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An omniscient moon lingers above decaying homes
 Cold wintry air shrouding the bleak landscape
 Cobblestones run through every street and ally
 Putrescent signs swaying in the silent night
 
 Ceres slowly walked through these familiar paths
 Her footsteps echoing throughout the deserted village
 Heart beating slowly falling to her knees
 She wept softly in the icy breeze
 
 Buried within the fine dust and rubble
 Ceres unearthed a cerulean hand crafted pillow
 With her family insignia embellished in the corner
 Painfully she silently read aloud “Welcome Home”

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This article has 4 comments.
Now that I know this was based off of a dream it makes more sense. Or as much sense as dreams can make.
It's still a haunting story whether or not your audience fully understands it. I think that's the way it is and should be with poetry. A reader never gets the same experience that you did while writing, but they can still be moved by what you wrote.
I loved the connection you made with Ceres. (Once I googled her...)
I was a bit confused by the ending and wished you would continue the story, but it was written beautifully.
Were you personifying a rennaisance with Ceres or was the name just used because you thought it fit? I was just wondering how far you wanted the connection between your character and the goddess to go?
 
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Favorite Quote:
"It was night, and the rain fell; and falling, it was rain, but, having fallen, it was blood" ~ Silence - A Fable by Edgar Allan Poe