The Last DragonA Poem by C. Harter AmosFor all the animals thoughtlessly slaughtered into extinctionThe great Chimère raised his regal head And mourned the last of his children who lay dead At his clawed feet, their beauty and perfection a thing to grieve If only for a moment before it was time To raise his massive wings to leave This place he’d shared with his lifelong mate Whose body was gone, her slaughter their kind’s fate. Wherever the Beautiful One lay with her broken crimson scales Chimère’s own heart couldn’t help but stay For all of time without end. The Drako would give his heart to only one Until the far distant death of the galaxy’s sun.
The blue of his scales matched the sky Giving no reason to look up, no reason to ask why The massive eloquent beast should fly overhead unheard, Not a beat of wing, not a whispered word, Only the drop of tears that fell from blue skies, From his beautiful lavender-blue catlike eyes.
He’d had friends who were human In towns nearer Loch Lomond But he was a prince of his kind The nine black ridges along his spine left no doubt To any who knew this obvious sign of royalty. He could never live in fear And the bottomless Loch Ness was near, Its darkness suited him well.
The lake’s surface was as smooth as glass It shimmered for a moment as Chimère Drako’s mass Broke the surface and he swam below In elegant movements, swanlike and slow Like a dance to the depths, his gills suddenly filled. He would stay there forever; no more dragon blood would be spilled. His royal blue scales have long ago turned black The ridges now soft along his once strong back Mankind now thinks of Chimère Drako on rare occasions When tourists take shadowed pictures during their vacations At Loch Ness to catch a glimpse of the lizard illusion We call a monster of mad delusion. © 2008 C. Harter AmosFeatured Review
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Added on February 7, 2008Last Updated on February 7, 2008 AuthorC. Harter AmosLexington, SCAboutBorn in the swamps of the South Carolina Low Country. Brought up on the Classics with a great deal of emphasis on music. I spent about six years at the University of South Carolina in Columbia soakin.. more..Writing
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