The Heart of War
The
raised blade covers half my face,
and
reflects for you, half your own.
I
glimpse myself, half-victim.
You
glimpse yourself, half-villain.
From
the eye of the rolling sun,
to
the misty ear of the mountain,
whom
might wager a bet from afar,
calling
wicked truths from noble deeds, telling
any
face for another?
You
cannot force the flower of verity
to
unbloom; to fold up
around
the jewel of knowing,
the
seeds that germinate
in
the heart of broken men.
Cleaving
the air,
the
blade's flash falls swift.
And,
quietly, we both turn,
walk
each other
home.
“I once had an ocean.”
For Tex
I
had a therapist once, and I told her that I revel in my sadness, that I don’t
try to climb out so quickly, that I like to rest there, and let it hurt for a
while. She acted as though I had just admitted to the cardinal sin of wellness.
But, I knew she was wrong. Sadness isn’t the enemy. It never was. Apathy is the
true enemy. Sadness is the price you pay for loving deeply, and loving well.
Love is capturing sea water in the palm of your hand, knowing, carelessly, that
it will soon go away, but still trying to care for it anyway. Sadness is the
empty palm, the dregs of salt left behind.
It
is saying, “I once had an ocean”.
I
once had an ocean. And it was glorious.
It
was wild. It was cooling. It was kind.
It
showed me violence.
It
showed me magic.
It
showed me meekness.
It
showed me loss. It gave to me my reflection.
It
gave to me my heart—a moss-covered, jagged thing,
smoothed
and carved by the tumble, the rolling depths of time.
I
once had an ocean. I captured it myself.
And
still, it went away.
I
don’t think it was ever mine, actually.
But,
I could pretend for a time that it was.
And
some days I can still feel it in my hands—the coolness of it there,
the
arch and curve of its back, how it lapped at my fingers now and then,
the
storied salt beneath my nails,
the
soft and fearsome waves come and gone,
the dreams it left behind.
Life, death,
life, death,
sunrise, moonrise,
life, death,
sunrise, life,
moonrise, death,
inhale, life,
exhale, death,
ebb and flow–
the waves
of the ocean,
it is all
the same,
and so
the pulse
of the stars
continue.
The Soul is a Walled Garden
An Ode To Little Edie
Is
a garden still a garden
when
the flowers, taken by weeds,
wither
black and shrink from the sun,
when
my summer dance has just begun,
and
mother’s song swims
beneath
the sweeping eaves?
And
what makes a weed ‘not a flower’?
Is
it that they do not weaken, they endure—
and
mark not the hours that shine, petal by petal,
but
flourish like ivy with the sweet sting of nettle,
wild
poets of bitter medicine; an ounce of gold
traded
for a pound of cure?
So
the garden blooms fed the earth;
in
Winter’s cold they fell, resigned—
and
the ghosts of friends like phantoms swept
from
stair to room, in hallways crept—
was
it real, or eras past;
the
crumbling mansions of the mind?
Although
the golden hour has come to pass,
the
stars still flicker like city lights,
I
lay beneath them, number my dreams,
for
there was never a line, but certainly seams
between
the past and present, where I can go
behind
closed eyes, and slip from sight.
Daydreams
of a time when the world comes looking
for
me down the lanes, over the drives;
will
they see the weeds or the roses that grow?
Will
they see me as I surely know?
A
weed–no, a flower! spurned by the world,
in
defiance, still thrives.
The
soul is a walled garden
that
cannot be breached by death;
wherein
my heart, unassuming,
planted
flowers, ever-blooming
in
brilliance, undisturbed;
see
how they dance with every breath.
“Your
days of mischief are done!”
said
Mother, to the dreamer, her son.
He
still slipped away, though,
with
the eyes of Galileo,
when
he swore he'd captured the sun!
Silvatiicus Riddle (He/They) is a 7x Rhysling Award-nominated Dark Fantasy/Speculative Fiction Writer & Poet haunting the bones of an old amusement park on the edge of New York City. His work has appeared or is forthcoming in: Strange Horizons, Apex Magazine, Enchanted Living, Eternal Haunted Summer, Spectral Realms, and Creepy Podcast, among others. He combats despair and entropy with his newsletter, The Goblin's Reliquary. For all available works, please visit: http://linktr.ee/silvatiicusriddle


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