Poem of the Day
My Library
By Mosab Abu Toha
My books remain on the shelves as I left them last year
but all the words have died.
My books remain on the shelves as I left them last year
but all the words have died.
Before the opening of the wrought-iron gates,
The gravel walks receive in daily dawns
Reindentation to fresh herring-bone
Like a cavalry charging, productive loins
in parallel
Straddle baby carriages;
Three countries blacken and vanish,
rivers run unlighted and silent,
lamp by lamp of the city came, went,
The farms are stinking craters in
Sheer sides under the sodden moors;
When it is not wind it is rain,
These cliffs, how glorious, Helen! We have driven
Along this route together often enough
Not to have missed this spot before, or given
She shapes the moral traveller
A sphere where she is in command,
And on a lower level her
The cross staggered him. At the cliff-top
Thomas, beneath its burden, stood
While the dulled wood
Several eras have come to a close
In this land of extremes. In our own day
We visit the slow process of decay
As it moves in the sun to decompose
Once more
The rain coerces memory,
And shadows cast upon the door
Sparrows disappear
As the shape of a wing is recognized;
The front door, walked to