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The Death of a Poem (standard:drama, 0 words) | |||
Author: Phil | Added: Jun 29 2001 | Views/Reads: 3319/2227 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
The narrator, Tom, a highschooler, is madly in love with a girl he's known for a long time. But will she go to the prom with him? | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story mellowdramatically that I was in pain but I'd make it somehow. Then she'd start crying and feeling bad for not going to the prom with me. Of course, I didn't really want to die, but I wanted the whole world to feel sorry for me. I just couldn't believe it. Such a beautiful girl, such a perfect creature, was going with that stupid, rotten, lousy jerk. After all these years of loving her, it had been all been crushed on the jagged rocks of reality, of Henry Stonning. To this day, the mention of his name hurts my feelings, ruins my whole day. I didn't go to the prom that year. Or the year after. I tried to get a date the next year, but I was to learn that Stacey wasn't the only girl not interested in me. I don't know how long I stood in that parking lot in the rain. But I remember taking the poem out of my pocket, unfolding it, and reading it for the last time. It was so beautiful. But Stacey would never know that such a wonderful poem had been written for her; she would never hear these words. As I read each line expressing my love, the merciless rain plastered the paper with huge spots of gray. By the time I was finished, the paper was ruined and soggy. I dropped it on the ground and stepped on it. Then, with my head hanging low, I slowly walked home. Although my face was wet, I remember one warm drop of water moving down my cheek. I think it was a tear. Tweet
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