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I am abandoned by the wind, left to deteriorate in the fall. I face my life's end, growing funereal. Generations of a blackbird lived on my limbs when I was young; their song's no longer heard, muffled in this dying tongue. Around me once-bursting life eroded. Prosperity surrendered to the drought. Peace and cradling boughs corroded, engrossed in lonely thought. If I could drink the wind or see a sapling sway just one last time, I may feel a little more at ease; but now time retires and nature runs away. I whisper, quite weakly, to give the young some peace, "Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more."
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Apr 17, 2013
Apr 17, 2013 at 8:07 PM UTC
The Song of the Dying Tree
I am abandoned by the wind, left to deteriorate in the fall. I face my life's end, growing funereal. Generations of a blackbird lived on my limbs when I was young; their song's no longer heard, muffled in this dying tongue. Around me once-bursting life eroded. Prosperity surrendered to the drought. Peace and cradling boughs corroded, engrossed in lonely thought. If I could drink the wind or see a sapling sway just one last time, I may feel a little more at ease; but now time retires and nature runs away. I whisper, quite weakly, to give the young some peace, "Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more."
christopher-howard-gorrie
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Apr 17, 2013
Apr 17, 2013 at 8:07 PM UTC
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