AubadeA Poem by Gerald ParkerSadly, I imagine you will wake, too, because the silence has changed colour, the way, fluting across a murky water, a swan’s light may gently startle you, gleaming through the curtains of your eyes. Wake, though with the softest of violence, snow has played you a nocturne of lightest down, quilted you in symphonic hush, mesmerised you in your sleep. A captive audience, your fidgeting legs are swathed, your cough stilled, by chords of white - you are laid to rest at every cadence. Oblivious to the cold auditorium, your lulled capillary thoughts are tingling, pleasantly beating time. Wake, and they are jerking the pendulum, flailing, frantically rattling the case; and you are shivering in your bed - horribly alone, except for you, and the Arctic waste to face. .
© 2019 Gerald Parker |
Stats
54 Views
Added on January 10, 2019 Last Updated on January 17, 2019 AuthorGerald ParkerLondon, United KingdomAboutThere's not much to tell. I read a lot of poetry and I read my own poetry regularly. I hope other people read it and derive as much pleasure out of it as I do. My output is small, about 110 poems as I.. more..Writing
|