The Rabid Angel

The Rabid Angel

A Poem by Ron Sanders
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come hither

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The Rabid Angel




Seems the spirit ever mends, though the light behind it bleeds.

Poor lamp am I. How strange

that the mind should sharpen while the maggot feeds.

Each day the world grows older. Yet her face remains fair, her view serene.

I’ve seen the way she milks her young, and watched her fields rush green.

But only as the sight grows weak can at last these old eyes see

what waits the clear, unbroken pools

in wide eyes peeking back at me.

You children play, and don’t mind me. The sun lies full where I drift, content.

If I seem to be brooding on happiness spent, then forgive me; I’m grateful

to not have to brood on sorrow.

So you children play. Can it truly be! Did time once bend, could hurts once heal?

It seems so long…seems scarcely real…that I was a creature of yesterday

who could not see past the morrow.

And where is that child now?

Is he dead, was he dreamt, is he lost for good?

Or is he only sleeping?

He would run, he would leap, he would laugh if he could.

He has savored his life, has drunk it to the full.

Why then is he weeping?

No, you children play, and don’t mind me.

Embrace this splendid, fleeting day. But elsewhere.

Go away:

Go drink from the cup while the taste is sweet, go bask in the light of your youth.

Run guileless, run free. Feel that nip in the marrow, the moth in the fist,

that bright, soulful tempest in a child’s first kiss--

grown cold in the arms of the hunter; matured, developed to…

this?

No, you children play, you children play.

The leech has yet to find you. Let your blood sing while it may.

For the rabid angel’s eyes are bright, her loving voice is lying;

her bosom heaves, but the heart is cold.

Season to season, her black shadow clings;

lamb after lamb, how pleasantly she stings!

All our lives we look to things. I tell you, by my eyes,

there are things behind thingsworking bashful children,

spiteful children; the angel lures her tender prey,

herding awkward children, skipping children,

skipping their childhood away.

No sleight of man, no higher Hand, no will can hold the years at bay.

Alone, I watch them, day by day, growing,

slowing in their play.

© 2024 Ron Sanders


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Added on October 29, 2024
Last Updated on October 29, 2024
Tags: life and death, predator and prey, growing pains

Author

Ron Sanders
Ron Sanders

San Pedro, CA



About
Free copies of the full-color, fleshed-out pdf file for the poem Faces, with its original formatting, will be made available to all sincere readers via email attachments, at [email protected]. .. more..

Writing
Yogi Yogi

A Story by Ron Sanders