Elegy for the Voice Beneath the Glass

I dwell beneath a dome of glass,
Where no one hears the smallest sound;
I watch the living world go past,
And mourn the self that can’t be found.

Day after day, my throat turns clay,
My lungs press hard against my chest;
I spend my breath, then give away
The little strength I had for rest.

No one must know that I am known,
No face should turn because I’m near;
I find my comfort all alone,
Yet ache for someone else to hear.

A silver crack divides the dark,
A narrow wound, a line of clear;
One stranger pauses at the mark,
And all my longing turns to fear.

The moment that their gaze is turned,
My frightened heart forgets its will;
The scream inside me, nearly burned,
Falls back into its careful still.

I try to hide, but walls are wide,
There is no shadow left to go;
The glass has kept me safe inside,
The crack has let the daylight show.

I want to be seen, but not displayed,
A shape half-lost between the rain;
I want the hand, but am afraid
Of being held too long in pain.

I want my voice to cross the air,
Yet not become another’s word;
I want a witness standing there,
But not the burden of being heard.

Pick me up like an old toy,
Turn me gently in the day;
Do not mend me, or destroy—
Just know I lived, then put away.

Let dust return to dust and rust,
Let silence fold around my name;
Let someone touch me once with trust,
Then leave me as I was, the same.

For I have learned the art to breathe
Where no one answers when I call;
A private grief, too tired to grieve,
Still presses both hands to the wall.

So let the passing world still pass,
And let the quiet keep its sound;
I’ll mourn myself beneath the glass,
Alive, unseen, and still unfound.

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