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Evening falls like an old friend, And all the dead poets have arrived, It is a gathering of all their spirits, For another try at stirring the muses. We see Keats, and Shelley, and Sandberg, As they slowly materialize before our eyes, Then Woodsworth and Dylan Thomas, Both simultaneously step into the light. Shakespeare wants to come, too, But his turn of a phrase won't do, Because we want Dickerson and Frost, And the bard must wait until his time has come. The bonfire is roaring, the starry, starry skies, A cool evening breeze steps lightly across our faces, Then Shelley begins to step forward and write in the air, Such phrases and sketches once again a delight to read. And, I, a poet want to beam in a trance of worldly proportion, I can not speak, or utter even the barest of grunts or utterances, Then Shakespeare, never to be outdone, begins a love-sick sonnet, While the crowd of hosts take notice and smile out loud. This gathering of dead poets seems like a dream of dreams, As they stand proudly upon the dampened ground of forest leaves, And Walt Whitman wants to recite from "Leaves of Grass" once more, While I, a student at the beginning of life, take copious notes galore.
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Dec 29, 2012
Dec 29, 2012 at 8:39 AM UTC
A Gathering
Evening falls like an old friend, And all the dead poets have arrived, It is a gathering of all their spirits, For another try at stirring the muses. We see Keats, and Shelley, and Sandberg, As they slowly materialize before our eyes, Then Woodsworth and Dylan Thomas, Both simultaneously step into the light. Shakespeare wants to come, too, But his turn of a phrase won't do, Because we want Dickerson and Frost, And the bard must wait until his time has come. The bonfire is roaring, the starry, starry skies, A cool evening breeze steps lightly across our faces, Then Shelley begins to step forward and write in the air, Such phrases and sketches once again a delight to read. And, I, a poet want to beam in a trance of worldly proportion, I can not speak, or utter even the barest of grunts or utterances, Then Shakespeare, never to be outdone, begins a love-sick sonnet, While the crowd of hosts take notice and smile out loud. This gathering of dead poets seems like a dream of dreams, As they stand proudly upon the dampened ground of forest leaves, And Walt Whitman wants to recite from "Leaves of Grass" once more, While I, a student at the beginning of life, take copious notes galore.
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65/M/American
Dec 29, 2012
Dec 29, 2012 at 8:39 AM UTC
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