Either ore
By queen beatle
- 378 reads
The grum of our chapel bell
marks the daily descent.
With bent back creaking
and hand gloved blister-black
we hack out downy riches
from our groaning belly.
Our empires may be mighty
but they're not ours.
There's talk of new buildings
in the next big town
illustrious temples of Commerce.
Ornate, they are, clad in fine carvings
of fruit trees and lush vines.
Our forest leaves for new continents
on saltwashed hulls lined with lung dust
to ward off shipworm.
Our dust is silk-soft;
it cloaks our breath quietly
tucks our child into an early bed
in the stomach of our reckoning.
We weaken the roots among us;
the foliage wilts away.
On a clustered path
settled by lighter feet
they crease their eyes to watch
leaf beetles trundle verdant up trunks
fed by remnants of our compromise:
by the ravage of our lung
the blister of our hand
the bend of our back.
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Comments
"progress"
Where as a youngster we played in the bush and veld, termite heaps snakes and fishing for carp catching only crabs. There now is a massive development shocpping centers house flats you name it. Incredible you can hardly believe it. for miles on end.
Enjoyed your poem but find it hard to understand.
Keep well Morwenna!! Tom
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Preaching to the Choir!
Through the sweat of our brows, skin of our hands, backbone of our spine the working man builds treasures for the wealthy. A nicely worded homage to the spine of industry; the working man. Enjoyed!
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Congratulations, this is poem
Congratulations, this is poem of the Week!
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