Nowhere to Fly

Nowhere to Fly

A Poem by Paris Hlad

Nowhere to Fly

 

-Clinging to a Reed-

 

-P-

 

The evening air is cruel tonight;

A frost lies on the grass,

 

A gibbous moon peeps on the path,

As my slow footsteps pass

 

A true farewell is kept within,

As leaving is a mix of wounded words

And broken bonds arriving cannot fix

 

A dog is barking in the woods;

The stars are small and gray,

And though they shine,

They seem to shrink,

 

And would no longer stay.[1]

 

A thrush is clinging to a reed;

She has nowhere to fly,

 

And I am turning from her gaze -

I cannot say goodbye.



[1] To Paris, love had value only if it is eternal. And from what he could tell, everything in the physical world, including love, has a beginning and an end. Thus, the poet came to reject the idea that God is ascendant in the material realm, concluding that if there is a supernatural being in charge of Earths immediate affairs, he is none too nice. Indeed, such a being guarantees a life of constant heartbreak. To Paris, the observable realities of the physical world suggest the predominance of demiurgic forces more than they do random occurrences or a kindly love god.

 

 

© 2023 Paris Hlad


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Added on August 10, 2023
Last Updated on August 10, 2023

Author

Paris Hlad
Paris Hlad

Southport, NC, United States Minor Outlying Islands



About
I am a 70-year-old retired New York state high school English teacher, living in Southport, NC. more..

Writing