SO SLOWLY SANK THE MOON

By Megan Spreadbury

I remember cold dark nights

lit with nothing but candlelight

my solitude hindered in virtue

and nothing to move through,

my mind was blank

calm waters flowing by the bank

and sediment was the predicament

as it crept into shoes, unsolicited

but the bay water became bothered

every sailor still standing hollered

and within the sea

respite became the entity

every being envied

as we sat so still, empty

from the way the world turned

watching it burn

and nothing was quite as beautiful

drunk moonlight watching excusable

our attitudes unbearable

holding onto pain intolerable

but watching the fire

our thoughts turned dire

held up on the wire dipped

from birds which whipped

with wind

knocking into sin

burning bright orange red

reflecting off that water, dead

waves seeming unbothered

by the sailors which squandered

so thoughtfully for their last breath

but in death, we lay unkempt

every attempt at breathing unfeasible

so we stay alive, unbelievable

how the tide could tire our minds

and I sit, still watching the world divine

and divided by those unrequited

thoughts tossed to the loss spited

by sea where it lays in envy

of every thought of mine that’s empty

we’re at a stand still

it wants my soul to kill

but with that luxurious death

comes the shuddering depth

that in a blink, on the brink

of being swallowed by the sea I sink

into the embers, imperative

that I burn myself out of the narrative