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Home Poetry Beauty

‘Lost’ and Other Poetry by Mandy Moe Pwint Tu

July 11, 2016
in Beauty, Culture, Poetry
A A
2
Le Sommeil. Alphonse Eugène Félix  Lecadre. Nantes, 1842 ; Paris, 1875. 1872. Scan of 2 d images in the public domain believed to be free to use without restriction in the US.

Le Sommeil. Alphonse Eugène Félix Lecadre. Nantes, 1842 ; Paris, 1875. 1872. Scan of 2 d images in the public domain believed to be free to use without restriction in the US.

Lost

The angel’s cry, the devil’s kiss:
How did you let it come to this?
You claimed the darkness too:
How when the world was screaming,
You thought you’d best be dreaming;
You thought the lies were true—

O, you have made a mess of things;
The world breaks stars and circus strings,
The wheels, they whirl and burn;
The lightning shapes the earthly plain
And all who sleep are washed by rain,
And never do return.

Don’t weep, my sweet, sad, human child,
The land is rough; the sea is wild
And sorrows teeming thrive
In restless hearts and whirring heads,
And demons sing beneath our beds
And hinder where we strive.

Yet stars still shine amid the cold,
The autumn’s leaves are just as gold
As sunlight o’er the streams;
So though the world may scorn you now
Yet though you lose your way somehow
You’ll sail back with your dreams.

 

Of Atlas and I

He said:
come sit with me, young mortal,
your eyes are cold and pale
your smile is faint and empty
your skin has grown so stalecome
sit with me, young mortal
and tell me of your life:
you have loved and lost, O surely,
you have known some strife?

I said:
Atlas, bearer of the skies,
pray tell me how you stand
how you live out your punishment
imprisoned on the land?
Atlas, bearer of the skies,
how do the heavens weigh?
Do you wish for some release
some broken, happy day?

He said:
young mortal, fair and true,
my arms have grown so weary;
my eyes have seen the sun
sweep over constantly;
young mortal, fair and true,
you do not know my sorrow
to bear such burdens day to day
with no relief tomorrow.

I said:
keeper of the skies, dear Atlas,
you have made much sacrifice
and had I strength as much as you,
I would not question twice.
Keeper of the skies, dear Atlas,
to bear this burden in your name,
for the sky may love the earth so fair
and dare not stoop to shame.

He said:
young mortal, bright and true,
you do not understand
my doing binds me here forever
forever to the lonely land:
young mortal, bright and true,
the heavens weigh not so much:
it is the weight of human hearts
that tremble ‘neath my touch.

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Comments 2

  1. David Paul Behrens says:
    10 years ago

    Very nice. Virtually outstanding.

    Reply
  2. Durlabh Singh says:
    10 years ago

    BALLAD

    Go saddle me the black black steed
    For I am going on a long long journey
    Go wipe away the tears that roll
    Across brawny cheeks of gypsie lassie.

    Fifteen well made men going on their steeds
    To get their brides leap over the strand
    The brunt hills in search of a namer
    Drying fast to justify conscript of land.

    Twilled with a broach and a ring wintry
    The death stalks the hill with sickled moon
    The leaden sheen on the steed’s back
    Has turned the night’s face into a roon.

    Late late yesterday I saw the moon
    Full bodied like a new sickled maned
    The death will stalk these streets tonight
    And am afraid of downy owl’s nickled bane.

    Come on fair ladies hang your hair down
    Over the fair head over the abordour
    The fifteen men have gone to castle waste
    And along came the death to devour.

    Go saddle me the black black steed
    The merry castle keep has hovelled a cry
    Though death stalks every haste and waste
    And brawny cheeks of gypsie have gone dry.

    Durlabh Singh.

    Reply

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