This Mortal Being

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  • Death

    This Mortal Being

    THIS MORTAL BEING

    Acute dirges, the pulpit and the holy inscriptions
    The crash sites, indeed the going of the gone
    All re-echo its realness of all realities
    But man is a viator who lacks the experience of this final necessity.

    Behold carnal freshness!
    As the creamy massage, the daily nutrition
    The escape from sunny rays into nature’s coolness
    All had their course in fruition.

    Cavorting, besides the carving of the hairs and beard
    The pencil travels in golden colors over the lips, lashes and lids
    As the long hairs relaxes behind
    Beauty hails and hovers upon a hip of dust.

    Damn- when at the wake keep I beheld
    Handsome beauty lost in wrinkle
    The nostril that praised the fumes wronged with wool
    The glittering eyes firmly closed as for a transpositional gaze.

    Eulogized beauty vanishes, freshness fades; the coagulation
    And to babes, the same that told the tales now a nightmare
    Cheerio then! we say whose turn tarries in action
    But surely to come and dare.

    Fables great men become, and only for memory
    Beauty, only illusory
    Wealth of influence and the subtle voice
    Only for days that were but once.

    Greetings on arrival, the clip of the codes
    Of the times beyond the clouds
    Either to the homes or hades bids
    For as the holy to the homes so the haughty to hades

    Ha! At last, it’s dawn
    Vivified eternity begins for them whose conscious time
    But of these, saves from oblivion’s had I known
    I thought of death, yet where shall I be for even so, death is mine.

    By Edebo, J Oguche.
    josephoguche@yahoo.com
    +23480 662 046 96
    +23470 565 051 68

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    Poetry is finer and more philosophical than history; for poetry expresses the universal, and history only the particular.

    Aristotle (384 BC-322 BC) Greek philosopher.

    Edebo’s Poems (9)

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