do to do Death's work
while we're still of the living.

I am awake.
A person.
A bright red elegy.
I will sing of life the day I die,
for even in all that's been lost
I have gained.
© Copyright 2012 Vivian A. Monroe (viviamonroe at Writing.Com). All rights reserved.
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Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/view_item/item_id/1847618-An-Elegy