Sonnet 651

What does it matter that we lived or died
Save that we left the world a better place?
The joyous smiles or sorrowed tears we cried,
Most serve life’s purpose blessed by Heaven’s grace.
To live dear life bestowed for self alone
Is yet perhaps the heavier cross to bear
For still on earth, it’s seldom we bemoan
The great or simple pleasures that we share.
By measure, only soulless creatures bide
In singularity— all acts for one;
So by analogy the selfish pride
In egocentric deeds benevolence shuns.
May grace and mercy guide our earthly ways,
That love and kindness pure, all evil raze.
 
© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 650

Were I now but a queer lad crowned in curls
With cherub smiles that all should want me there
And I did covet his ass more than yours—
Then of your coyness I would never care.
I would forsake those endless feline games
To full pursue pure lust directed wants
And in one night hold dozens without shame
In back of bars or seedy dim lit haunts.
Perhaps but sad, I was not wired so;
I am a slave unto the female form,
To sacred curves and golden ratios—
More to soft arms that swaddle me in warmth;
To plumb sweet depths of soul filled sultry eyes,
Then detumesce betwixt encircling thighs.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 649

Bright, pert and green she sashayed up to me
Stroking my ego with soft moues and smiles,
Breasts brushing slight, sure accidentally…
Provocatively standing in profile.
A giggling child caught up in women’s schemes
Perhaps unknowing still the scene in play
Or yet responding to some half baked dreams,
By nascent lust or puppy love displayed.
Pure innocence that just discovered fire,
That flame licked passion flickering in the soul;
A sylph controlled by instinct born desire
Preparing yet for love’s heart-scripted roles.
Were I a knave, her dance might so invite—
But twice her age, a forehead kiss good night.
©Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.