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Open Poetry #40
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Spike Daft
Junior Member
since 2006-09-12
Posts 23
CA, USA

0 posted 2007-01-13 05:04 PM


Hello again, all! Sorry for the absence; I've been quite ill. Can't wait to catch up on some great poems! In the meantime, I figured I'd post one I found in my archive...


Blackbairne Hill

When the moon is a diamond in the jet-black sky
and the breeze is calm and still
And the trees are dark and sleeping
like the robins on the sill,
I can feel the cycle of the night
like the turning blades upon the mill;
I can hear the songs the night-things play
upon sweet Blackbairne Hill.

The spring is immortal on the Hill;
little creatures always at play,
but this paradise, though constant now,
saw once a much darker day.
On these warm evenings I sit by the sill
while the tresses of the willow sway,
and remember the story of the little robin
who sang the rains away...

I knew once of a lass as faire as the spring
with a fall of auburn hair
She would meet the Sun on Blackbairne Hill
and take him dancing there.
Each day he’d never fail to rise,
for he knew she waited there,
and they would waltz the lazy days away
without a qualm or care.

When winter came the Sun grew ill
and faded into gray,
and the sheltering leaves of the willow trees
caught the wind and blew away.
The lassie with the auburn hair
from her place not once did stray,
and she waited for her sweet Sun there,
as her joy was blown away.

Upon the top of Blackbairne Hill
she waited for a sign,
but the howling of the ceaseless wind
did prove that Fate was blind.
Each night she prayed with all her might,
and begged it to be kind,
but Fate had other plans for her
within its stoic mind.

And so, when the grass replaced the snow
and the robin’s call was shrill,
and the earth awakened from its winter sleep
and the brooks were no longer still
The Sun threw back his blanket gray
and rushed out with a gleeful will,
and found his lassie, as cold as ice-
dead upon Blackbairne Hill.

That was the spring I remember well,
when the Sun, in deepest pain,
shone not once for all the world
and doused the Hill with rain.
But one day, from out of this endless torrent
came a robin, who bravely sang
and chased the clouds from off the Hill
and made the Sun smile again.

The robin sat and sang of joy
despite the sadness there
And sang a tribute for the lass
with the fall of auburn hair.
He sang unto the saddened Sun
and voiced a hopeful prayer
that the Sun would revive the joyful Spring
that loved the lassie faire.

Now throughout the year the grass stays green
and gentle breezes turn the mill,
and children of that robin sing,
their voices light and shrill.
Each day I am reminded of when
the Spring- and life- stood still,
and when the robin brought it back
upon sweet Blackbairne Hill.

Grey Matter Custom Images
http://spikedaft.deviantart.com

© Copyright 2007 Andrea Weist - All Rights Reserved
trutodaraiders
Senior Member
since 2006-12-02
Posts 820
CA
1 posted 2007-01-13 05:25 PM


Andrea i am not much for ctitique..I can say this was a well done poem..Enjoyed the read
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