|
Menu
|
|
|
Social
|
|
|
|
The Grass is always greener
Contributed by
taurusgem1
on
Tuesday, 2nd August 2005 @ 02:26:07 AM in AEST
Topic:
ambiguous
|
Idealistic remedies to your wounded heart All prepared as you fidget in your dimly lit kitchen The warm liquid of Grandmas chicken soup does not soothe; Instead its heat stings Blistering, a red sore onto your hopeful comfort
Mastering the illusion of happiness Harem like, behind dark veils of a concubines heartache You fight subconsciously to be his chosen one, yet His mistress is unbeatable
His mistress, an unattainable mirror image Only lets him see the sun highlighting the grasss greener side As its blades gently move with the wind of obsession They reflect a hypnotic need for a superior life Never showing the worms beneath the surface
Copyright ©
taurusgem1
... [
2005-08-02 02:26:07] (Date/Time posted on
site)
Advertisments:
|
|
|
|
|
Sorry, comments are no longer allowed for anonymous, please register for a free membership to access this feature and more
|
|
All comments are owned by the poster. Your Poetry
Dot Com is not responsible for the content of any
comment. That said, if you find an offensive comment, please
contact via the FeedBack Form with details, including poem title
etc.
|
|
|
Re: The Grass is always greener
(User Rating: 1 ) by ceazer2005 on
Tuesday, 2nd August 2005 @ 03:11:31 AM AEST (User
Info | Send
a Message)
|
beautiful poem.
Jake |
|
|
Re: The Grass is always greener
(User Rating: 1 ) by Vampirequeen on
Tuesday, 2nd August 2005 @ 03:51:28 AM AEST (User
Info | Send
a Message)
|
what an awsome beautiful write/. |
|
|
Re: The Grass is always greener
(User Rating: 1 ) by lostrelic on
Tuesday, 2nd August 2005 @ 06:09:33 AM AEST (User
Info | Send
a Message)
|
cool poem like the flow nice wording two thumbs up |
|
|
Re: The Grass is always greener
(User Rating: 1 ) by trixxx on
Tuesday, 2nd August 2005 @ 08:38:21 AM AEST (User
Info | Send
a Message)
|
i like it, the flow seems to work well, it matches the unsteady and inwardly conentious nature of the subject |
|
|
|