Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
Old, abandoned wooden hulks, They lie, keeled over, on coarse grass, Left to sleep on the estuary flats. These brute barges, timbers strong As the men who worked them, masterless, Rise on no tide, rest heavy and decay. From one, still upright, a mooring rope Hangs in an arc, like the downward curve Of its great, oaken, rusty-hinged rudder; Tied to the mud where older keel spines die.
0
Jun 19, 2011
Jun 19, 2011 at 8:07 AM UTC
Charnel Ground
Old, abandoned wooden hulks, They lie, keeled over, on coarse grass, Left to sleep on the estuary flats. These brute barges, timbers strong As the men who worked them, masterless, Rise on no tide, rest heavy and decay. From one, still upright, a mooring rope Hangs in an arc, like the downward curve Of its great, oaken, rusty-hinged rudder; Tied to the mud where older keel spines die.
raymond-crump
Written by
Jun 19, 2011
Jun 19, 2011 at 8:07 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem