Enchanted Journal: Sonnet #2
“Good afternoon to thee, fair journal. I fear a lot does weigh upon my mind this day. Dreadful revelations hath unraveled betwixt the magical fellow and the good lady. ‘tis something regarding her lord father. I know not what to do, nor what to say...so instead I do suppose I shall ‘write’ in thee, fair journal. It does always ease my mind. A sonnet, I think...indeed, indeed. A sonnet it shall be.
And who shall bare the blame? ‘I,’ said the swan,
With fire and flame. I shall bare the blame.’
Where wicked deeds die, guilt goes on and on,
Even if no one dares to speak their name.
Doth he find at the bottom of the stein,
Some numb relief - a blackness like the sea?
So dark and deep that e’erything seems fine,
‘til the morning sun dries the drunken glee?
I know well the horrors of life and mind,
I know of rust, of loss, of lust, of blood,
Then why now do my lips falter to find,
The words that ought describe my friend’s ill flood?
‘tis said the swan sings not until he dies,
Thus in limbo he lives ‘twixt truth and lies.”











