The waves of the Cumberland heave solemn and true
A sickness moved through us
Paroling fog in the gut, and
Escaping heavy through
My chest gaping towards you—
You there burning in your Appalachian coal, and
Tobacco long highways
Grieving loud in your sigh
Til one day I fell, too far—
Deeper than the Southern sand, that is
Whistling above Earth
Oh Solemn, I pray.
Our love grew dense and tangled, and messy that summer
Foggy and yellow, and stained wrought like
The pews of your youth.
For Heaven cried loudly with its yawn and blue tears—
I remiss.
I weep for you.
Sleeping, there, as big as stands Time—
Snuffed above the smoke rushing higher than your ghost
And the stench of impermanence drifting lonely
In that river, Hell moaned, moving fast and out of sight.
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