The Broken Lady
By Jane Hyphen
- 357 reads
She doesn’t move
The broken lady
At least when the mortals are passing
She may contemplate much
From the bounds of her post
She’s more than the stepping stones
But less than the carp in the fountain pools
Placed among the greenery
‘She beautiful,’ they say
About her nothing ways
Perhaps themselves to write her story
But for transient fluttering leaves
She stands alone
Is she a shrine?
To modesty perhaps
To speak up, she cannot
Or cast her eyes, cast down
Ashamed she holds her clothes
Against her sober form
‘She’s not moving, it’s the branches’
‘She’s not calling, it’s the wind’
Her trees are so protective
Silent witness to her fall
They hid her stony arm
Beneath a bed of leaves
And she was resurrected
Only to be buried deeper still
Her features once refined
Are softened by the rain
Her face is an illusion
To make you look again
And times goes on - unsettled
On the watch of the broken lady
In her powerlessness, a knowing
In her abstinence, a scream
She won’t fall again
Her roots go down to ethereal seams
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Comments
I really like this poem. I
I really like this poem. I have read it a few times to get between the layers. My literal interpretation is of a statue that's neglected but I imagine there are metaphors at work here.
Either way, it's beautifully done.
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much to ponder and wonder.
much to ponder and wonder.
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It made me ponder on the
It made me ponder on the people who we know so little about that we see and pass, and may wonder about, but only see the outer features, and maybe a little of the wear and tear of life on their faces. Rhiannon
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