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Wife of an Icon
Our only escape is in your garden of gleaming vermilion vines
The wall with the bountiful carmine-colored roses
You’re on every teenage girls’ wall, forever happy and young
You’re high every midnight from playing your red stringed friend in front of thousands of fans
The girls in their tight mini skirts,
everybody wonders what it would be like to love you
You’re gone every night, lights flashing with your childhood mates
I hate it,
but I’m fine if it means I get to love the real you
Who never wants to hide
Who kisses my little nose
Who smiles downward, shyly.
Who sits in the morning sun and thrusts his chin to the sky
Who listens for its nature’s light voice in sweeping air
I’m happy while you delicately brush the strings to get the perfect chords
But part of me knows our love is calamitous,
I dream of the real you even when I’m awake
Even when your two inches from my body
Sinking in the old couch saying “I’m sorry”
“She means nothing.”
The radiance I thought your face possessed had fled
So I’ll let it play out through the love songs you write
Until I realize we’re out of time, until we’re no longer each other’s safe space
Until the roses in the garden wilt, the vines curl, and someone else listens to you strumming your guitar.
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This poem was inspired by how constant pressure on the relationship, no matter how beautiful, can come crumbling down. Specifically this poem also talks about how people act differently with the people they love versus friends and people who idolize them. This poem is very loosely inspired by Beatles' member George Harrison and relationship with his first wife, Pattie Boyd. With that said, you can insert whoever you want to think it's about into this poem!