I Have To GoA Poem by Pratik“I still had this idea that there was a whole world of marvelous golden people somewhere, as far ahead of me as the seniors at Rye when I was in the sixth grade; people who knew everything instinctively, who made their lives work out the way they wanted without even trying, who never had to make the best of a bad job because it never occurred to them to do anything less then perfectly the first time. Sort of heroic super-people, all of them beautiful and witty and calm and kind, and I always imagined that when I did find them I'd suddenly know that I Belonged among them, that I was one of them, that I'd been meant to be one of them all along, and everything in the meantime had been a mistake; and they'd know it too. I'd be like the ugly duckling among the swans.” ~~Revolutionary Road The craft of my clanged feet Trod in silent trepidation on the bulbous emerald green, Clothed in the ushering of the faraway star. As the knobby fingers grab the metal mezzotints of the wrought iron gate, Its lazy creaks dawdling in the morning florid puffs, I feel wisps of the cold dread that curdles in leafy knots of bumblebee, Its tassels suffusing in forces of incognito, Clawing my skin in many a barbed prickles, Thrusting in hesitant steps up the pebbled footholds. There is a red satchel across the drooping shoulders That squirrels the fluffy little dreams and the voluptuous stories And the spiral twists of the winding lane in her hypnotized promenades Leads to the rocky banks of the dying lagoon Where in the alabaster ivory cove I made love with that sandy haired girl Gabrielle In the creamy froth of the sultry Saturday twilight. Just where the gravel grumbles gives way to the singing grass, There are the dwindling wrecks the queen’s château. There is a creature up in its rickety spire, bidding her time. She is a fleecy ball of cinder ash in all her ravenous splendor, The cockeyed head held in appraisal suspension, The crescent beak gulping down the spoofy shards. Concealed in the creepers of wisteria, there is the pair of her beetle-black eyes, The inkling in their iris emanates rays in silent mutiny that delves in the cores, Weighing my virtues and vices, adjudging the proportions. How I wish I could snatch her by that furry muzzle, Shove her down the adder’s throat, lurking in the vines of mistletoe. But I hear the melodies of distant caravans rolling on dusty roads, Someone is there, calling me, That woman in pallid face and Celtic regalia, I have to go. As I totter by, I see, In the undulating meadows ablaze in molten gold, A single daisy raising her cocky head, All foxy looking in the brooch of vanilla florets and the sulfur glow on the blushed face, Crooning those Limerick runes floating in the autumn air, that head in pendulum motions. But I know the reason behind that sly smile, that caricature she puts on, She is turning over my fazed chronicles in her head, Overcome by the silent giggles she glances with her noxious stare, That sneers with goading razz, mauling my skeletal spine, in the shells of chutzpah. I could have plucked her, petal by petal, killing her stink, Stunned her in a wooden frame hanging on my lilac walls. But no, I have to get going, I see the azure shimmers just a way ahead, The ship fleet, all resplendent in their manors of steel, The hails of seamen, moonstruck in their buoyant reveries, Holding the promises of Arcadian backwoods. I see that dusty road to the pier, with fewer conquers in between, I have to go. © 2012 PratikFeatured Review
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Added on February 23, 2012Last Updated on February 23, 2012 AuthorPratikRaleigh, NCAboutHello! I am Pratik Mukherjee from Calcutta, India - the city of Mother Teresa and the famous poet Tagore. My pen name is Aaran, a variant of the word 'Aran' and derived from the Aran Islands, a gro.. more..Writing
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