Inspired by Pablo Neruda’s One Hundred Love Sonnets: XVII
I loved you without knowing how,
or when or from where.
I loved you simply.
I love you still.
Such child-like innocence we had,
such purity of need and emotion.
In truth, we were leechers, not lovers.
One would give, one would take,
one was crumbs to the other man’s cake.
As time marched on,
our splinters began to show,
our poison began to flow,
our hearts turned harder,
our paths veered farther
and farther
apart.
“Love” is the loftiest of illusions.
One glimpse and,
like a drug,
we want more.
But love needs faithful legs to stand on, too.
Without them, the illusion disappears,
and all we have left are fears.
The heart aches,
the mirror breaks,
the shards draw blood,
we drag each other through mud.
It hurts,
it hurts,
it hurts,
the pain a reminder of “love”‘s dictate.
“Breathe,” it cries, “breathe and you will awake”
Learn to discern, what is real, what is fake.
It was True Love’s kiss that broke the curse, however slight,
however gentle.
We had two choices –
reblossom or burn.
I fell to the earth, digging,
even as the fire held firm.
Love is Wise, Love is Patient.
It waits lifetime upon lifetime
for us to find it,
for us to feel it.
I loved you without knowing how,
or when or from where.
I loved you simply.
I love you still.
And that, in truth,
is Love’s will.
Beautifully expressed. Love like a Phoenix rises above the embers of our mortal remains.
The sword glistens brighter only after it has been put through fire.
The only true love, is love of love.
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