(A note: in this poem, the authors write alternate stanzas.)
FREEDOM
has always demanded
my surrender to an instant in time
surrender to fate and therefore
to glory
Though my wily will
has oft gotten in the way
with grand illusions and the necessary
fiction that I am in command
But in the end, it is command
of nothing and no one
for that is the nature of time,
mean shrew who prunes our hopes
A clock that does not click
nor clang, but flies tirelessly; one day
its talons will ****** us away, releasing us
forever, from the burdens of the day
And until those burdens take flight
I carry a candle for the hours, open a book
for the days, and teach my trembling hand
to hold on to hope.
Aug 27, 2017
Aug 27, 2017 at 4:38 PM UTC
(A note: in this poem, the authors write alternate stanzas.)
FREEDOM
has always demanded
my surrender to an instant in time
surrender to fate and therefore
to glory
Though my wily will
has oft gotten in the way
with grand illusions and the necessary
fiction that I am in command
But in the end, it is command
of nothing and no one
for that is the nature of time,
mean shrew who prunes our hopes
A clock that does not click
nor clang, but flies tirelessly; one day
its talons will ****** us away, releasing us
forever, from the burdens of the day
And until those burdens take flight
I carry a candle for the hours, open a book
for the days, and teach my trembling hand
to hold on to hope.
