Oswalds Lament (AudioPlusMusic) by Carter Seagrove published on 2020-04-30T19:46:19Z Oswald's Lament Written by Alp Mortal Read by Hal Sinden (for Eulogy Media) Music - Stopping By the Inn by Twin Musicom is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) Source: http://www.twinmusicom.org/song/298/stopping-by-the-inn Artist: http://www.twinmusicom.org (Taken from the story 'Oswald's Lament' http://carterseagrove.weebly.com/oswaldslament.html) “Dumah; My heart melts for him as moth craves flame. The night, so lonely now, leaves me vanquished and broken 'til dawn. I pluck a memory from the air like a petal from the bloom of peony perfection and hold it ‘gainst my breast. Imbibed of a sorrowful winter’s hoary breath, my heart is rapacious cold. Hell would be my preferred reality. Eschewing reason, embracing insanity; t’was no choice exercised of free will. Love is no more certain than where the smithy’s hammer falls. Love; the planished surface of a medicine bowl. Every dimple, evidence of the craft; not so blind; not so random. I am well; love makes me sick. The smithy is no fool; he does not strike his thumb, does he? Not he, adorned by blood blisters and contusions of hopeless fools. Cannot be true that love was so barren that I taste only ash; I remember the thunder roll between our thighs; a refuge from confusing rain. Our love was bold; red like the wound. Our love was wise; sagacious as plums that ripen only in the act of picking, else held in stasis ‘til observed. Our love was delectable, like scent floating in the breeze. Our love was fervid; a naked prophet, possessed and revered. We, but acolytes of beauteous truth; seekers not yet believers; pedestrians and passengers; mere spawn; embryonic demons with one horn. Unformed fruit; a question mark for a cock. Love him? I did; swear it was true. Worms may eat my brain but thought is undiminished and emotions hunger for marrow; I swell in servitude of the gift. The deserving man craves the least; the undeserving man, the most; I, now, the fulcrum of the scales; craving more makes me ugly; desiring less, angelic. Goodbye sweet, rotten flux; momentary delusion; eternal, infernal and carnal; my chalice will never be full. Dumah! I love you. Adieu. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tl8uNocmLPw Copyright The Carter Seagrove Project 2020 produced in association with The Alderbourne Press Ltd Genre Lament Comment by KTF <3 2020-07-14T06:38:30Z Comment by jh0st rep0st you are an amazing wordsmith. Do you also write lyrics? ;-} 2020-06-17T11:26:47Z Comment by Jh0st wow, great poetry and great reading 2020-06-17T11:25:27Z Comment by Rigden Durham who made it ?? 2020-05-02T14:24:18Z Comment by Gershom Leon So nice to hear it 2020-05-02T14:23:35Z Comment by Grammont Avery Perfect 2020-05-02T14:22:20Z Comment by Scardenia Velasquez Whooo nice one 2020-05-02T14:21:54Z Comment by Deakin Johnson Loving it 2020-05-02T14:21:16Z Comment by PORFIRIO Moon So so nice 2020-05-02T14:19:56Z Comment by Wabasso Glass Superb! 2020-05-02T14:16:12Z Comment by Idalyn Conway Nice :) 2020-05-02T14:15:18Z Comment by Abbotsford Howe So cool 2020-05-02T14:11:27Z Comment by Harland Mclaughlin omg ! 2020-05-02T13:51:48Z Comment by Gereld Browning Perfect 2020-05-02T13:50:36Z Comment by Botts Beach Superb! 2020-05-02T13:50:14Z Comment by Elsona Owens Cant wait to listen more from you! 2020-05-02T13:49:17Z Comment by Carter Seagrove The story behind Oswald’s Lament Oswald is a brash, ostentatious and thoroughly incorrigible rogue ... but his heart is won over by the young army captain - Dumah, upon whom he lavishes every luxury, much to the amusement of the city folk. His much publicized brazen affaire with the young captain nearly lands in him jail when it is discovered that Dumah is a traitor. Fleeing the city to avoid the backlash, Oswald boards a boat. On-board is a troubadour, who Oswald begs to compose a lament. The troubadour agrees. After delivering the lament, the troubadour disappears, leaving behind a jewel - a jewel that Oswald believed stolen by Dumah. Only then does he realise that the troubadour was Dumah in disguise. The burning question will always be this - did Dumah love Oswald as Oswald loved him, and was Dumah’s flight an act to protect himself or Oswald’s reputation, even his life? 2020-05-02T05:37:30Z