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Wonder
your wonder spits a ghastly future, child
and hears the mourning wails of naive’s death
a rabbit through and through, skinned with style
dead on bed in the head with the last breath
shall i toy with innocence by the neck
through learning summer concludes far too fast
once i die, i’ll grow back older, a wreck
such is “best” life when the world is too vast
i’ll look forward to wine at nine, silent home
while gripping naivety like a dead rose
the one my first love gave me, but i’ve grown
curiosity plus cat on my clothes
apply concrete to open wounds, onward!
we grow too big for our bones, still, stronger.
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This article has 1 comment.
This poem was inspired by the term, "curiosity killed the cat" because my cousin recently told me that I was curious, which is why I tend to pursue things more often. It might sound like a good thing, but in hindsight, maybe remaining innocent and naive would be better in some ways because the more we grow up, the more we lose the magic of childhood.