Spring in a Country Graveyard
By queen beatle
- 1260 reads
Even as the ancient patterns
Chiselled into rock remind us always
Of the end to every song,
The vast cacophonies of life
Ignore the dirge and drown it out
With every twitch of leaf and crash of bird.
The hot-faced child with fists on ears
Hops foot to foot and caterwauls,
'I CAN'T HEAR YOU!' into the face of death;
And barricades the finities
Asserted by the elder, who knows better
Than to bite and disagree,
Accepting that the child will learn
In time and cruel time again
That every dancing breath abbreviates.
And every slab of wintry slate
That leans up crooked from the roots
Among the rubber worms and velvet moles
Whispers soft, 'I am a stranger
In a silent land of strangers
Who can only live to wait, and wait to live.'
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Comments
rubber worms and velvet moles
rubber worms and velvet moles - Interesting description!
Your poem reminded me of the poem often on gravestones in the past, in various forms –
Remember Man as you go by
As you are now so once was I
As I am now so shall you be,
Prepare yourself to follow me
Rhiannon
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A thought-provoking poem,
A thought-provoking poem, beautifully put together.
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Your work is excelent Morwenna
You work is excelent Morwenna. Beautiful. Always.
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