Persephone's Dream

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  • Philosophy

    Persephone's Dream

    I dreamt that while in restless slumber
    Death beckon'd with his sweet caress.
    He pulled me to a chasm deep,
    buoyant by its harsh duress.
    His whisper was a smooth temptation
    which Dante abhorred, and Byron craved;
    and walking through the circle gates,
    the road upon I stepped was paved
    with sins of the father, of flesh, of spite,
    I grasped tighter to my captor's hand.
    I saw that life in its every glory
    was nothing but minute grains of sand.
    A desert span a lifetime wide
    with lamentations of souls long lost
    carried through the misty morn;
    a choice was offered - but with a cost.
    My lovers eye, he held me still,
    I dared not move, for hope in vain,
    the seeds of love, a mothers pain.
    Away! Epona to cry tears of woe
    Upon a desolate Earth.
    For in staying power springs anew
    I shall bring thee naught but mirth.
    Hlāfmæsse shall bring forth new tidings of warmth
    and thy shall hold me in thy arms again,
    Until then, however, I must reside
    and atone for a lover's sin.
    Upon awakening, I drew a breath,
    shakily wiped a single tear.
    For knowing love's true entity beckoned,
    and I had come so near.
    Do not doubt, ye gentle folk
    to hasten from his touch.
    Widen thy arms, embrace it gladly,
    for it matters much.

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    The true philosopher and the true poet are one, and a beauty, which is truth, and a truth, which is beauty, is the aim of both.

    Ralph Waldo Emerson, American Poet (1803-1882)

    DrowningFish’s Poems (4)

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