Tags
Cold Winter, Currency Symbolism, Dark Verse, Existential Dread, Fate, Gothic Irony, Ironic Legacy, Madness, Metaphorical Imagery, Moral Allegory, Narrative Poetry, Obsession, Poe-Inspired, Poverty, Psychological Collapse, Social Commentary, Superstition, Symbolism, Tragic Downfall, Urban Squalor

A copper coin lay gleaming in the street,
Its worn face kissed by countless passing feet.
He stooped to claim what fortune dared bestow,
A pauper’s prayer for luck’s deceptive glow.
His pockets swelled with copper’s dull refrain,
Each copper charm to ward off hunger’s strain,
Through alleyways and gutters, bent he’d crawl,
To gather pennies, drawn by fortune’s call.
“The more I find,” he murmured to the night,
“That fickle fate might hold me in its sight.”
His trembling hands with oxidation’s stain,
He wagered hope against misfortune’s chain.
The landlord came with eviction’s cruel decree,
But clutching pennies tight, he would not flee—
“My fortune’s here!” he cried, “in copper’s spell!”
They dragged him forth from reason’s cracked citadel.
In winter’s grip, he slept on frozen ground,
His pockets weighted down with what he’d found,
Each penny pressed against his withering skin,
A thousand copper ghosts entombed therein.
They found him when the morning broke its seal,
His body stiff, his face an ashen teal,
The pennies scattered round his lifeless form—
No luck could save him from the winter storm.
The coroner withdrew each tarnished prize,
And counted fortunes lost to luck’s demise:
Three hundred coins—the wages paid for pain,
The tithe exacted by superstition’s reign.
Now somewhere, someone stoops to claim their prize—
A penny gleams beneath the clouded skies.
They clutch illusions—false hope’s fleeting glee,
Oblivious to dead hands that held such currency.








