Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
My mother's waters gave me birth and wrinkled, I came to her arms. So, wrinkled, will I leave this earth; beyond its sorrows and its charms. How sorrowful and soon, the dusk will not be held back by our cries and I within this worn out husk lie down again, and hope to rise. I dream of other waters now; where joy and love and comfort are. Where, to pain I need never bow, beyond some bright but distant star. Such afterlife I'll never know, unless I slip this earth -and go.
0
Apr 24, 2012
Apr 24, 2012 at 1:40 AM UTC
Hope (A Sonnet)
My mother's waters gave me birth and wrinkled, I came to her arms. So, wrinkled, will I leave this earth; beyond its sorrows and its charms. How sorrowful and soon, the dusk will not be held back by our cries and I within this worn out husk lie down again, and hope to rise. I dream of other waters now; where joy and love and comfort are. Where, to pain I need never bow, beyond some bright but distant star. Such afterlife I'll never know, unless I slip this earth -and go.
deborah-birch
Written by
67/F/Canadian
Apr 24, 2012
Apr 24, 2012 at 1:40 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem