I thought it to be fire
By love_writing
- 1802 reads
I thought it to be fire
a glorious final act ablaze in golden tangerine.
Close the crimson velour theatre,
darken your eyes from the glare.
Then I thought it to be the sunshine
severed and sliced through the slatted shades.
Snap the long lengths of Venetian,
shield us from the apocalyptical light.
We stood us all, in blackened sunglasses
huddled together; frightened front room faces.
No light shall enter this childhood home,
sunshine would kill us alone.
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Comments
Like the stangeness, makes me
Like the stangeness, makes me think of the 'The Others'.
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My interpretation was a death
My interpretation was a death in a child's family, and the body of the deceased ensconsed in the said, front room, with all the curtains drawn, and then, the ensuing cremation. Certainly, when I was a child, 'death' was never spoken of, and when my dear old granddad (pop) died when I was four, nobody would tell me where he had gone, and I'd wait patiently, every day, for him to come home
An emotive, and well written poem, open to many interpretations, as proven.
Tina
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