Tell me your love is not cruel.
You needn’t – it does not exist.
Against you, I must constantly duel
But am shrouded by mist.

The mist around your heart,
It lies, it deceives.
You are a work of art,
Which my heart perceives
As love and devotion.
You hold a king’s power,
Your beauty is your throne
Raising you up – tall as a tower.

Tell me, can I ever change the path,
My soul has set for my coming years?
You needn’t – I can always count on your wrath,
To make my heart spill tears.

(Just to clarify, that was a partial rewrite of a previous poem I posted here titled “A King’s Throne Is As Cold As His Heart”)

You are brighter than all moons,
Your clothes as black as the runes
Decorating your skin – clear as the pale night.
I am able to find my way, guided by your witchlight.
Oh the people you’ve saved, the things you’ve destroyed.
You saved me from myself and filled up the void
Growing in my empty heart. By the angel,
I owe you my life, son of Raziel.
Your touch makes the power of your stele dim.
I am yours as you are mine, dear Nephilim.

Before, we were a book without a word.
As my magic drew you in,
Your runes put a spell on me.
Now, we are as limitless as the world.

For this, my dear, is my favourite combination:
Your hair; as black as the night sky,
Your eyes; as blue as the sea.
And you, my dear, are the epitome of perfection.

Where we now stand, you stood.
I was lonely, when you found me,
You were lost, when I found you.
We are one, Alec Lightwood.

I find it rather ironic that Jay Gatsby has the ability to read people perfectly, yet the notion of opening a book and then going on to read it is seemingly preposterous to him. What ever did we do to make him so distant?
My cousin The Picture of Dorian Gray on the shelf below me doesn’t think we are to blame, and I would tend to agree with him. I don’t think Jay dislikes reading, I just don’t think he enjoys it either. He has so many other things to do in his busy billionaire life. None of which involve picking me off a shelf, of course.
He often walks into the library and just stands in the middle of the room, as though he were admiring his impressive collection. Yet when I look into his eyes, all I am able to detect is a vague emptiness. It has occurred, occasionally, that he take one of us in his hands and look at the cover, perhaps even daring to open the front page and skim over the first few words before tiring his eyes. I’ve never had the honour. Sometimes, I wonder if he is purposefully ignoring me. I think, though, that I might feel insulted if he made the effort of picking me up but didn’t bother carrying on to actually read me.
I remember once, not so long ago in fact, a drunk owl-eyed man from one of Jay’s parties stumbled into this very library. I’m rather proud to say he took quite a liking to me. Not only that, but he gently tipped me backwards to get a better look at my spine, and slid me out of my place. The touch of human hands on my cover, and the sound of my pages carefully being turned, one by one. Seeing things from a new angle was quite disconcerting in and of itself. I felt dazed when the owl-eyed man gently put me back in my spot. I distinctly remember hearing the owl-eyed man mentioning something about my cousins and I being “real books, with pages and everything”, a look of awe written across his face. I think he was expecting fake cardboard books.
Jay wants people to believe he is a well-educated Oxford man, but we all know he only spent four months there after the war. A handful of my cousins were brought here from Oxford, but he never read them. I get the impression he brought them here as a reminder to himself that he did, in fact, partially attend Oxford University. To convince others, one must first convince oneself.
What I love about being one of Jay’s books is that I get to hear so many different opinions regarding such an infinitely wide range of subjects varying from religion to unicorns. Another thing I love about belonging to him is the amount of things I hear from other humans who wander in here, trying to act ‘intellectual’ when they’re really too drunk off their own ego to notice our open ears, devouring every word they utter. They manage to come up with the most absurd rumours you could imagine about how Jay became who he is. However the facts remain unexamined, quite like my cousins and I.
I think it a tragedy that a mind as intricate as his be wasted on the wild imaginings of a man in love with impossibility. What has love ever done for humanity? It has caused wars, deaths, grief… Don’t tell The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling that. He’ll simply say love is what we owe our existence to.
I suppose I rather like my owner, however hypocritical he may be. Although in his defence, he is ‘in love’, as The History of Tom Jones, A Foundling would phrase it, and I wouldn’t be here if he weren’t.
Why would Jay Gatsby feel the need to own a book entitled Out Of Love if not to remind him love isn’t an amount like his money, but an emotion who’s persistence keeps one going?

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Ton regard répare mon coeur brisé en morceaux
Alors que ce sont tes mots qui l’ont brisé ainsi.
Quel hypocrite es-tu pour te faire voir si beau
Alors que c’est ton visage qui me rend ainsi?

Why do you no longer laugh?
What happened to my sunshine
Whose ray could light up a path
In my hopelessly lost mind.
Your touch is not as before;
It soothes my worries no more.

Your eyes are full of regret,
I pray I am not its source.
It was not there when we met;
T’was when life took its course
That you lost faith, faith in me,
For this is my tragedy.

Or, tu ne ris plus,

Tu ne danses plus, ne chantes plus;

Tu me sembles perdue.

It always happens like this.

I stroll through the square, my feet brushing through the leaves. Out of the corner of my eyes, I make out Mrs. Baumern’s black cat trying to jump from one window sill to another. I stop to watch it. I suddenly hear a loud thudding sound. I look to the left and see Mr. Weseley cutting down a tree with his axe. It starts raining, and the sky grows dark, as though in a hurry. Mr. Weseley stands up straight, his back still turned, silent.

“Mr. Weseley?” I ask hesitatingly.

He slowly turns around until he is facing me. His head is drooping slightly, so I can’t quite make out his face from under his hooded grey cloak. After what feels like an eternity, he raises his head. I feel myself grow pale. All the colour has been drained from my face. Instead of Mr. Weseley, I see a black oval shape, with two sunken eye-sockets and a mouth shaped hole. Grey smoke is pouring out of it. I want to scream but nothing seems to be coming out.

He starts advancing towards me. My feet are as though fastened to the ground. As he grows closer, I realise that what I thought had been an axe was in fact much bigger and thinner, much more elegant. It is a scythe. He stops as he reaches me. He seems so fragile, and yet so powerful at the same time. I can practically taste his loneliness, rolling off him in waves. I want to run from this sad, desolate creature, but I can’t. I can feel him drawing the life out of me. I wonder why he even carries a scythe. He doesn’t need one.

Suddenly my legs buckle. I don’t want to run any more. I feel my face against the dead leaves. I don’t want to be afraid any more. I can no longer feel anything. I don’t feel. There is darkness. There is silence. There is nothing.

 

Ever since I can remember, I have been able to see what will happen in the future. Every so often I am randomly hit by a vision of something that will take place in my future life. I used to think they were simply dreams, but I soon came to realise they meant something more.

When I was six, I had a vision of my little brother drowning in the lake. At the time, I dismissed it as a nightmare. However two years later, my father was telling me that my little brother had just drowned in the lake. He described it just as I had seen it. That was when I knew my dreams and nightmares were not only imaginings of the mind, but predictions of the future.

Most of the time, the visions are quite unimportant; for example the surprise test in maths next week, or my neighbours moving out in a year’s time. A handful, however, are much more meaningful, and none of which I can prevent. Believe me I’ve tried, but it’s as though something were holding me back, restraining me from not breaking my leg. Or not being able to warn anyone as the church burned down with people still locked in a few years back. I even had a vision of my boyfriend breaking up with me last month which I was yet again unable to prevent.

I don’t know what causes them, but these visions are someone’s fault, and I intend to find out who. I hate the feeling of not knowing, but I’m not going to pretend I do. I used to think of these visions as a kind of gift, but I think of them now as a curse. Knowing how you are going to die isn’t particularly comforting. Knowing how you are going to die and not being able to do anything about it isn’t particularly soothing either.

I have never had the same vision twice. Except one. There is one vision which I have everyday. At least once everyday, I see myself dying the same way, over and over again. Over the course of the years, I have come to notice and pick up every minute detail of it. The movement of each branch, the sound of each step, the taste of each intake of air, the smell of each flower, the feel of my face crashing against each leaf. And then nothing. I can’t even describe it. It’s just a kind of emptiness, which cannot be filled. Should not, in fact, be filled.

This is what I tell myself as I stroll through the village square, my feet brushing through the thick carpet of leaves. I’ve never liked autumn; too many noisy dead leaves. Out of the corner of my eyes, I see Mrs. Baumern’s black cat trying to jump from one window sill to another. I stop immediately, watching it. I suddenly hear a loud thudding sound.

The inevitable has come to pass, and I feel now the future in the instant.

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Books have always been an important part of my life. I learnt how to read before going to school, and even then I was an avid reader. The pile of books in my room grew rapidly, but I kept them tidy and well organised so that I could find the one I wanted easily. Perhaps that is why I am constantly rearranging things around the house to be in a more orderly fashion.

Books really have always been a way to escape reality. I can simply open a book and all of my worries will float away for a while. And even as I close the book, the story shadows my thoughts and dreams, easing my way through life. It’s rather strange how these little black swirls and dots on a page can change one’s life. When authors write a book, they are giving their opinion on a subject. And when you read a lot of books, you discover all these different points of view; giving me a new perspective on things and helping me forge my own outlook on life today.

A couple of years ago, I met Nicky Singer, author of Feather Boy, with whom I exchanged ideas in a writing workshop. Actually talking with the person who wrote this book was an amazing experience and reinforced my wish to continue writing.

I create many alternative universes which is probably what motivated me to start a website, where I publish some of my writings. I have met people around me who like the same books as I do, and have made interesting friends who recommend even more books.

When you read many books, you do not simply have a better literary culture, but you also learn many random facts. For instance thanks to the Hunger Games (Collins), I know now that mockingbirds mimic the sounds of other birds and insects. Percy Jackson (Riordan) taught me about Greek and Roman mythology, Dracula (Stoker) confirmed my suspicions that vampires do not glitter in the sunlight, as they do according to Twilight (Meyer), and Divergent (Roth) reminded me of five important words that define us as human beings (amity, abnegation, dauntless, erudite and candor). The Book Thief (Zusak) showed me that there are two sides to everything, the Perks of Being a Wallflower (Chbosky) gave me hope, Looking for Alaska (Green) told me that some things are best left unknown and the Count of Monte Cristo (Dumas) made me understand that life is not a fairy tale.

All of these characters have such different lives, such different personalities. When I am in a difficult position, I ask myself what my favourite character would do in this particular situation. When I meet someone, I subconsciously compare them to a character from a story. Now whether or not that is a good thing, I couldn’t tell you, but it certainly is a part of who I am.

I have always relied on books to help me on this thrilling journey we call life. All of these stories have such a great influence on me and the decisions I make. Books truly define who I am today.

Le doux bruit constant de pages qui tournent dans un livre,
Nos yeux absorbés par l’histoire et ses conflits,
Les rêves des personnages que nous voulons poursuivre;
Voici ce qu’est un livre qui raconte un récit.

Comme c’est étrange, le livre a un pouvoir ultime;
Il est tout-puissant, il contrôle nos émotions,
De la volonté de l’auteur nous sommes victimes
Notre vie à jamais changée par ses créations.

En lisant tard le soir, on devient plus sensibles;
Leurs pensées resonnent dans notre esprit tel des cloches.
Nous connaissons leurs propos les plus horribles,
Leurs rêves les plus beaux – des personnages nous sommes proches.

De leurs joies nous rions, leurs tristesses nous pleurons.
C’est dans notre monde qu’est plus crucial le roman
Que l’univers réel dans lequel nous vivons;
Ce sont les histoires qui rendent ces siècles plus vivants.