Submit your work, meet writers and drop the ads. Become a member
Iley O'Glesby May 2014
The way the waves lick against the bow, remind me of when
I once held your steady hand, before the night began.
Now I rock adrift. Away, from the emerald shore
Never again to call your name, silence forevermore.
Iley O'Glesby Oct 2013
Oh Shadow, how you've grown since last we spoke,
But I do not have your fee.
No paper, no coin, not even a note,
More time, could you please give me?

Sun sinks low, and I see you've brought friends,
Could I offer a trade of some sort?
The last light echoes, breaks, and it bends.
But you always ask for much more.

Impatience and persistence, you know all these things,
And you know the core of my heart
I try to wait til the wipperwill sings,
But the dawn seems oh so far.
Iley O'Glesby Sep 2013
I'm lost, not in such a form,
that I don't know ways back home,
But in the sense that the road is forked,
and I'm standing all alone.
I know the man that gives the tour,
thru this winding, twisted place,
But He hasn't spoken, in what seems like years,
I can't recall His face.
I've turned down a road or two,
that I thought was clear of doubt,
To find myself back here again,
whispering, "But how?".
I expected markers on the way,
to give me some degree,
Of where it is I'm going,
or where it is I'll be.
But the question that still lingers,
I feel it growing still,
Is this unknown route my doing,
or is it all your will?
Iley O'Glesby Aug 2013
Can love grow in a garden overrun,
By flowers of years long past?
Can new saplings sip nectar from under the ground,
Spoiled by romance, which fruit didn't last?
Can the river flow freely, if held by a stone?
Can the root grow deeply, if the seeds are not sown?

Time is the gardener, and heartache the *****.
One can only see growth, if one accepts change.
Iley O'Glesby Nov 2012
Oh, sweet Willow. Why do you weep?
You've no fear of being cut down
No fruit to reap.

You'll stand on the bank, by this old river bed
You'll weap in quiet sorrow
Until you are dead

Don't worry about heartache
Your friends are just trees
Pain they can take
They can't even feel breeze

If you had a voice, what would your words be?
Would it be "Hello, my friend." or "Please...**** me."
Iley O'Glesby Nov 2012
There once was a man named Stanley McNare
Who loved to go walking, for he had not a care.
In a field of clover he was walking one day,
No brambles, or briars, or withered brown sage.
Yet Stanley was amazed this unusual day
To meet an old fellow, walking his way.
The man’s hair was grey, tattered by time,
He’d lost his vigor, his fervor, and shine.
Stanley greeted the man with a welcoming wave,
But he walked past Stanley as if in a daze.
Stanley turned round and said, “Sir, are you well?”
The man quickly stated, “Oh yes child, I’m swell.”
The man was dressed in a ***** black garb,
His visage was torn, his eyes staring far.
He turned to Stanley and said with dismay,
“What caused you to walk here, this beautiful day?”
Stanley thought long of the question in place,
Looking to the man, with the withered, drawn face
Stanley said, “Sir, I’d say the feel of the sod,
The smell of the flowers, or the long talks with God.”
The old man spit, on a green clover pad
As if Stanley’s answer had made him quite mad.
“Oh Stanley, my boy! Now how can one talk,
With a God that doesn’t speak, or even so much squawk?”
Stanley pondered again, his mind full of thought,
Of things he should say, and things he should not
“Well,” he said, as the old man grinned
“He speaks thru the trees, the bees, and the wind.”
“He lets me know, without ever a word,
That He is still speaking, tho maybe unheard.”
The old man bent over with audible glee
He spoke thru the laughter, “Have mercy on me!”
“Stanley, so foolish, your mind is so slow,
You’ve created a “God”, that’ll you’ll never know!”
Now Stanley was dismayed by the man’s vast pride,
And began to walk away, increasing his stride.
Then he stopped in his tracks, his mind all aflame
He asked the old man, “Who told you my name?”
The old man smiled, his grin full of sin,
“I know more than that, just let me begin.
Stanley so slothful, so jealous, and vain,
You’re one of my favorites! That's how I call you by name.”
“You hide behind crosses, prayer, and The Word,
But I’ll tell you the truth if I’ll be undeterred.”
“You’re unworthy, unholy, and just out hand,
Safe in His palm, like an oyster holds sand.”
Stanley’s hands grew cold and his realized the trick,
He was talking to none other, than the devil, Ol’ Nick.
Stanley was terrified from his head to his feet
Of all the people, he just had to meet
“What do you want, you liar of lies?
You nasty old crow, that fell from the skies!”
Ol’ Nick looked to Stanley, his eyes all aglow
“There are things I must tell you, things you must know.”
“Stanley, I’m old. Far older than earth,
I’ve lost my gladness, my glee, and my mirth.”
“I need a new pigeon, to put in a cage
To anger our “Father”, the Ancient of Days.”
“Job, was a battle that I didn’t win,
I hurled darts of fire, and tempted with sin.”
“But for today I’ll find an easier way
I’ll sow seeds of laziness, mistrust, and dismay.”
“While they sit in the pew and put on their show,
Worshipping a God, they don’t even know.”
“Every Sunday, I’ve seen it, from here, far and wide
I’m winning them over, all on my side.”
Now, Stanley had enough of Ol’ Nick’s  report
And decided he wouldn’t have more of the sort.
“Be gone you old devil, you unwelcome guest,
I’ll hear nothing of pigeons, or devilish tests.”
“I’ll have you know, by the blood of the lamb,
My sin is cleansed fully, by the great I AM.”
Ol’ Nick’s yelped, his visage quite ill
His olden features growing older still.
“Stanley McNare, you foolhardy beast,
Victory I’ll have, and you’ll be the feast.
I’ve dragged cities, empires, and men down below,
What makes you  think that you can make me go?”
With a prayer on his lips, and fire in his eyes
Stanley shouted out this commanding reply:
“By the power of Christ I am made whole
He holds my heart, my body, and even my soul.
Tho my flesh may be weary, so weak, and so frail
I serve the God that never can fail!”
And as if a dream, Stanley stood all alone
No one around him, ‘cept a few stepping stones.
He made his way home, his feet on the sod,
Singing and praising and talking to God.
Iley O'Glesby Nov 2012
Yes, I know the river flows
I know the stars burn bright.
I know the tree, it slowly grows
Until its dying night.

Yes, I know the wind will blow
As long as the ground stands still.
I know that come morning, the rooster crows
As the sun hits windowsill

But the road is broken, beaten, and marred.
My soul is captured, silenced, and scarred.
For the next moment, just a breeze
Unknown, untamed, like changing seas

I'll guess, I'll ponder, I'll even pray...
I'll know, when tomorrow becomes today.
Next page