Call me cynical
For not having faith in you
Lies have tainted me
Asking to trust what you know
Haven’t we done this before
~
~~Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Call me cynical
For not having faith in you
Lies have tainted me
Asking to trust what you know
Haven’t we done this before
~
~~Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Each stanza within this poem is an individual landays which I nested with other individual landays to make a longer poem focusing on a single topic.
~
~
I am drawn to your crystal clear eyes
For its there I find truth, peace and love in abundance
,
Were it not for you I would perish
Swallowed up by the worlds lack of humanity
.
Your tender touch is a reminder
That goodness surely does exist in spite of our faults
.
My hope is for better days ahead
Where man finally faces the error of his ways
.
Would not a lasting peace serve us all
Ending our torrential thirst for never ending war
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
~
Authors Note: A landays is form of folk poetry from Afghanistan. Meant to be recited or sung aloud, and frequently anonymous, the form is a couplet comprised of 22 syllables. The first line has 9 syllables and the second line 13 syllables. Landays end on “ma” or “na” sounds and treat themes such as love, grief, homeland, war, and separation. See Eliza Griswold’s extensive reporting on the form in the June 2013 issue of Poetry, in which she explains how the form was created by and for the more than 20 million Pashtun women who span the border between Afghanistan and Pakistan.
~
The ending on “ma” or “na” sounds applies to the Pashtun language and was disregarded in English. Each stanza within this poem is an individual landays which I nested with other individual landays to make a longer poem focusing on a single topic.
I pray for restraint.
I pray that pride will not turn us blind,
This can only result in death.
Drawing all sides to the brink
On what road will there be peace?
.
Yes, perhaps lines have been crossed,
But lines can be distorted by wind,
Blurred by anger, smothered with oil,
Causing harried decisions…
This is the time for wisdom not greed.
.
Let not egotism ignite Armageddon,
The stakes are far too great.
Have we learned nothing from our past,
Nothing from our present,
Nothing from the farewells to our sons and daughters?
.
Tell us almighty, what is victory!
Show us what victory looks like,
We have not seen one in so long!
You ask again for our trust
Yet your truths ring as hollow as ever.
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Blood pools on doorstep
Watered down by mothers tears
Limited air strikes
In the end it matters not
A child’s death is permanent
~
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
As fading light danced with drifting fog,
Eerily drawn am I towards croak of frog.
Fast approach ‘cross soggy ground
Within an instant airs void of sound.
No frog, no cricket, no mosquitoes buzz,
For just a moment lost I was.
Then sound of sucking, foot in mud,
Terrified of dying, death in cold blood.
In fear for my life standing stone still,
Uncontrollable shivers as if a cold chill.
Slivers of light from cloud covered moon,
Praying to God it would be over soon.
Out of the shadows arose fanged beast,
Reason why sounds of nature had ceased.
Standing a head taller than tallest man I knew,
Sabre from sheath like lightning I drew.
Mustering courage for fear of flight,
I stood my ground determined I would fight.
From the shadow he stalked nose to the wind,
Catching my scent certain I had sinned.
For what reason would God unleash Satan’s fury,
Except in the hopes under bogs mire bury.
The glint of my blade must have captured his eye,
Like a cat through the swamp grass this evil did fly.
With the swipe of his hand claws hit their mark,
For barely a second the whole world went dark.
Such is my luck that the sabre stayed grasped,
Struggling to my feet with a faint thrust he gasped.
Blood on my blade proved the devil had been hit,
He stumbled and roared and crimson he did spit.
Shaking off the fog and the pain in my chest,
Determined to lay this monster to rest.
I trudged through the mud not a second to spare,
With razor sharp edged to the hilt I did bear.
Snapping his jaws his tail cracked like a whip,
Avoiding the fork as I tottered and slipped.
His anger was evident by his blood curdling cry,
To finish him off it was certain do or die.
Taking his tail with one mighty blow,
It continued to move as if putting staging a show.
With beast so distracted by the lose of his tail,
His color of skin turned obsidian to pale.
I drew back once more committed to his end,
Slice through his neck at the spine blade did bend.
As if made of marble all his thrashing came to a stop,
His head tilted forward, to his knees he did drop.
His eyes that did once glow a fiery red,
Turned a dull shade of black, I knew he was dead.
Exhausted and terrified I fell to the ground,
All of natures creatures carried on their sound.
Thing born of nightmares to be consumed by the bog,
Sinking ever slowly ne’er rising hence to slog.
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Cry of somber horn sounds,
Cloaked in fogs muted cape;
Lonesome and lonely as others answer not.
With greatest of care she lumbers on,
Waning on autumn wind, she cries,
Longing for her groom so long ago parted.
Drawn and weary her soul aches
In hopes with lover soon united.
He waits…
On rocky shore, he waits,
To hear the joyous cry of his bridegroom,
Against cold and crashing spray–he waits
For her voice, it never comes,
He wales…
For his love–he is forlorn.
She is gone.
~
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Dry tears dull her cheeks
No more left has she to cry
All has been taken
Her life, joy and only child
Squandered by a tyrant’s hand
~
Our inaction screams
Falling upon bloody ears
Looking like cowards
We cower in our corner
Pompous in isolation
~
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Stacks puff their gray smoke
Debris like a beaver’s dam
Fish…belly up float
Stink of capitalism
Passed as unfettered progress
~
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
To lay in the tall grass
Soaking up summer sun,
I recall a time so much simpler than today,
Carefree, up at dawn, out, exploring,
Seeking out new worlds, new adventures.
Calls for lunch went unheeded,
There just wasn’t the time.
Mother knew, mother always knew
This was part of the plan.
Friends and imagination consumed,
My world for the taking,
King, conqueror, soldier
How I long for those days.
Today kings become tyrants,
Conquerors commit genocide
And soldiers really die.
Games of youth were just silly fun,
There were no consequences,
There was no death, no tyranny.
At the end of the day we’d shake hands,
Smile and run home for dinner,
Dreaming of tomorrow,
Dreaming of our next conquest
From the safety of our beds.
~
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
Looking back over rounded shoulders,
At friends who’ve long passed;
He can see them like yesterday,
So much like him today.
“Maybe I don’t want to go forward alone”, he thought,
His blanket of bronze and gold
Offering little warmth to his heart grown cold.
His parched lips quiver under mossy beard,
Longing for a sip of cool mountain water.
What lies ahead scares him
Standing at rivers edge.
In his youth no apprehension would he have shown,
His fearlessness bringing out the best in him,
But no longer is he fearless, no longer is he emulous.
Instead he is resigned to spend his life’s remainder…
Waving goodbye to what was
And what might have been.
.
~~ Dominic R. DiFrancesco ~~
(Words at the Weekend – 17-18 August 2013 prompts)
http://boipoet.wordpress.com/2013/08/17/words-at-the-weekend-17-18-august-2013/