A thousand years of drought

By Michael Daigle

Thunder rumbles like distant gun fire,
The echoes of endless battle.
The statues all have swords,
Huzzahs not to sacrifices, but to campaigns for glory forgotten.
Let the metal rust and the stone melt.
Remember the faces and tears,
Not the cries, nor the gloating words of conflict.
Let love be as fierce as war.

Dry rivers mark deserts, hunger descends to hollow eyes;
Cries of pain cannot penetrate the smiling evil of power.
Dry bones nestled in soft sand for others to find,
The poetry of need crushed by the metal wall of self.

A broken heart sighs behind a smiling face.
What splinters of your dreams are mine?
An old woman’s shaky letters cry for life and love,
Words full of times and weariness, rest that has not come.

Hate is easy, blame easier still;
And easier yet it is to let the past poison.

Pray the rains come and dissolve the walls
Pray tears soften to forgiveness.
Pray that soft words balm the wound that festers still.
Pray the sunlight cracks the hardness.
Pray that silence stirs to sound, that stasis turns to motion.
Pray we step from the porch hands held, voices raised
Pray love is aroused to wake the gray day,
To end a thousand years of drought.

Michael Stephen Daigle is a writer and journalist who lives in Phillipsburg, N.J. He is the author of the award-winning Frank Nagler Mystery series, published by Imzadi Publishing, LLC of Tulsa, Okla.: “The Swamps of Jersey,” 2014; the sequel, “A Game Called Dead,” 2016; “The Weight of Living”, 2017; “The Red Hand,” 2019.

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