Paper Crowns

Xian C

We wear them—

creased from grocery bags,

ink still bleeding from last week’s receipts,

edges soft where rain kissed them.

 

Paper crowns:

they tear at the temple,

collapse with a yawn,

and yet—

we bow as if they were wrought in iron.

 

Children fold them with gluey fingers,

declare themselves kings of couches,

rulers of hallways lined with shoes.

Grown men staple their debts into circlets,

pretend the weight is gold.

 

What is a crown but a fragile promise,

a flimsy cutout of permanence,

balanced on skulls that crack just the same?

 

Still—

we wear them.

Because somewhere in the ashtray of history,

someone believed in kingdoms made of paper,

and the rest of us

never stopped pretending.

  • Author: Xian C (Offline Offline)
  • Published: September 29th, 2025 20:31
  • Category: Unclassified
  • Views: 4
  • Users favorite of this poem: sorenbarrett
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Comments1

  • sorenbarrett

    This poem strikes in two directions for me, one nostalgia for I remember those paper crowns as a child and two the last part of this poem and kingdoms built on paper is a genius tie in with the child's crowns and the issue of currency coming to be paper. This poem deserves more readings and is quite deep. Very intellectual as well as emotive and nostalgic. A definite fave



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