In 1558 Pieter Brueghel painted
Icarus falling to the blue and green water
in a darkened corner, out of sight
He crashed close to shore
between a fisherman busy reviewing his catch
and a great ship with its sails being pulled
farther and farther into the sea
He sank and drowned quietly
while the whole world carried on
unbothered by death and tragedy
tending to their plows and herds
They’ll come back tomorrow
to plow their fields and steer their herds
with the same thoughts, an endless loop
even when a boy falls from the sky
And like my house falling to pieces
of white rubble and shattered glass
The screams are kept between the walls,
but the windows are paintings
of young boys falling to the floor
silently, unnoticed by the world
Mar 4, 2013
Mar 4, 2013 at 12:03 AM UTC
In 1558 Pieter Brueghel painted
Icarus falling to the blue and green water
in a darkened corner, out of sight
He crashed close to shore
between a fisherman busy reviewing his catch
and a great ship with its sails being pulled
farther and farther into the sea
He sank and drowned quietly
while the whole world carried on
unbothered by death and tragedy
tending to their plows and herds
They’ll come back tomorrow
to plow their fields and steer their herds
with the same thoughts, an endless loop
even when a boy falls from the sky
And like my house falling to pieces
of white rubble and shattered glass
The screams are kept between the walls,
but the windows are paintings
of young boys falling to the floor
silently, unnoticed by the world
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5e/Bruegel,_Pieter_de_Oude_-_De_val_van_icarus_-_hi_res.jpg
