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    Thirteen Black Roses: Gothic Romantic Poetry

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      THIRTEEN BLACK ROSES

      Gothic Romantic Poetry

      By

      CHRISTOPHER COURTLEY

      Thirteen Black Roses: Gothic Romantic Poetry by Christopher Courtley

      Copyright 2013 by Christopher Courtley

      Cover design by Christopher Courtley

      https://www.christophercourtley.com

      O Rose, thou art sick!

      ~William Blake

      CONTENTS

      To A Sick Rose

      Descending Angel

      Addiction

      To Lilith, Queen of Darkness

      Medusa

      Nosferatu, or Despair

      The Ghost

      The Comical Tragedy

      How Frantically We Clothe Each Naked Day

      The Layers of Illusion

      My Garden of Proserpine

      Wedding Night

      No Swan Song

      About the Author

      To A Sick Rose

      My Rose, O thou art sick, but it is I

      Who wrap myself in shadow to escape

      The noisome day and to thy bosom fly;

      Who bite thy lips and from them kisses rape—

      My clutches desperate, my head a swarm

      That buzzes with a thousand sleepless nights

      Until I rest inside thee soft and warm;

      My secret Rose, whose crimson bed’s delights

      Alone can still the howling of the storm

      That rages with a thousand anguished cries

      And spends its fury on thy trembling form

      Before it once again begins to rise

      Up from my core corruption, roiling thick,

      Devouring my life—Rose, I am sick!

      Back to top

      Descending Angel

      Through the rain’s grey haze I sometimes see

      An angel sail across the night’s deep ocean

      Wrapped in sombre swathes of mystery

      Feline and ethereal in motion.

      Surreal, she glides, with sweeping eyes exotic

      Concealing more about her than they tell;

      In havens strange she weathers storms erotic

      And holds some phantom lover in her spell.

      Or perhaps she walks this world unknown

      Adrift like me upon the seas of time

      Wandering deserted streets alone

      Until the morning sun begins its climb.

      I’ll never know, nor share my secret pain;

      She passes, virginal, just like the night

      Descending with the dark clouds and the rain

      To seize my heart before she takes to flight.

      Back to top

      Addiction

      She stalks the shadows of my mind

      And the dreams she leaves behind

      Taunt me with her memory

      Haunting nightmarish ecstasy.

      A sickly lust, a prick of fear—

      The night descends and brings her here

      Naked and untouched by man

      A moon-white virgin courtesan.

      She is all and I am hers

      Abject slave to a heart that stirs

      For no one—so I nightly sit

      In paradises counterfeit.

      Loving her is poisoned bliss

      Her kiss is death and still I kiss;

      So banish sun and harsh daylight

      And come sweet angel of the night—

      Come upon the moonlight’s streaming

      Come and light my darkest dreaming

      Come and fill my veins with pleasure—

      All I want, and all I treasure.

      Back to top

      To Lilith, Queen of Darkness

      There’s a sweet, sharp knowledge only gleaned in the night

      Far from the noise and the noisome light

      Of day and distraction, formation and fight—

      The dark and the silence that nurtures delight,

      Healing old wounds and soothing the spite

      That attends our struggles and impedes our flight.

      Night is for lovers and liers in truth

      Sweetest of tongue and sharpest of tooth;

      The eye of the day brings the harshest of lights;

      So to hell with my days—only give me your nights!

      Give me your darkness to nourish my soul;

      Give me your nakedness, plain, pure and whole—

      Give me the sweetness my sharpness desires

      And give me the sharpness my sweetness requires.

      Back to top

      Medusa

      Once greedy for her golden hair

      I plucked a strand from her fair head,

      But fixed in her medusa stare

      My feet to her stone floor were wed.

      Now ever standing frozen there

      Impaled by Cupid’s leaden dart

      I watch her with an eyeless glare

      And weigh her with a statue’s heart.

      How swiftly once the hours fled,

      But now they stalk; a lion’s share

      Upon my weary soul has fed

      And laid her sordid secrets bare.

      Within her chamber bathed in red,

      Clad only in her golden hair,

      As alchemists make gold from lead

      So she makes love without a care

      To any who will grace her bed

      An hour or two and then depart.

      One night she looked at me and said:

      “Ah, what a fragile work of art

      You are, my dear.” Then I with dread

      Perceived how she could break apart

      My body as though it were bread,

      Crumble to bits my statue’s heart

      And crush my frozen eyeless glare

      To dust beneath her august tread

      For winds to sweep from out her lair.

      But she just laughed and tossed her head

      To kiss me with her golden hair

      As turning she went back to bed.

      And still she keeps me standing there,

      A figure neither live nor dead.

      Back to top

      Nosferatu, or Despair

      Now once again Despair hath sunk

      Its rotting teeth into my will,

      And of my aspirations drunk,

      And of my dreams taken its fill.

      Upon its rank and icy breath

      Is borne the stinking waste of years

      Infecting everything, like Death,

      Whose robes are steeped in blood and tears

      As stooping over all my cares

      It throws long shifting shadows on

      The steeply climbing, crumbling stairs

      Of my ambitions, almost gone

      And quickly fading from my sight

      Into the stalking mists of time

      Like corpses drained to leprous white

      Deep in a pit, heaped o’er with lime,

      The plague victims of my intent,

      Those hopes and dreams I once held dear

      In slow decay lie impotent

      As I do in the grip of fear.

      And those inverted creatures, my

      Unrestful thoughts and nightmares, bring

      To life a scream born from a sigh

      As shadowed night doth give them wing;

      A sigh so deep that no abyss

      Nor even the unfathomed sea

      Nor even Death’s cold, endless kiss

      Can rival its profundity.

      Back to top

      The Ghost

      As I walk the sodden banks of this river of human souls

      That hurry onward to their common destiny

      I observe them as they say their lines and play their little roles


      And dance to the tune of a tragic symphony.

      I haunt your world like a ghost mourning the life it lost

      A shadow watching from the corners of your envied existence

      For I cannot cross the river you have crossed

      And so there lies between us an infinite distance.

      But sometimes in the ocean depths of your eyes

      I can see the shimmer of a shining yesterday

      Like something you just couldn’t exorcise

      That left its silver lining amid the grey.

      As through this carnival of souls I move unhurried

      The baggage of my former life left far behind

      Gone but not forgotten, though deeply buried

      A priceless treasure none will ever find

      In the masked and painted faces of the figures passing by

      I read a thousand books that say the same damned thing

      A thousand different ways, and with a lonely sigh

      I seek the solace solitude will bring.

      So here I stand alone, and here alone I stay

      I cannot enter your world, nor will you enter mine

      My one remaining hope is that one day

      They will once again collide and recombine.

      And sometimes in the ocean depths of your eyes

      I can see the shimmer of a shining yesterday

      Like something you just couldn’t exorcise

      That left its silver lining amid the grey

      Back to top

      The Comical Tragedy

      we bring our demons with us

      lying as we go

      inviting all our evils in

      visible transparent show

      and ever so obscure

      the exorcising of the cure

      never to be grasped by us

      who hold ourselves so clean and pure

      as we primp and prance and pose

      parading in our emperors clothes

      pointing fingers in secure

      assessment of each others woes

      arrayed in naked faults we grin

      and snicker at our fellows sin

      for as without us so within

      the fun house mirrors we abjure

      too tempting is the ancient lure

      to gossip and to some add vice

      all guilt with virtues to assure

      that we are all so very nice

      to bring our demons with us

      in this traveling circus show

      acting out a freakish mythos

      crying as we go

      Back to top

      How Frantically We Clothe Each Naked Day

      How frantically we clothe each naked day

      With every ornament that comes our way

      In masques and revelries adorn our time

      Ridiculously prance and pantomime

      Like clowns who with their antics hope in vain

      To drown out for one moment all the pain

      That shrieks beneath its costume nonetheless

      As in its former poverty of dress.

      The ghost of winter in our dream of spring

      Still casts its shadow over everything—

      The phantom at the ball who does his best

      To make himself a most unwelcome guest.

      We make a show of shrugging off our cares

      But laughter is a mask that trembling wears.

      Back to top

      The Layers of Illusion

      The world and we are semblance and no more;

      Beneath each different mask indifference lies—

      The layers of illusion we adore

      Conceal a dull despair that never dies.

      Behind the masquerade that life puts on

      There yawns a vast but empty banquet hall

      Where echoes of a chorus long since gone

      Give rise to forms like shadows on the wall.

      Loud pageants pass, and thrill, annoy, or bore;

      The games we play at best serve to amuse.

      Why strive to win when no one’s keeping score

      And more to gain is simply more to lose?

      While we in relays run our bootless race

      To build our lies upon another’s lies,

      Our weary feet can only serve to trace

      Wide circles in the sands of enterprise.

      As clouds drift by, and neither stand nor fall

      So sail we on to some imagined shore

      Until time strips us bare and of us all

      Makes clumsily an end, and then no more.

      Thus frenziedly we whirl as in a dream

      Through shifting seasons in their endless round

      Where all we know of things is how they seem,

      To spokes of Fortune’s wheel forever bound.

      So scorn the world as but a painted whore,

      Or love her—only pay her and have done.

      The lies we lived, the truths by which we swore

      Will lie with her and in her and be one.

      Back to top

      My Garden of Proserpine

      Sleep’s the soothing balm for scathing time;

      To lie awash in dreams, half-waking still

      Between the never-land of bliss sublime

      And lucid labyrinths of what-you-will;

      Such sleep is sweet. But bitter gall is better,

      For honey-slow, this syrup sly as sin

      From its first slinking serpent-subtile letter

      (Kiss-shaped whisper, worm of saccharine)

      Slips in, a silken silver murderess

      To shrink from as I never have from pain—

      That heroine of Nod whose cold caress

      Once drew from tainted blood the sons of Cain.

      So you slip in, my garden of delight,

      Golgotha, grinning skull of pale-horsed Death,

      Through scarlet tears in skin once virgin-white,

      With flowers, rot, and grave-dirt on your breath.

      Such sleep’s a comfort I cannot endure;

      A cipher like a circle to confine

      And pin me to your wheel of cause and cure;

      Your milk and honey and your sour wine.

      Back to top

      Wedding Night

      The dark night softly calls to me and beckons me to bed

      With promises like sand grains tinkling through an hourglass

      And whispers of sweet nothing upon which to rest my head;

      A pillow of oblivion beneath the even grass.

      As dusk had drawn its velvet curtain on the world’s unrest

      The veil over my eyes was lifted; darkness shone like light

      And then a lifetime’s longing rose from deep within my breast

      As I prepared to give myself to my eternal night.

      How soothing and seductive, these caresses formed of bliss;

      The life that once entranced is ravished now by Death’s allure,

      For he has breathed into my bosom with his endless kiss

      A shadow of that consummation I cannot abjure.

      No more is time my enemy; I’ve put away all pride;

      Hence even hope has flown, with all the burden of my cares—

      And now with pure abandon will my soul, that joyous bride

      Embraced by her Beloved, shed this garment that she wears.

      Back to top

      No Swan Song

      I have no swan song; words desert me now

      That I have lost my youthful poet’s soul.

      I have no will to sing one anyhow;

      My heart’s as empty as a beggar’s bowl.

      Such poor unhappy lines as I might pen

      Cannot but show the dearth of feeling there,

      As they fall flat and fizzle out again

      And again, without their former flair.

      And though they aptly show my poverty

      Of spirit, passion, and creative fire,

      This alone does not make poetry,

      No more than ashes make a funeral pyre.

      Back to top

      ###


      About the author:

      Christopher Courtley has been spinning tales for nearly four decades. He wrote his first poem when he was around eight, but it wasn't until his late teens that he became a prolific poet. Born and raised in the slums of New York City, he has come to appreciate the finer things in life, such as cutlery, napkins, music made with real instruments, sophisticated women, and good manners. When he is not languishing in an absinthe-soaked torpor, or wandering between the worlds, or being irritatingly distracted by the vicissitudes of earthly life, he spends his nights writing furiously, occasionally remembering to shave, bathe, and eat.

      Also by Christopher Courtley:

      TROLL STEW: A STRANGE BREW OF DARK FAIRY TALES AND POEMS FOR ADULTS

      THE TEMPLE OF BAAL-ZEBUB (TALE I OF THE VALRUNA SAGA)

      THE BONE DANCER (TALE II OF THE VALRUNA SAGA)

      Connect with the author online:

      Official Site: https://www.christophercourtley.com

      Twitter: https://twitter.com/courtleymanor

      Facebook: https://facebook.com/courtleymanor

      Blog: https://courtleymanor.blogspot.com

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