Clockwork,
a poem by Abhinav Aradhi
Time flies,
Is what all the people
sing.
They’ve gathered at some
headstones,
And the world is listening.
Time flies,
And humanity forgives,
Like a soft, comforting
blow,
On a long festering wound.
Time flies,
And bodies go rotten,
But then they regenerate
the soil,
And suddenly the world is
virile again.
Time flies,
And we start to look past
the curtains,
At the people scarred by
one another,
And a house plagued by
radioactivity.
Time flies,
Is what all the people
sing.
They’ve gathered at some
headstones,
And the world is listening.
Someone’s placing daffodils
on the graves,
And someone’s sobbing up a
storm,
But there’s an uneasy peace
here in this somber niche.
It’s almost a haunted
paradise.
Time flies,
Is what all the people
sing.
Their voices ring out past
the poles,
And reach the starstruck
eyes of some teen girl.
Time flies,
And so do we.
Soaring on, beyond our
wildest dreams.
As cliche as it may be, we
believe it.
Time flies,
Like little flurries of
doves,
Streaking the sky like
harbingers,
Of a time unheard of to us.
People die,
And we all just move on.
All that’s left is some
paltry headstone,
And an empty promise to
change.
People die,
And time flies,
And there go the
waterworks.
Isn’t it all just so
futile?
No comments:
Post a Comment