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Poetry
by Chris Zachariou
United Kingdom


Τάκης Ζαχαρίου

Ποιήματα

Γιαλούσα, Κύπρος

Writer's pictureChris Zachariou

Poets in Love - A Coming-of-Age Poem


The poet with unbridled thoughts

and the scent of fledgling sparrows

on her lips

rides bareback to the river

on the preacher's scarlet mule.


Baring her teeth, she hunts

the piety of the mosquito hunter

until her quarry whimpers


and sails on his sterile raft

until he finds her bathing in the river

wearing nothing but the rattle

of her designer chains.


Under the of an aspen tree

the poets revel in the sweet taste

of failure and scorn the moonless

landscape of success.


Their unfinished rhymes

writhe in sheer wantonness

with the songs of blue wasps

on a bed of fallen needles.


Mired in the fever of this new swamp

she flutters in his calloused hands

and cries to her lover 'push me down

and push me down until I taste the mud'.


Part of the mosaics cycle of poems


A few words about the poem…


A Coming-of-Age Poem Unveiling the Enigma of Desire and Societal Rebellion

In the enigmatic realm of "Poets in Love," the poet navigates a landscape where innocence recedes, giving way to the awakening of sexual desire. The scent of fledgling sparrows on her lips serves as a subtle metaphor for the burgeoning sexuality that permeates the narrative.


The journey to the river on the preacher's scarlet mule symbolizes the poet's entry into the world of sexual gratification, a departure from the sheltered realm of unbridled thoughts. Baring her teeth, she becomes a huntress, pursuing the piety of the mosquito hunter—a seemingly meaningless occupation that succumbs to the poet's overt sexuality.


As her quarry whimpers and sails on a sterile raft, the poet is found bathing in the river, adorned only in the banality of designer chains. The juxtaposition of the whimpers and the sterile raft suggests a surrender to temptation, while the designer chains embody a meaningless existence devoid of depth.


In the shade of an aspen tree, the lovers revel in the sweet taste of failure, a commentary on those whose lives revolve solely around success. The moonless landscape of success is scorned, emphasizing the poets' rejection of conventional measures of achievement.


Their unfinished rhymes writhe with sheer wantonness, intertwining with the songs of amoral blue wasps on a bed of fallen needles. The aspen tree emerges as a symbol of sobriety amidst the poets' rejection of societal norms, as they abandon themselves to the unbridled pursuit of sexual gratification.


Mired in the fever of the new swamp, the poet flutters in her lover's calloused hands, illustrating an unconventional relationship between youth and age. The plea to be pushed down until tasting the mud encapsulates a complete and utter indulgence in newfound desires—an act of surrender that marks the discovery and embrace of sexuality.


In essence, "Poets in Love" unfolds as a coming-of-age poem, where symbols and imagery weave a tapestry of mystery, hinting at the complexities of desire, societal rebellion, and the intoxicating allure of surrendering to the primal forces that shape the human experience.

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