A poem I wrote, based off a scene in my short story 'Marguerite'. |
Braiding her dark hair with pallid fingers The crackling gramophone of Puccini The indelible scent of sorrow lingers: The sweet perfume of perdition. An artificial sadness, is what the opera is Mourning for a false love, a beautiful lie And her, like a butterfly in a chrysalis Enjoying the sweet perfume of perdition. The abysmal night, like a blanket of darkness Un bel dì, vedremo levarsi un fil di fumo... O heavens, what shall she do with such moroseness? With such a sweet perfume of perdition? A walk in the oak-and-lily, dawn-lit forest With vague intent, like Ophelia was she Near-emaciated, mad, and devoid of rest The air rich with the sweet perfume of perdition. No human foot save hers tread there No one but her enjoyed the rushing rivers She was alone, flowers in her loose, dark hair Scented with the sweet perfume of perdition. She, like a strangely lovely banshee, hated by Fate Apple blossoms falling from flowering trees The scents of daisies, brown sugar, and hate: The sweet perfume of perdition. Another wintry breeze spirited past The cruel touch of ice to the bone December's frost would unkindly last As long as the sweet perfume of perdition. Then, our wandering maiden came To a rushing, beautiful, ice-water river The croaking of bullfrogs, a chorus always the same Reminiscent of the sweet perfume of perdition. Her bony hands were frostbit by its freezing waters. But she noticed the lily-pads floating there, in full blossom Her bitter tears fell on these ephemeral flowers And hers was the sweet perfume of perdition. |