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A Man's Appeal

In early days, man strode

beneath wide wild skies

reading the landscape with understanding eyes,

forgetting the paths of the women and children.

Wood and hill he paced,

silent, stealthy, alone,

solitude his defence against idleness,

solitude the means by which the Earth spoke to him,

and the state in which experience, memory and thought

bred music, poetry and story.

 

Times change, of course

and I begrudge not one second

in your company.

But if I willingly submit

to being sounding board for your day's plans;

to being a climbing frame for the boys,

or to answering the question,

"What are you doing?" with smiling candour,

 

Then perhaps you can forgive me

if I happen to spend

more time than you

in the one room in the house

with a lock on the door.

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Written by
alan-mcclure
Scottish
Published
Jan 3, 2011
Lines·Words
23·134
Notes

- From Also Available Free

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