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Requiem for Faith (Free verse) by James Rykelangeli
For him, the sky paled from azure to ashen,
Wept tears of fury on his young sonâs bedroom window,
Forced its windy despair on the trees,
Uprooted the wide ocean in remembrance of him.
And the son, the dolorous inspiration of the sky,
Mourned under the tear-plashed windowpane,
Inventing saccharine sentiments
In guilt over sour recollections
Of the stubbly double chin
Where beer in perpetuity dripped,
Of the fat lips in perpetuity condemning,
Of the kind-cruel puffy eyes,
Which taught his precocious boy
Anxietyâs neurotic introspection,
Which calls its solace beauty.
Now, a quaint form of beauty the son
Imagined might appear at the window:
The father as a numinous angel
Of graceful wings shining with variegated sunlight
And a paunch and needing a shave,
With raiment as soft and bright as clouds
And yellow toenails and bloodshot eyes.
To him, the son wished to take flight
And embrace the homely angel of his imaginings.
But then he chided his fanciful musings as painâs absurd refuge
And instead marveled that he should feel himself lost
At the loss of a sometimes sweet, often booming idiot,
Or that he should wish the oppressor
Again to take up his dunce cap-crown
Of parental supervision.
But yet he might have it were it performable,
So much did he feel himself disintegrated:
Born an amorphous confluence of conflicting perfumes,
To be blown perforce by incomprehensible winds
Out across gray cityscapes,
Once irreconcilable, now irretrievable.
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