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The Page
The searing white of the page,
What to write,
Can be a cage
A sheet of paper
Can be a dreamscape,
Or a prison from which
One cannot escape
Stare too long,
You’ll soon regret
Step away, do not fret
If you stare at the clock,
As it ticks away the time,
You might find yourself
Slowly losing your mind
Remember: the Page is yours,
Not the other way around;
Don’t let it make you frown
Don’t let it win,
You wear the crown,
For the King of the Page’s mind
Will forever be sound
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Originally written as an Honors English assignment in my freshman year, I lost the first copy of this poem, and so I have reconstructed it. The original was much, much better. I promise.
It was intended to depict the feeling of "writer's block." As a writer myself, I have occasionally suffered from this unfortunate ailment.
It was also intended to be the poetry counterpart to a story I had written in that same class, called "Utopia." The story is about a man who makes his living from writing, and having run out of ideas, he writes of a place where everything is perfect. Suddenly, he wakes up, realizing he is in a dream. The setting of his dream is his "Utopia," or the perfect place he knows cannot exist. Long story short, he is trapped within his own mind, in a vast field of grey, without color or substance, unable to awake from his dream. Or nightmare, however you perceive it.
(Lovecraftian, I know, and if I could remember where I put the original copy I would submit it, and you would see that the character's name is William Lovecraft. An homage, to one of the greatest writers.)