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Virginia E

For the Letters Through Time Challenge, my final entry

By John CoxPublished 11 months ago Updated 11 months ago 4 min read
Reimagined Portrait of Virginia Eliza Poe

My dearest Ginny -

It was many and many a year ago, in our cottage by the sea, when you died in close embrace, your still warm face held tightly to me.

Like a mother with wee child, we did together rock, my tears freshly shed, dripp'd heavily atop thy dark locks.

Heaven's angels, envious of our love sublime, with pretended piety, plotted to take thee to God's kingdom for all eternity.

How great my lament when winged seraphs bore you away, whilst I closed up fair flesh in cold crypt where such torment led my soul astray.

How I pled with God that night to return Virginia E to me, thy spirit to tarry while I lay cold abed clinging to what remain'd of thee.

Demon moans and angel tears rose out of solemn wind, death's voice cried out loudly from his dark throne, whilst my heart perish'd all alone.

How I keened in the hour when thou died, with plenteous kiss bestowed upon thy pale brow; woe the day I lost my childhood bride.

Rise up! Rise up! Like Lazarus, come forth my love; descend from thy bower in the heavens, and return upon white wings like a dove!

But no rays from holy Heaven deigned shine upon our lonely cottage by the sea, nor dove alight, nor spirit bright bring any word from thee.

The seasons come and seasons go, the cruel wind howling through our cottage by the sea, ever calling for Virginia E.

Awake laid I in the twilight gloaming, searching for my lost consort, but your ship appear'd not, nor return'd home to its welcoming port.

I begged the moon in its wane to gleam once more mournfully and with it carry dreams from days long past when I clasped thee to me ever tightly.

To see again thy gay smile, even if only at rest, my pillow a chariot to wing me to Heaven's gates, where I will for you await.

O God! O God! Can I not hold you in my embrace whilst I weep and feel your treasured breath once more upon my wet cheeks?

How I plead with God to return Virginia E to me, my prayers arising unanswered in the cold night air, crying out for your love so fair.

Do you yet hear the roar of the surf-tormented shore or remember how the wet sands slid through your toes, then rushed away in their deathly throes?

Of thee only such memories remain, like a dream within a dream, thy voice no more than a haunted whisper in the breeze.

But days turn to weeks and months to years, and my heart recovers not, my love never dimming nor the blessing of time salve for bitter tears.

Our cottage by the sea a place of unending mourning, I must away and carry my grief to faraway shores and remove the memory of my undoing.

Thy lovely face and voice live on only in me, the cruel wind howling through our cottage by the sea, ever calling for my Virginia E.

No wine nor brandy shalt rob me the memory of thy lips, nor solace can I seek, nor face however fair thy love eclipse.

Memories of thee hold all former joys captive, my soul doth find itself alone, all thoughts fixed on the poesy to carve on our tombstone.

Be still, O my soul, silent in seclusion, the spirits of the dead have return'd, as in life, now in death to old familiar haunts, all Hell revives my strife.

I tremble with fear, a fever burns in my crestfallen brow when coldly beckons thou, my desire to live yet greater than desire to follow.

How I pled with God to return Virginia E on the night her wraith appear'd to me, her ragged windings fluttering cruelly.

These thoughts I dare not banish, this visitation, this warning, this premonition like the wind that once called thee and now calls for me.

O breeze –the very breath of God– how it chills flesh and bone in my poor bed clothes, how ruinous foul this troubling call.

The night, now enemy mine, its twinkling lights stillborn, the stars I no longer behold, their once glorious thrones empty and forlorn.

No solace greets me across the starless miles, thy far-flung sun frozen and amber, I can live no longer without the sheen of thy bright smile.

But no matter where I rest my weary brow, Somnus tames not my misery nor stills my lips from calling out for thou!

What dread gifts do thou bear for me now in the still of the midnight hour, what terrors and latent joys carry thee from thy hidden bower?

Some call it hope, but it is but agony to my bruised desire, even if thou solicit me still, beckoning me to follow thee to Heaven's gates or fire.

Shall not Hell make me fear my end all the more or still the endless craving in this heart for the theft of thy flowering?

But never shalt I forget, I swear with terrible oaths, the haloed brightness of our sweet summer hours!

The seasons come and seasons go, the cruel wind howling through our cottage by the sea, ever calling for Virginia E.

In my fever I cry out at last for thee, more than crime to dare this dream; can thou yet hear me, love, and rescue from the mire of my sickly seam?

Death is near, I hear again its dread voice in the moaning of the breeze; I had not thought without tears of thee whom in life was everything to me.

My heart beats heavily in my breast, at the twelfth chime of the bells, thy apparition motioning to follow thee into Heaven or very Hell.

But when the storm had broke and I awoke in a leap of sudden faith, my spirit finally beckon'd in return to thy pale wraith.

Panting with fear, I lie abed writing a last letter to thee, and so let he who finds bury as keepsake between me and Virginia E.

A million times will I kiss thee. Fear not, I am coming!

E.A.P.

FictionFigures

About the Creator

John Cox

Twisted teller of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Aint got none of that.

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  • L.C. Schäfer9 months ago

    I had to read several of these lines twice, they were that good! Good luck in the challenge 😄

  • Shirley Belk10 months ago

    I think you channeled the lofty bard in this one! Great job, John.

  • 😭 This is heart broken 💔

  • Right from the very beginning I had tears with, “Your warm face held tightly to me,” I understand this sort of loss and emotion deeply. This was so heart wrenching beautiful. I love how you carefully crafted the aura and the emotion of the moment with your words. Beautifully written, excellent work, John!

  • D.K. Shepard10 months ago

    What a fantastic and POEtic final entry, John! The italicized portions we like lovely refrains woven throughout the letter! And I think you nailed the narrative voice for Poe! Very well done!

  • Paul Stewart10 months ago

    I love Poe and this felt like some discovered masterpiece....you really captured his spirit, the prose, the repetition, the melancholy (yeap, borrowing from Rommi cos he said it best) just just...I am at a loss as to which is my favourite of your entries for this challenge, but as this one is Poe, it feels like my favourite for the moment. Not that the others aren't stellar, because they are. If I had to single out one, it'd be this one. It makes me want to buy more Poe collections (I don't think I have any right now, which makes me sad). Sublime, sir, take a bow, for I am clapping in rapturious applause for this!

  • C. Rommial Butler10 months ago

    Well-wrought! You captured Poe's meloncholy and his poetic prose style here! I am a lover of Poe's works, not so much of him marrying his too-young cousin... though it wasn't uncommon for the time, and I do believe his love for her was sincere. Keep in mind that FDR and Eleanor were also related, and this in a prominent family after the turn of the next century. I'm not a huge fan of FDR (more a Teddy guy as the Roosevelts go) but just point this out to illustrate the prevalence of the practice. I should hope we have enough people from distinct gene pools to stop inbreeding with each other and enough prospective mate to let children grow to adulthoood! But those were different times, and this was by no means the most abhorrent practice, I am sorry to say. Here, perhaps, is that hope I am always looking for, that we have laws against these things now rather than laws encouraging them!

  • Cindy Calder11 months ago

    Oh, but you have channeled Edgar Allan Poe so beautifully in this amazing piece. I am amazed at the creative endeavor and fortitude it took to pen such a lengthy letter. Your writing is always masterful, but in this piece, you have excelled beyond the norm. Well done....well done.

  • Rohitha Lanka11 months ago

    My dearest Ginny - It was many and many a year ago, in our cottage by the sea, when you died in close embrace, your still warm face held tightly to me very interesting poets

  • Caitlin Charlton11 months ago

    Oh this was so beautiful. The way the letter spoke of his love for Virginia E, the loss of her; how the memory of it, seemed too much for him, so he called out to God. Oh my… ‘nor the blessing of time salve for bitter tears’… tugging at my heartstrings. I could feel the love, especially when he wouldn’t drink brandy or wine to make her absence, bearable. The hint at a possible happily ever after in the realm of the dead in the last line, was such a satisfying ending. 👏🏽👌🏽

  • Rachel Deeming11 months ago

    I didn't know who Virginia E was but I could sense Poe throughout so good job in your emulating his style of writing, John. Having learnt a little more about their relationship and their origins, Poe has given me the "ick" a little and I do wonder if there is a guilt to his poems, an extension of what permeated his life. Interesting choice of letter, John, which is atmospheric, ghostly, unsettling.

  • Mark Graham11 months ago

    What an epic prose poem in letter format. Good job and I had tears form behind my eyes.

  • Cathy holmes11 months ago

    Damn! You ain't messing around, my friend. This is fantastic. I love the poetic the flow, and you nailed the language. I can truly imagine Poe writing this. Well done and good luck.

  • John, this is breathtaking. The yearning and ache jump off the page until the reader wears it like a cloak. Fantastic work, good luck in this challenge!

  • Gina C.11 months ago

    What a stunning love letter - the rhymes and sentiment in this are heavenly :) By the end of this, I wanted Virginia E returned to me, too!

  • Gay smile! I remembered this time that you taught me gay meant happy! Your letter was so emotional and I felt so sad for Poe 🥺

  • Truly epic & glorious in all its pathos, my friend. Can any such words end in but the dagger's kiss or apothecary's balm?

  • Lamar Wiggins11 months ago

    Perfect!!! An amazing poetic likeness to the master himself. Take a bow, Sir John Cox. And best of luck!!!

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