On The Death Of A Friend
A Poem by Satish Verma
Unsung:
how it was, you died Unsung:
how it was, you died 
Unsung: how it was, you died wearing your shoes? The jesamins will meet you― in the backyard. The stains are unwashable; like pomegranates bursting open on my chest. The screams still run after me. How do I get you midway― in anonymity. I never wanted you to go, my make-believer. It was not homozygosity. Your face swims like a dragonfly on the interface of tears. There was no re-entry in the frame of life.
© 2016 Satish Verma
Reviews
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This is very beautiful and replete with such beautiful imagery. I particularly like "Your face swims like a dragonfly on the interface of tears." I imagine a dragonfly whose wings are made translucent by human tears. Try as it might, it cannot reenter the frame of life. There is such a tinge of sadness to someone having died unsung. It reminds me of when I was nineteen, discovering that my father was buried in an unmarked grave. How dishonorable it seemed for him to be buried without even his name, unsung, if you will. While I remedied that by putting a marker on his grave, the sting of that finding has never left me.
Posted 9 Years Ago
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Added on March 20, 2016
Last Updated on March 20, 2016
Tags: Life
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