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Sonnet of a Dove
You do not look dead. Only quite sleepy. 
 I think I’ll imagine you a dove, so
 you can soar like the bird you were. Maybe 
 you’ll call. I’ll know you by your golden glow. 
 
 You had soft hands and a warm heart, drooping
 feathers like a willow weeping. You taught  
 me birds like to fly in the rain, leaving
 their bones behind them. Leaving me distraught. 
 
 But you are no longer something with wings. 
 Six feet underground, cage of wood. A bud 
 too soon gone cold, sugar-crusted sun clings
 to your lips. Without story, without blood. 
 
 I loved you, now there’s nothing more to love. 
 A hole inside of me, shaped like a dove.

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