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The Ghost Who Wept

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Summary:
A sorrow-stricken ghost from the early 1800s wanders eternally through the ever-changing home in which he died, yearning for recognition, companionship, and release from his endless solitude.

Ceaselessly wandering
through the abode wherein I expired.

Begrudging the multitude of indwellers
altering incessantly with the passage of years.

Disconsolate, beholding their lives—idle—
Squandered.

Begirt—
yet unto all eternity forlorn,

Yowling, beseeching, I bellow—
And yet e’er but—
Inefficaciously falling upon deaf ears—

Futile endeavors to glean recognition.

With a covetous heart—
Beating madly in its solitude—
Beseeching one to plight their troth
Immemorially unto a spectral counterpart…

With a languishing heart, evermore—

Alas, I am but a doleful incorporeality,
Perpetually frozen in perdition;

A weary soul unsuccoured—
Forbidden the very conceivability of quietude—

Condemned unto the illimitable compass of solitude.

I fain would ascend this plane,
Could I but claim my druthers.

My disregarded existence—
A dreary banality,

Whenceforth, I languish to plunge
Unto the obscure.

Thereunto ever I drift—
A desolate spectre,
Bereft of solace—
Accursed to pilgrimage—

A restless mockery of life.

I am but a weeping spectre, evermore—
Evermore, evermore—

Am I but a ghost who weeps.

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    2 COMMENTS

    1. For this poem, I wanted to challenge myself by writing in a style reminiscent of Poe himself. It took a fair amount of research to capture the linguistic tone of the 1800s, as I wanted the poem to read as though it had truly been written during that era.

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