by William Shiloh Danan

She dances through my dreams,
Weighed down by the grievous moments of day and night,
Spinning on battlements, the shadow of her angel
Long since withering.

Along the banks of her gossamer madness,
I am poised in infallible hallowness,
Sainted by the blessing of intention
To pluck her from every watery procession.

Her garments plead
With the heaviness of my drink.
"Pray Love, Remember"

She lays in her mumbled sacraments,
Torn maidenheads fluttering in garlands of mockery.
Slipping from naked lips, her bitter gifts dropping
In sighed, sweet song.

And I, the long cloaked savior,
Haunt all the courtyards
Where she might be singing
Clutching at fingers too soon whetted and pruned.

Her rosemary blooms
In every bower I pervade
"Pray Love, Remember"

There's a willow aslant a brook
Where every snatch of old tunes
Is sung by my heart from her drowning mask.

There is stone and slipper
Where her distraction shall reveal
My betrothal to her fall.

And on either side of this tumbled grace,
I hover to bait release.

For I court Delirium
In brides that hang between.
So, "Pray Love, Remember"

Posted with gracious permission of William Danan...I just had to add this message from him...

I'm sure you know, as a writer, how you slave and sweat over one child, while another pops out almost unnoticed. And it is, invariably, that child, the one that stands looking at you while you herniate your hand and heart over another, who attains the notice... and invariably the troublesome birth that fades...