sound escape
By Di_Hard
- 3757 reads
Earth's first touch for reaching sun, iron age hill fort
looks out over ground held in molten blue, above
all sound, save wind's unseen tongue howling vowels round
consonants of stone left millennia before
humans climbed up, or down to walk under whispers
shifting green, tawny, gone with shadows' forgotten
secrets blown from sap-sucked twig spokes in seasons' wheel
within turning years, man's gear changes, estranges
us step by step as mud's downtrodden beneath ploughs
and air's cut into time by church bells from the town
while wildlife flees then flows back into tilled gaps, fills
a search for proof of Heaven with evidence : song
from birds, bugs, beasts of all kinds telling us : Life is
and always will be if we stop thinking we're god
sent to understand, control; as a child will
put their finger in a clock's cogs to hold back age
people strive to maximise profit, monetise
even space; choice is ceded, monocrops seeded
so workers in large plants making our breath are fired
interrupting supply chains of good weather, we
invented other kinds of Peace - both fighting's pause
and all absence of Wild's ability to be. In such
sterile silence a questioning ear's answerless
under the sky, our lonely voice inside, echoing
But.
...let's think outside this box of our cleverness
and find winds blow, waves carry, sun lights us forward
to a future built on sound foundations for all
inspired by Ewan's thought provoking poem The Art Of Noises : A Futurist's Manifesto : https://www.abctales.com/story/ewan/art-noises-futurists-manifesto
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Comments
The wind sounding vowels, and
The wind sounding vowels, and stones consonants! Interesting metaphor!
choices cedeed, monocrops seeded - deft phrasing!
We are commanded to be stewards in our world but to try to do good, not for greed.
and an interesting point to conclude on the good 'sound' foundations of life. - the soothing sounds like birdsong or water rippling?, though thunder and machinery can be wake-up calls! Rhiannon
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This poem has such an
This poem has such an emotional flow to it Di. It gives a feeling of us humans needing to re-evaluate what's most important and listen to the natural sounds of Mother Earth. As a senitive person I could feel your passion within this poem.
Effective as always and makes the reader think.
Jenny.
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Lovely
and pointed, a quiet roar to respect this place. Almost a librarians' firm, but gentle, shush among things yet to be learned and re-learned. Really enjoyed reading.
Best as always
Lena x
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What a wonderful defence of
What a wonderful defence of what's good or could be good. So many lovely descriptions, Di, but you know those three simple words 'above all sound' stopped me in my tracks. Why is that? Maybe some sense of peace above everything. I read the rest of it as if on top of the mountain. You put those words in the right place, near the beginning. Really good.
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Not sure about a hill fort
Not sure about a hill fort but definitely lots of ruins. My favourite - and the saddest - is where the Battle of Hastings was. There's this definite tangible prescence to the place. I loved your explanation.
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I always love it when you
I always love it when you post a poem because (apart from the poem) I know the comments from others will be so interesting. I can only echo what's already been said and look for my nearest hill fort to visit (never been to one!). Would you like me to edit your work to remove the cut/paste colour discrepancy?
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no it's not new. all you need
no it's not new. all you need to do is go to edit, select all the text, and then click on 'remove formattting'
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our blue earth, we fucked it
our blue earth, we fucked it up a bit, but it's still a great idea.
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I read this thoughtful piece when I posted my effort
The final stanza left a lasting impression. Clever words so full of hope. I'll drink to that thought!
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This wonderful piece is our
This wonderful piece is our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day!
Please share/retweet if you enjoyed it too
Picture Credit:https://tinyurl.com/d65xm63p
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I enjoyed this, although it
I enjoyed this, although it certainly says almost too much at once. I particularly like the second part, as it speaks against our attempts to control everything, and to monetise everything, including our own lives.
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"...save wind's unseen tongue
"...save wind's unseen tongue howling vowels round consonants of stone left millennia.." Lots of wonderfully, poetic lines in this, Di. Enjoyed Ewan's poem and enoyed this one just as much. Paul
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Congratulations Di! Gold well deserved
for this thoughtful and very relevant piece.
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Your poem is effective in its
Your poem is effective in its vivid picture of where we our planet is unfortunately going. If only we would listen to nature, the cries of vanishing wildlife and learn to protect our habitat, as they protect theirs and if we'd change our ways, stop the business as usual attitude for profits sake, for wealth that lasts one lifetime's ego, if we'd accept the signs of destruction, the rapid warnings and give support to the earths needs now, to save our future, humanities future, we might yet survive. But I fear we will continue on in denial as a sad epitaph is being written for us, fires burning over the land, eating ancient forests; temperatures rising across the planet, oceans no longer able to absorb the heat. It is evident the time to change this course is nearly depleted, but deaf ears and blind eyes still rule.
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Hi Di
Hi Di
Beautiful poem. I live near a hill fort, and visualised it as I was reading it.
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There are ancient stone fortresses
There are ancient stone fortresses / kraals out Mpumalanga they must be Ancient, stone or iron age. There are many it is still a mystery, on our farm there are also. Maybe my brother can tell you more I picked up a flint knife/axe there that must be stone age. It is altogether facinating I think it would be worthwile to do research some reading and field work.
They are there, glaring, monuments to a civilization a lost and very primitive people.
All the best! Tom Brown
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