PURSUANCE
I wander in search of words,
those that can translate
my agonies and ectasies,
like a ghost, lone and thirsty,
looking for those that bleed,
for my poems were all arrhythmic
verses, inert and lacking essence.
Bereft of soul, they were carcasses
mere flesh and clotted blood
that stinked and putrified
a while after.
I'm done giving stillbirths.
I've grown pale from them.
Weak, I stumble and fall, on my days
So I put on, at night, my white gown
step out, with a dry mouth
hunting for words, real and throbbing
my appetite insatiable,
wanting to devour them all alive
hoping it could cure me
once and for all, my last refuge
in bearing a worthy baby
after all these infertile years.
I scavenge in desperation
among piles of memories,
relentless and unabashed
to conceive and nurture one, with
all my finest genes of imaginations
embedded like beads on my past,
gracefully in rhymes and phrases.
An ordeal I take myself through
each night, my gown scribbled and scarred,
to hold an offspring in my hands
flaunt her before the world,
her shining metaphors,
her chasmic moods,
to become a mother beaming with pride
in my final rest, my living child
who'd carry my name forward,
liberating souls off
dense human bodies,
like a soft bomb, a subtle revolution,
a green leaf in my torn pocket.
(All about my wilting poetry)
Good work
ReplyDelete