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Transculent threads run up and down Old planks of wood- Upright and close together, Like distant cousins leaning towards each other And whispering sweet condolences At a funeral. The spider weaves her heavy web Out of weightless air, Intricately trapping Suicidal fruit flies And drops of dew, Reflecting off the shriveled corpses of Unfortunate insects, Casting a subtle shadow Upon the indifferent shrubbery: Infected with parasites that fail to even Acknowledge his heavy existence. "I'm here", he desperately wails, "Beneath your spindly legs And despair ridden hearts, Full of something like ambition, but of a different tone, Beating on and on below your silent wings." Deaf to his compassion, They lay tangled in their fate, Accepting death From the moment the spider drew close And caressed their sorry souls with her Delicate finger tips. His emerald tendons wear her web- For, the past won't let him shake it. An old man Who keeps the shawl of his late wife, Wrapped a little too tightly Around his frail, veiny throat, Just to know she was once there, And to keep her from ever really dying. So the bush cloaks his body With the cobwebs of the savage spider, Adorned with corpses Of insects too passive To question that which required their lives. Alone in silent ceremony, He gravely continues on, Beneath the dance of life and death, Yet never fully numb to it all, His nerves twitch and shake with the presence Of something gradually taking it's course. Life flows in and out of his branches, Like a tumultuous waterfall Giving life to all around it, While drowning those too weak to follow In it's unalterable current. And so, another day goes by, But to the forest, it's all the same, For none can hear the old bush cry, Mourning each fragile bug by name.
0
Jun 12, 2013
Jun 12, 2013 at 11:04 AM UTC
Ceremony
Transculent threads run up and down Old planks of wood- Upright and close together, Like distant cousins leaning towards each other And whispering sweet condolences At a funeral. The spider weaves her heavy web Out of weightless air, Intricately trapping Suicidal fruit flies And drops of dew, Reflecting off the shriveled corpses of Unfortunate insects, Casting a subtle shadow Upon the indifferent shrubbery: Infected with parasites that fail to even Acknowledge his heavy existence. "I'm here", he desperately wails, "Beneath your spindly legs And despair ridden hearts, Full of something like ambition, but of a different tone, Beating on and on below your silent wings." Deaf to his compassion, They lay tangled in their fate, Accepting death From the moment the spider drew close And caressed their sorry souls with her Delicate finger tips. His emerald tendons wear her web- For, the past won't let him shake it. An old man Who keeps the shawl of his late wife, Wrapped a little too tightly Around his frail, veiny throat, Just to know she was once there, And to keep her from ever really dying. So the bush cloaks his body With the cobwebs of the savage spider, Adorned with corpses Of insects too passive To question that which required their lives. Alone in silent ceremony, He gravely continues on, Beneath the dance of life and death, Yet never fully numb to it all, His nerves twitch and shake with the presence Of something gradually taking it's course. Life flows in and out of his branches, Like a tumultuous waterfall Giving life to all around it, While drowning those too weak to follow In it's unalterable current. And so, another day goes by, But to the forest, it's all the same, For none can hear the old bush cry, Mourning each fragile bug by name.
meka-boyle
Written by
American
Jun 12, 2013
Jun 12, 2013 at 11:04 AM UTC
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