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Open Poetry #44
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Midnitesun
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since 2001-05-18
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Gaia

0 posted 2009-05-25 05:31 PM



Blue-gray, nearly uniform
in color and attitude,
a restless hovering haze
covers the battlefield skies
on this...and every other
Memorial Day.

Gettysburg, Memorial Day

I find myself having heart palpitations,
but not from the rigors of walking
around the stone and rail fences
that line the battlefield,
nor from the heat and humidity
that rule the day.

These palpitations of the heart
are steeped in empathy,
of the psychological, historical
realities of three long days
in July of 1863.

I see General Robert E Lee
sitting proudly (though tasting defeat)
atop a gray gelding
named Traveler.

I hear the echo of President Lincoln
delivering the Gettysburg address
at the National Cemetery
November 1863.

I observe the blue-gray haze
that still hovers
over the battlefield
where valiant soldiers
both Union and Confederate
shed their blood for their cause.

Today, the history stories
come alive and are palpable.
Names such as
Pickett's Charge,
the Wheatfield,
the Peach Orchard,
Plum Run,
take on new meanings.

Spectral spirits hover in the haze,
and though I do not see
any discernible
uniformed shapes or figures
running in that haze,
I feel the presence
of hundreds of departed souls,
as if they are watching me,
wondering what message
and meaning I might glean
from standing on
sacred ground.

Time will tell.

© Copyright 2009 Kathleen Kacy Stafford - All Rights Reserved
Sunshine
Administrator
Member Empyrean
since 1999-06-25
Posts 63354
Listening to every heart
1 posted 2009-05-25 06:04 PM


quote:
I feel the presence
of hundreds of departed souls,
as if they are watching me,
wondering what message
and meaning I might glean
from standing on
sacred ground.


Reflection on any ground is humbling,
but when it is on the ground of lost souls
it becomes even more so.

Tender writing, Kacy. Thank you for sharing.

Margherita
Member Seraphic
since 2003-02-08
Posts 22236
Eternity
2 posted 2009-05-25 06:33 PM


Dear Kacy, you really made me feel the atmosphere of this hystoric place with great intensity.

A poem that makes one stop and think.

Love,
Margherita

Martie
Moderator
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since 1999-09-21
Posts 28049
California
3 posted 2009-05-25 06:35 PM


Kacy...they know the heart within you and welcome your knowing spirit.  
Midnitesun
Deputy Moderator 1 Tour
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since 2001-05-18
Posts 28647
Gaia
4 posted 2009-05-25 06:57 PM


Kari, Margherita, Martie,

Thank you for reading this offering.
There are many images and thoughts racing through my head tonight it will be nearly impossible to sleep.

ArtSolstice
Member
since 2007-03-18
Posts 498

5 posted 2009-05-26 07:17 PM


Wow!  Well and poeticly described!
secondhanddreampoet
Member Ascendant
since 2006-11-07
Posts 6394
a 'Universalist' !
6 posted 2009-05-26 07:30 PM


fine 'write' about the most 'haunted' place in America (quite possibly the world?!):

51,112 (23,049 Union and 28,063 Confederate) casualties!

from a 'P.I.P.-land' forum (and a 'Memorial Day') past:

In Memoria (Gettysburg)

   inscrutable stones,
ghostly bells toll forever
        in memoria!

           - b.e.a.

MUCH applause for this timely and effective 'penning' !!

Oklahoma Rose
Senior Member
since 2008-02-28
Posts 1586
Oklahoma USA
7 posted 2009-05-26 08:35 PM


Thank you, Kacy for sharing this history with me.
OwlSA
Member Rara Avis
since 2005-11-07
Posts 9347
Durban, South Africa
8 posted 2009-05-27 06:19 PM


Kacy, you should have been (amongst a million other things - but then you can't be everything) a History teacher.  If you had been my teacher (a bit difficult as we are the same age!) I would have hung on every word you uttered, got lost in the haze of every word-image you painted, thought thoughts I had never dreamed of before, learned things I hadn't known and been even more passionate about History than I already am - just as I did, reading this living, breathing poem.  The Traveler touch was the cherry on the top.  Few people can touch you for compassion, kindness and loyalty.  I learned more about Gettysburg and the real feel of it from your poem, than any History book could teach from cover to cover.  

Owl

Midnitesun
Deputy Moderator 1 Tour
Member Empyrean
since 2001-05-18
Posts 28647
Gaia
9 posted 2009-05-27 06:35 PM


Art Solstice, what a treat to have a reply from you!
Bruce, numbers are mind-boggling and difficult to comprehend. Three days, so many lost.
Sue, thank you for reading.
Diana, history was never my best subject, perhaps it just wasn't taught with enough color and passion. Gettysburg is a powerful place to encounter the emotional, physical, historical impact of war.

BluesSerenade
Member Patricius
since 2001-10-23
Posts 10549
By the Seaside
10 posted 2009-05-27 09:49 PM


A fine tribute, Kacy!!

Your poetic history does indeed come alive.

Excellent writing~

Robert E. Jordan
Member Rara Avis
since 2008-01-25
Posts 8541
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
11 posted 2009-05-27 09:58 PM


Yo Kacy,

My great grandfather did the Civil War.  He was most noted for riding his horse into the barrooms of Huntington, PA., and for exploading a pipefull of gun powder every fourth of July.

He was also a beekeeper, like I used to be when I was on the farm.

Love Bobby

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