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| Remembering |  | |  |  | by S.D. Parsons | |
You were the moon, the fourth phase of darkness, silver hope slivered in feasts of swimming stars.
Galaxies fade upon themselves, new planets created in brief cacophonies of flesh, pinning desire beneath thick, angel arms before washing clean from an unwilling womb.
This fragmented memory of dreams we call living spins sense from our consciousness.
I see prison bars, still.
She stands, listens to rumbles of far-off fantasies roll over her body like baptisms, voiding her lilac mind of care.
Paper lips; pale crescent sandbars lying at the edge of deep oceans.
Eternal waters of praise dredged clear of truth, I wish to swim but there is no glory here.
Only the frailty of handicap, wherein I find dark comfort beneath blankets of lies buttered with belief.
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