<i>Avians Of Quests</i>

Avians Of Quests

A Poem by Alskar

To watch a hoyl wilt with weight of self-majesty blacks my royal eyes. I must not lift 
To fall feathered against your brackled sternum, else you shall fall fowl to 
The elusive Persephone of tyrianed rivers. Instead, I shall become a watcher 
Of the ancient minority, placed against amethyst foliage and proud even in 
Inherent denouncement. 

Moonstones are patient against iridescent plummage. We may look in the same 
Direction, but our purposes marry not. Still you remain against minutes and days. 
Patient as your myth for the azure pyre which calls your end. At littlest, you await
The ember which announces your beginning. But then no longer shall you be
My high hoyl. 

I pass under amaranth skies to gnarled violet topiary above your crest. Cosmic white 
Though I am, beauty lies within contrast. It is this that presses Persian rocks to 
Stare at the old, and the quiet. Still yet I am starred against nobility, and your half
Mooned eyes fail to notice. Flail my untouched wings and cry out to phthalo oceans.
Blacken me.

© 2011 Alskar


Author's Note

Alskar
Jewish mythology includes the story of the hoyl—a bird that, like the phoenix, is devoured by divine fire only to rise from its own ashes. Legend says that after Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit in the Garden of Eden, Adam offered the fruit to all of the animals. The hoyl bird was the only one that refused to eat the fruit that God had said must never be eaten. As a reward, the hoyl received a kind of immortality. It never dies but only goes to sleep, after which fire destroys it. An egg remains, however, and from that egg a full-grown hoyl hatches anew.


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Featured Review

Ah, thank you for the author's note. I was a bit lost on the 'hoyl' thing. I researched it and it only returned reference to musicians and such (people with that name).
Well, with the definition renewed under the given definition I would definitely venture far enough to say that this is an exquisite work.
A tale of decline, lovely, lovely.
100/100

Posted 12 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.




Reviews

Very well written

Posted 12 Years Ago


I quite like your poetic voice, I'm pretty sure anything you write would appeal to me on some 'gut' level due to this.

My favorite lines was probably:

Still you remain against minutes and days

Posted 12 Years Ago


Different, I have to say, very, very different.

Your vocabulary and way of words is very unique and strong, but also kind of hard to understand.

Awesome overall :)



Posted 12 Years Ago


This is truly a beautifull piece, I can see why it took first place in the contest of skilled poets. Very well thought out and very discriptive, plus the old language fits it perfectly of course! This will go into my favs...!

Posted 12 Years Ago


Graceful poem and it amuses me that you know your mythology, adding an entire story in one poem.

The hoyl is a representation of resistance against temptation. That only those strong enough to ignore it are rewarded with the greatest gift of all: life. :)

Amazing job!

Posted 12 Years Ago


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CT
Not bad at all, and your knowledge of the subject definitely enhances it. It just feels a bit... I don't know... Artificial. A bit too forced, if you will. It seems many of the words are only there to make the poem seem more sophisticated. Honestly, I feel like it could have been a better poem without many of the more exotic examples. Not bad, just a bit to contrived for my tastes. Keep it up.

Posted 12 Years Ago


So graceful and with a great background to match!

Posted 12 Years Ago


This is expressing so much, so elegantly. Each line attaching itself to the next, almost without effort, but I'm sure there was a lot of that and care for this piece. What a great concept, attached to a more grounded story, that I've never heard before. So much good stuff!

Posted 12 Years Ago


Eloquent to a fault and raw. You have my appraise, without a doubt

Posted 12 Years Ago


This is an amazing poem and I like the Iegend..well done. Excellent word play as well.

Posted 12 Years Ago



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Added on September 1, 2011
Last Updated on November 15, 2011

Author

Alskar
Alskar

Edinburgh, United Kingdom



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