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A poem about life, death, and rebirth. |
The Lichen A poem about life, death, and rebirth. Edited by Livingston County Writers & Critics Support Group The lichen creeps along the wall of the city overpass Growing on the concrete slabs Blanketing the pavement wall Flowers grow amidst blowing snow Even death cannot contain The lichens growing green In the darkened, grainy sky, a hope of life pulsates joy within despair; love’s sweet trances singing While cold winds lash, Lake Michigan’s surf tears at the rocky shore The trees reflect a deadened brown for summers’ death knell Ringing Gardens with their deadened husks are sheened in icy sleet Shakespeare’s statue pensive sits Amidst flower stalks now deadened One calls out in lamentation Has summer been in vain? Is there not a trace of life in this dark, dreary land? Behold, I see the lichen grow along the rocky clefts The green defies November’s plague A flower grows amidst the rocks Green lichen climbs the concrete walls A gentle psalm proclaiming life amidst the deadened land Mid-winter’s stormy gale blows hard A hopeless lamentation as summer lies entombed A flower blanketed in the lichens growing green Doth whisper hope in a world of darkness stark and dreary Mid-winter’s frigid winds veil a somber truth to life’s dead, daily drag Yet on the crags and concrete walls the lichen grows in sacred green A harbinger of beauty yet to come Word count: 212 |