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Don't
Don't stand at my bedside,
my dear,
your grimacing smile reveals sharp, yellow teeth
like a power-hungry vulture.
My dear,
waiting to prey, gleaming eyes. I
pity the honeyed lies
that hover about your crooked mouth.
They fool the world, not me.
Ghosts of my hopes, dissipated at last,
my dear.
Can you not see him, the Reaper?
His grey scepter held high
inside me, in cracked, dry walls
that trap my curious mind. We are ready,
my dear.
My living days have cloaked my eyes
with arrogance and pride.
Too late, it is falling and crumbling, now.
My dear,
with nothing left of me to consume;
Don't stand at my bedside.
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I owe this poem to two people, both of whom I have never met. The first is the owner of a local Italian restaurant because he let me go home taking one of the restaurant's cloth napkins. On it, I had written my first draft of this poem. The second is the author of the novel Their Eyes Were Watching God, Zora Neale Hurston. Her account of the emotional abuse that her main character went through really struck a cord with me. Although this is based on the relationship between Janie and Joe in this novel, I, and many others who have lived in Janie's shoes, can really relate to this. Or at least I hope that they will.