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I told the swifts they’d got it wrong I watched them glide and dip and play The sky was of the richest hue Without a the slightest hint of grey But slowly as the day wore on The clouds began to blot the light And doubts began to fill my head Could the swifts have got it right? Of course they had, why even ask No confusion in their feathery heads The clues were plain, the signs were clear The rain would come, as soon as said And so it did, with lightening flash With thunderous roar and constant pound With drops the size of apricots To slake the tired and parch-ed ground. We mustn’t doubt our fellow creatures They feel things that we’d never sense Watch for signs and **** an ear And bow to Nature’s sapience. Stuart Williamson August 2016 ©
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Nov 30, 2017
Nov 30, 2017 at 7:17 AM UTC
I Told the Swifts
I told the swifts they’d got it wrong I watched them glide and dip and play The sky was of the richest hue Without a the slightest hint of grey But slowly as the day wore on The clouds began to blot the light And doubts began to fill my head Could the swifts have got it right? Of course they had, why even ask No confusion in their feathery heads The clues were plain, the signs were clear The rain would come, as soon as said And so it did, with lightening flash With thunderous roar and constant pound With drops the size of apricots To slake the tired and parch-ed ground. We mustn’t doubt our fellow creatures They feel things that we’d never sense Watch for signs and **** an ear And bow to Nature’s sapience. Stuart Williamson August 2016 ©
stuart-williamson
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58/M/Ecuador
Nov 30, 2017
Nov 30, 2017 at 7:17 AM UTC
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