Hunting
through the archives on a data stick – came across this poem I wrote a few
years ago.
Slip
sideways into my soul almost unnoticed the world’s cry
A t-shirt
thin from years of wear and washing.
Defeat
sagging his shoulders.
Fat (shameful, embarrassing): no-one wants to be
fat.
Sitting
on the bench with his small son on his knee, his hands gentle around the child,
holding
him safe,
his face
held tenderly against his boy’s head;
both of
them looking towards the horizon, across the inscrutable beauty of the ocean,
its body of unfathomable mystery defying imagination.
At the
moment I pass, the wind carries his words to me; the wisdom of his generation,
father to son, the answer of his soul
for his
child’s questioning.
‘Dunno,’
he is saying.
Slip
sideways into my soul almost unnoticed the world’s cry
Another
day, cold and tempestuous,
the
clouds tossing and the spray flying;
at the
roadside,
horrified
watching
the bus ticket
the wind
snatched out of his hand
blow
through the relentless traffic
across
the road and away.
Beyond
dignity, reduced to childhood
‘It’s not fair!’ he cries out and stamps in
rage; tries desperately to thread the indifferent stream of cars and chase the
wind for its prey.
Slip
sideways into my soul almost unnoticed the world’s cry
Bleak
morning of deluging rain
Everyone
is shivering, faces like masks
As the
hearse draws up
One
teenage girl clutches crazy
Burying
her face in his shoulder, crying out
‘I can’t do this! I can’t! I can’t do this!’
The
anguish wraps tightly round us
like
barbed wire.
Slip
sideways into my soul almost unnoticed the world’s cry
I think
maybe they do not feel
your
quiet eyes beholding,
your
listening to the voice of the world;
intent,
understanding,
taking
them seriously.
Slip
sideways into my soul almost unnoticed the world’s cry
©
Penelope Wilcock 2008
it's been a rough few weeks for our poor old world, hasn't it? there is nothing to do but to have watchful eyes, listening ears and prayerful hearts. thank you for this lovely poem.
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ReplyDeleteI am reminded of a book I once read on the holocaust & one image that has stayed with me for decades. As the nazis prepared to fire into the people lined behind the trenches prepared to take their bodies one father directed his young son's eyes upward to the blue of the sky & the birds flying free ~ away from the horror. Like the catch~cry*Look for the Helpers* there is still much beauty in the world, still good people, because change starts with us & how we choose.
ReplyDelete"Look for the Helpers", yes indeed! And with all their selfless courage, they still come.
ReplyDeleteOh so sad and so beautiful too. Look for the beauty and the helpers and we will get through.
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