An introduction to the series in poem.
Oscar Wilde, the man loved stars
They surge silently
Unfazed by the night infinite.
Stars blaze bravely bright
Not unlike the unseiged light
From the fields they stare distantly at
Farther still sat gazing I.
Stars mark their own scars
With unheard rhymes that fuel their capes fluttering stark
Holding their duty with anger just
Stars, their indurate crust.
Racing down the skyline
Towards the awaiting flowers
From the black canvas they shower.
Beautiful are the meadows
But it is not our McGuffin.
Behind the attires our story hides
Between the lines it’s written.
If we could blossom where the verdance are,
The stars might see us too,
But petals latched onto a walnut marred,
Is always a bloom untrue.
Our opus magnum,
A star unfinished.
The solar system implodes
A light relinquished
Past us shot millions
Never cherished
Still we’re alone
To crash before the fuel burnt finished.
Soon diminished.
They hang so far from the gutter we saunter in.
Too far to reach.
But they casually fall to these worlds we also wander in
Too bright to seize.
With that strength with luck we are mustering,
Slowly releasing that iridescence we’re clustered in.
Barely a starlight glow.
And if we catch one ever meandering
Misguided by the shimmer we’re dusted in.
We have to let it go.
To every star:
I hope that you find a flower that can relish in you
So that light can shine in another image anew.
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