Thursday Sonnet: Paris
By john_silver
Fri, 19 Mar 2010
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2 comments
Paris, Paris, I have not come to light
Or spin you, I’ve not come to sing la Senne,
My throat seeks no refreshment from your night
And I’m not asking where to go or when.
For pilgrims are no conquerors, who come
To seek the root of their humility,
That common street where all their roads are one,
Behind the mask of your plurality.
Paris, you’re not the basin of my past;
You are a road, but you lead not to Rome.
And what is Rome if not a bust (the last)
That honours ashes, cinder dressed as home?
Paris, teach me the junctions of the way
Which leads to noble or ignoble clay.
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Comments
It sounds good, but I'm not
Permalink Submitted by Luly Whisper on
It sounds good, but I'm not sure I understand it. Could you explain/expand?
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Thanks for your explanation
Permalink Submitted by Luly Whisper on
Thanks for your explanation (posted elsewhere).
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