Too early a death for those who young
have lost prophecy in blast and flame.
The broken have been assembled
as best could be to pose for burial.
The man in bleak authority intones
the word that cannot tell
when last the girls stood singing
under the sweetest tree,
how remote from nightmare
they giggled secrets believing
death was the end for the old.
After the moans are choked
and the flowers gone petalless,
the girls will be with greatgrandparents,
themselves not long in that last room.
Mothers and fathers,
grandfathers and grandmothers
still pace the waking street
though few are the footfalls
that echo where the children lie.
But walk they will
the sixty-odd more years they’re due.
Beyond allotted time and self
the four of them will go
down red gullies of guilt
and alleys of dark memories,
through snagging fields of scarecrows,
and up an unforgetting hill
to blazon accusation of an age.
(May Miller)
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Based on Topics: Man Poems, Death & Dying Poems, Nature Poems, Flowers Poems, Mothers Poems, Fathers Poems, Age Poems, Children Poems, Memory PoemsBased on Keywords: giggled, grandfathers, unforgetting, grandmothers, intones, scarecrows, snagging