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poem about love and loss |
RAPTURE OF THE DEEP by, David E. Reiser Light of my life. Desire of my loins. My sex. My soul. Lolita Vladimir Nabokov I. I smile at her, Overcome with ecstasy. I watch her disappear, Shimmering and turning translucent As she swims away from me. In my vision, She grows smaller and smaller, Diffusing into birefringent fractals, Dissolving into the sea. She is swimming away from me. She undulates in The currents’ rise and fall Gently they lift her, Coldly they sink her down. I have to smile, Dazzled in these final moments, Unable to forget her beauty. But in the end, she will leave no trace. In the end, we never do. Only the ocean lives on, Rising and falling, Pierced with shafts of light Descended from the surface Of our memories, Or what we imagine those memories must have been. She will never be again; Perhaps she never was at all, Deep in shades of aquamarine, Her tiny body flutters As she turns one final time To blow a farewell kiss to me And then is gone. II. You may ask: “And was it really worth it, after all, To die like this? And I will say, “Oh, yes! Oh, yes! The agony of loss is when we love our best. I never loved her more Than the day I watched her swim away from me.” I tried to blow one final kiss to her, But by now I was too weak. I floated emptily, Drifting in the delicate, waggling fingers Of the sea anemone; And when I knew for certain That she was gone, I filled my lungs with the sea Knowing that I had never been as happy As I was when I was with her; Never so at peace Never again to be that free. |