There is a place,
a breathing space between where the neat hedge stops
and the garden next door splays,
where the moss spreads cool and green,
where the stars wink with aged beams,
where the spruce hare relaxes and dreams,
warming her fur in the yellow-berry rays.
Let us go from this place where the shrill wind screams
down blackened roads and acrid dead ends,
clear of the coal mines and gravestone heads,
walk steadily forward, ignoring the dread,
and the clothes that are sullied and shred,
in search of that space between garden and hedge.
But the way is blurred and the path overgrown
and the memory of clear weather has strayed,
with time the burnished metal has dulled,
with time the mind needs to be oiled,
with time all the sparks have been culled,
so let’s search for the children to show us the way.
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Note: This poem was inspired by Shel Silverstein’s Where the Sidewalk Ends.
note: a repost (Merry Christmas dear bloggy friends) 💞
Brilliant ! Excellent to see poetry written about a child’s perception of the world.
thank you lifecameos – hope you had a good Chrissy 😀
Thank you. we had a great Christmas. Might even be a poem or two in it when I can free myself up to write again.
sounds great 😍
Oh…such a delightful read as the year comes to an end.
thanks Charles 😍 I need a child’s perspective to get me through Christmas holidays!
A delightful place, indeed!
yes, I might slip over there now 😎 thanks colonialist 😍