The eldest daughter is 
a poem written amid military coupe.
A forgotten goddess sleeping inside a prehistoric cave for eight thousand years, 
her dreams infused
with the scent of damp earth 
and forgotten rituals.
The yearning of blood,
like that of a sycophant mosquito, 
that feeds on the sweat of the living.
A reminder of the hunger 
that gnaws within,
a void that cannot be filled.
A chasm that yawns
like the mouth of a milky way.
A portal to the underworld
where the dead reside.
A story unremembered, 
except in the dreams
of a vampire. 
A land where God weeps 
when cigarettes are out of stock.
Nails struck on eyes of a stray dog.
Plastic heart that doesn't 
decompose for ages.
A sea threatening to drown itself.
Fraudulent copy of apologies 
that doesn't make sense.
Stab scar over a butterfly's eyelids.
A frost bite never intending to kill.
A titanium bone inside plastered leg.
A censored war documentary.
A mashed tomato sticking 
inside a empty cup.
A magnifying glass afraid of
starting a house fire.
The golden chariot of forest cuckoos.
A bridge hoping to burn.
A wound outstaying it's stay.
A grief comforting pain.
Frankeinstein begging for a brave new world.

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