A description of a place my friends and I often visit. |
A line of dusky trunks rise from the west And also from the east: a palisade, Or the pillars, built on royal foundation, Whose stony-strength might once, in times forgotten, Have borne the weight of a mighty hall: A hall whose skyward rafters would have torn The watching clouds which still persist above, Whose glorious walls and buttressed arches now Have been retaken by the hungry, hungry Earth, quite long ago. On either side, a mottled valley rolls Downward, treacherous with layered leaves. We stand between them, on the forest's spine, This great and northward swell of land Which no one here can reach. We rule this place, Our secret fortress, our steadfast resort. Atop our thrones of precious wood, sculpted From the tower's fallen form: A great Oak Long since deceased, we survey and note That all is good, and everything is as it should. We are not lonely here, for those of us Who visit are the finest companions Trusted much and trusting back in kind. This place's earth and air have heard so much, So many tales and quiet mumblings Said in confidence. But words are safer Here than home, or on the streets whose rumble Glowers in the distance, and remind us Of their grinding, smokey, sour manners Which here, at least, never will intrude. |