It is good that
we must cultivate dreams,
But most often
man’s uncertainty and destiny’s certainty screams
to shatter them to pieces.
We, though must hope
to evade the deadly anchor’s drop,
It is our futile, and not so futile, duty to
carry the life’s ship through heaving waves,
Wonderful! So many winds one braves!
Like smouldering coal in the hull
the passion ever craves,
The tiny flicker braves
against the mightiest swathes of stormy dark,
Storms, meanwhile, play against the timber strong,
In the wooden frame, but, many dreams throng,
And enjoy the journey, though, unfinishable and long!
Time’s worms eat the timber,
And stealthily doth eventuality limber,
to sneak through the destiny’s holes,
Longly piled up agony of the storm furiously rolls,
Carried thou so far and wide;
tattered are those soles.
We carry a mountainous bulk of hopes
encased in some ash and tear drops,
How meticulously time thrashes its harvest,--
From buxom ripe fruits
it reaps only peelings and stones,
From life’s crop
death reaps only the lifeless drop,
The majestic reaper
wants but few grains of soil
from all the juicy, lifeful, thriving tissues.
Still, we have to live
and we need to hope
till that final mop,
We know that the slate will be
cleaned up after all,
But we have to play our part in life’s ball,
For crammed will be the hall
tomorrow as well,
When in other bodies life will dwell.
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