Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
I paddled and glided along the current Of the St. Clair, To the west bank of the serpentine river, And portaged to the ash tree, Known as Ching-ach-gook, Waving noble limbs in full relief, Offering respite from the meridian sun. Leaves fluttered in the north current. Beneath I lay in cold comfort Envisioning the bows and bats that once propogated: The unborn of an endangered species. This is a dead tree growing, Seeds, like Uncas, Rotting above the roots: This native treasure Waiting for the emerald bore Like an imprisoned pagan.
0
Aug 17, 2015
Aug 17, 2015 at 8:50 AM UTC
Last of the Ashes
I paddled and glided along the current Of the St. Clair, To the west bank of the serpentine river, And portaged to the ash tree, Known as Ching-ach-gook, Waving noble limbs in full relief, Offering respite from the meridian sun. Leaves fluttered in the north current. Beneath I lay in cold comfort Envisioning the bows and bats that once propogated: The unborn of an endangered species. This is a dead tree growing, Seeds, like Uncas, Rotting above the roots: This native treasure Waiting for the emerald bore Like an imprisoned pagan.
Chingachgook: Character from Last of the Mohicans. Uncas: His son.
francie-lynch
Written by
Aug 17, 2015
Aug 17, 2015 at 8:50 AM UTC
Request permission to use this poem