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The stanzas of the mountains—I cannot read them they are too smart for me, too high. The grass is green and The sky is blue, but I still live in the wreck of what once was—in bones and pastures. The wind doesn’t whisper my name, it never has—why should it bow to me when in one burst it can knock me over? You fell because of me, were ruined because of me and still I beat you like the abusive overseer. You are not animate like me, you do not stare at your rhyme and palm trees—trying to comprehend the why buried under the incorporeal X. I am sorry, but we will be born again and then— like two lovers that never quarreled—we can look at Him and say, “How great He is!”
0
Feb 22, 2012
Feb 22, 2012 at 4:29 AM UTC
Southern California Elegy
The stanzas of the mountains—I cannot read them they are too smart for me, too high. The grass is green and The sky is blue, but I still live in the wreck of what once was—in bones and pastures. The wind doesn’t whisper my name, it never has—why should it bow to me when in one burst it can knock me over? You fell because of me, were ruined because of me and still I beat you like the abusive overseer. You are not animate like me, you do not stare at your rhyme and palm trees—trying to comprehend the why buried under the incorporeal X. I am sorry, but we will be born again and then— like two lovers that never quarreled—we can look at Him and say, “How great He is!”
rachel-thompson
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Feb 22, 2012
Feb 22, 2012 at 4:29 AM UTC
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