The Poet of Smoke
He wrote verses in the air, and they refused to fade.
By GoldenSpeechPublished 3 months ago • 1 min read

In the ruins of postwar Venice, a man named Lorenzo wrote poems by burning incense instead of ink. The smoke curled into words — fleeting, beautiful, alive. People said his poems weren’t read; they were breathed.
One night, a widow begged him to write her dead husband’s name. The air turned black. The poem didn’t vanish — it lingered, forming a face that whispered her name.
Soon, others came, desperate to speak to the dead. Lorenzo wrote until his lungs failed. They buried him beside his last work — a poem made entirely of smoke.
To this day, when mist drifts over the canals, you can sometimes see letters in the air:
“We are what’s left unsaid.”


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