Soliloquy of the BookcaseA Poem by Sel Whiteley
I might be the mere skeleton of a pine
with wood the shade of wet sand, the whorls in my grain like flames. I might wear the armour of a knight, be small scaffolding filled with dreams. Sometimes, you overload me, and weighed down like a mule, I'm all aching limbs. Still, I sustain the words in which you take solace on those winter nights. Nectar of scholars, I hold ideas - in the future, I may distill the concepts of science not discovered this millenia. I reflect a rainbow of subjects but I'm only the stem not the stamen. I am the last resting place of the drunken, desolate poet but I am not a heartbeat in ink. I am the grave, see my lacing of crosses, each a deathplace of eternal life. I could hold the words of the world, a thousand secrets and sentences, if you let me.Some of you, bury your sons untended in my valleys for decades, I never forget them. I am father to your orphans, the unloved and lost, the used and abused, the torn to bits. I stand broad shouldered to heaven, like Atlas, I hold your world. © 2011 Sel WhiteleyReviews
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Added on May 4, 2011Last Updated on May 5, 2011 Author
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