poem: A Moment of Silence

poem: A Moment of Silence

A Chapter by Marie Anzalone
"

for the survivors- Sendai, March 15, 2011

"

This is a burden too heavy for all the world to bear-

Too close, Death's steed has shaken its bridle's sonorous bell

and we are bound by grief as together, we pause to stare.

 

A beast has emerged again from its resting plaintive lair

we see the rider is something vast, incomprehenisble, and fell-

This is a burden too heavy for all the world to bear.

 

The souls interred by its passing are the survivor's collective fare,

our sentinels bring us brazen images of each new unfolding hell-

and we are bound by grief as together, we pause to stare.

 

Ice melts in human hearts as fire rends the very air,

Eyes behold such destruction as human voices can never tell-

This is a burden too heavy for all the world to bear.

 

Wishing only for something to remember growing green and fair,

we supplicate for intervention, actions or words to ease this evil spell-

and we are bound by grief as together, we pause to stare.

 

With costs so exalted, even atheists search for belief to serve as prayer,

There comes a deadly silence unbroken by any save Death's final knell-

and we are bound by grief as together, we pause to stare.

This is a burden too heavy for all the world to bear.

 



© 2012 Marie Anzalone


Author's Note

Marie Anzalone
We live in an age when the images on our tv screen bring the horrors endured by the human psyche into our living rooms. What we once imagined through written word, we now watch unfolding in real time in front of our eyes, disasters both natural and manmade. We need a new kind of compassion, the kind that comes from knowing that the world is both smaller and vaster than we think. The kind that lets us acknowedlge collective terror and grief, and moves us to act with generosity and courage in the face of our own uncertainty. I wrote this for the surivors of the Japan earthquake and tsunami, but it could easily apply to any of a number of other events we have watched unfold in the last decade. And, there will be more to come.

My Review

Would you like to review this Chapter?
Login | Register




Featured Review

The world is too much, sometimes. CNN, the internet. They and all their corespondents, resources, and contacts are having a hard time defining for us all these swirling events. I think we as a society might be driving ourselves mad. Technology and its outward exponential expansion is making it real hard, for humanity and its slow spiritual growth to keep up. A good piece Raquelita. Thought provoking. Thank you for featuring this


Posted 11 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

Marie Anzalone

11 Years Ago

Thank you, Diego. I wonder sometimes if our minds are capabale of keeping up the pace? I reda two pi.. read more
Larry Dyson

11 Years Ago

Yes!
Tree

11 Years Ago

Great points you bring up. Hard to tell if we can handle in the long run this deluge of information .. read more



Reviews

A passionate write. Technology has opened up the universal allowing us to share each others disasters and well as accomplishments. It has brought it's own form of democracy which helps us to share. If this world is to be saved someday, we need this new alertness to bring us all closer together to share the burdens of our universe. Very well penned.

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

a wonderful piece, thanks for sharing

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.

your words are beautiful

Posted 13 Years Ago


1 of 1 people found this review constructive.


2
next Next Page
last Last Page
Share This
Email
Facebook
Twitter
Request Read Request
Add to Library My Library
Subscribe Subscribe


Stats

976 Views
13 Reviews
Rating
Shelved in 1 Library
Added on March 14, 2011
Last Updated on August 25, 2012

A Pilgrimage in Epistles: Poems as Letters and Observations


Author

Marie Anzalone
Marie Anzalone

Xecaracoj, Quetzaltenango, Guatemala



About
Bilingual (English and Spanish) poet, essayist, novelist, grant writer, editor, and technical writer working in Central America. "A poet's work is to name the unnameable, to point at frauds, to ta.. more..

Writing