Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
O grandmother, though we are Pakeha you had great mana. You lived close to that taciturn volcano, One Tree Hill, and its scoria scars were like the lines on your face, etched out by the evolution of that city. And, grandmother, you remembered the beginning of the cycle with the lucid vision you could not afford on the recent past. I always wanted to tell you that I loved you, grandmother, with a sincerity you would feel long after you passed through the gates of heaven. To tell you that when I was a child, I believed you would be here always, but then I listened closely to the silence between your words and I knew you were weary of this world. You were the last bridge connecting us with a pioneer century and I feared we would lose ourselves if ever we lost you, but we never did for in our children and in our children’s children we will see the face of Ruby, the dark-haired girl.
0
Feb 24, 2015
Feb 24, 2015 at 11:44 PM UTC
RUBY, THE DARK-HAIRED GIRL (1887-1987)
O grandmother, though we are Pakeha you had great mana. You lived close to that taciturn volcano, One Tree Hill, and its scoria scars were like the lines on your face, etched out by the evolution of that city. And, grandmother, you remembered the beginning of the cycle with the lucid vision you could not afford on the recent past. I always wanted to tell you that I loved you, grandmother, with a sincerity you would feel long after you passed through the gates of heaven. To tell you that when I was a child, I believed you would be here always, but then I listened closely to the silence between your words and I knew you were weary of this world. You were the last bridge connecting us with a pioneer century and I feared we would lose ourselves if ever we lost you, but we never did for in our children and in our children’s children we will see the face of Ruby, the dark-haired girl.
Copyright Andrew M. Bell
Written by
Feb 24, 2015
Feb 24, 2015 at 11:44 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem