A poem concerning the future of our rights and freedoms. |
A portrait once painted. Through clouded testimonial descends the dark ebony wings of a crow, crudely rasping to the succession of a dream. Landing on a cross's arms cawing over a field of infertile dirt which has sewn no crops this year. Without a thought left to reap, the fright remains erect to keep us crows away. The farmers care only for land now, but do nothing with its soil -just collect. And though their trees wither in their yards, bearing no fruit, they pay no mind... knowing very well - mindless of their spoils - that all things must come to an end, and die in time. Without a worry of what's left for their future sons. The flame strikes the kindled bush dead behind the empty fields of wheat in the grasp of the hot, dry sun. Rising from the brush and yellow grass to the treetops is a torch, to guide the moths and mosquitoes looking for light - hazing the mirage of a distant oasis promising eternal life to those who bathe in front of the blistering heat. ... A farmer sits naked on his deck with his rifle leaning by his stool painting the image of a dieing world while grinning like a fool. His canvas painted thick and wet with pigments of our will wrapped around the frame of freedom - a brush, painting conscious scenes of further hopes he'd wish to kill. ... This drought of life is given no end in sight. The fields, only bare and riddled with the corpses of questions and affable field mice having ate their young before they'd starved. Now marking the plains with meatless skeletons: having died of thirst- Their bones picked clean like a trout, tail-to-head who also lie suffocated - to the east lining the dried up bosom, of the tumid river bed. The cross beam makes a perch for the tired, gray feet of an aging crow. Staring past the line drawn in the sand between the plowed rows of stagnant growth; beyond the gaping fissure of the promised land. The blind image now flecking like the rust off the nails which support this torso of severed faith. The bird now pecking at the button eyes of the man filled with straw and lies- meant to scare it away. The crow's feathers once black as jet, in sights now painted red by the farmers who wave their obdurate arms at anything that lives. The battle rages ever on between the naked men with guns over each other's infertile lots until none are left proud - but dead; just as the dead river runs. Once all the force has given up - their sibilant tongues, will cease to spit, the crows will rest without appeal, and pick it from their fetid lips. Living as they always have unto themselves and hitherto, resting only when required. Only fearing the nightly shadows, - finding license in the clouds but now free to land upon a lonely, forgotten stool and examine a portrait once painted. |