Hunger
I press my palms to the glass of night,
watching the silhouette of what I want—
a flame that flickers just beyond
the reach of reason,
but I do not move.
Your name is a storm I mouth in silence,
each syllable a thread
pulled tight across my ribs.
I feel you—
not in touch,
but in the ache of absence
that blooms like bruises under skin.
The moon is complicit,
spilling light across my restraint
as if to say, go.
But I stay.
Still.
Stillness is its own kind of fever.
I’ve taught my body
the grammar of denial,
each breath a sentence I do not finish.
There is art in holding back—
in standing at the edge of a kiss
and tasting only the idea of salt.
Longing is a slow fire—
it doesn’t consume,
only warms the cage
where my wildest yes
paces.
But oh—
in the cathedral of my thoughts,
you burn like stained glass:
beautiful, untouchable,
casting colors on the floor of what I cannot have.
3 thoughts on "Hunger"
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All hauntingly gorgeous, but that final stanza was a vibrant visual above the rest.
Thank you.
Stillness is its own kind of fever- love the tone of this poem with creative language!