Petrification, and disintegration. What are we without memories? What are they without us? |
Shudder, man, and claw your ribs, No spirits watch you here; So crawl this endless waste This endless waste of every fathomed place You've born and let since disappear. That elbow on the windowsill; That glimpse of wrist, like fruit, Sunning on the windowsill. The kerosene of your brilliant life; The sluggish wake of fumes and spent routine. Resilient once, now stooped and brittle, They've left you now, your wife and spittle, For the pleasures of a tangerine. Jumping puddles, crushing snails -- That time alone when you first found guilt And stared, and stared, and stared: A grain of past beneath your nails. Shudder man, you broken thing, You tired and feeling stepped-on thing, The flames that burned your life away, Those brilliant flames that burned your life away Are absent from your quivering eye But branded in your dusty hide: As wrinkles of your yesterday; And have packed your paltry shape with all the dust of your design. Flicker now, and blink away, The wind will strip you on your knees: Debris, and dust, and pieces to make another's memory; To be gripped until they sink, undone. And when there's dust, and dust enough, We'll pile a dune to the sun. |