Icarus Laughed

I’m in the mood to share some free-verse poetry with you this week, so I’ve chosen a favorite poem of mine that I’ve encountered in a couple of different places on the internet recently. (Edit: to clarify, this is a poem I found, not a poem I wrote. All credit goes to the original source, here.) As far as I know, it doesn’t have a title. Enjoy!

Here is what they don't tell you:

Icarus laughed as he fell.
Threw his head back and
yelled into the winds,
arms spread wide,
teeth bared to the world.

(There is a bitter triumph
in crashing
when you should be
soaring.)

The wax scorched his skin,
ran blazing trails down his back,
his thighs, his ankles, his feet.
Feathers floated like prayers
past his fingers,
close enough to snatch back.
Death breathed burning kisses
against his shoulders,
where the wings joined the harness.
The sun painted everything
in shades of gold.

(There is a certain beauty
in setting the world on fire
and watching from the center
of the flames.) 
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