Friday, September 26, 2014

A Poem and a Story

This past week has been a rough one for me. I was hospitalized with a very bad stomach infection, and actually wondered at a couple of points if I was going to die. To make a long and miserable story short, I was able to recover, and I’m home today with my family and with a new perspective on life.

I wrote a poem a few days back, and I understand its meaning even more now than I did before my ordeal. When I was laying sick in my hospital bed, I remember waking and feeling infinitely better, and knowing as I watched the sunrise that I was lucky to see its beauty once more. How many people passed away in the night, never living to see that beautiful change of the sky? I was given a good lesson: never take for granted the life you’ve been given, live every day to its fullest, and know that the things of this world are all going to decay and rot with time. Live and love like today is your last day, and never be ashamed of time spent having fun with those you love.

Enough rambling. On to the poem…

Journey’s End
The hurried man pressed on
Alone, through the wood
Each step moving forward
Quickly as he could
No nose for the smells
Nor eyes to sightsee
A schedule maintained
Meant places to be
On weary pace forward
By chance he did meet
Fellow traveler, all dozing
At mighty oak’s feet
This second man smiled
Content wave his greeting
The first scowled and moved on
No time for chance meeting
What a queer way to live,
The first thought of the second
One must strive to ignore
These distractions that beckon
Yet imagine surprise
When the first man did see
The second man once more
Asleep at the tree
“Have I circled?” he wondered,
“Or is he this fast?
How else could this be
That last man that I passed?”
The second sat up
With a wave and a smile
“Would you care to sit, friend,
And rest for a while?”
“Why do you tarry
And waste so much time
With challenges to face
And mountains to climb?”
“I’ve climbed my own mountains,”
Said man number two
“I walk the same path,
But I’m different than you.”
The first shook his head,
Smiled, mocking and sad
“You must learn to rush
If good things you would have.”
“Oh! Never,” he answered
While patting the tree
“The things here worth having
Are closer to free.”
With a snort and a shake,
The first man pushed on
Seeing no sense
In this second man’s song
Yet no matter how frantic
No matter how fast
The man made his pace
The second he passed
First once and then twice,
A third time, you see
The first man caught up
To that man by the tree
And too soon came winter
The trees fell to gray
The man became weary
As night replaced day
He stumbled and tripped
And the schedule did fall
For all clear the date
When that night comes to call
“Glad to see you!”
The second man said
As the two lay immobile
On hospital bed
“What happened to beauty?”
The first wailed in fright
“I worked to find peace,
Once I reached this twilight.
Yet I’ve found only pain
And despair in the cold.
Now the beauty is gone
And I find myself old.”
“The beauty is here,”
The contented man said
A wizened old finger
Gestured to the head
The first man thought hard
For mem’ry that satisfied
But his life had been built
On a system that lied
“You can enjoy the breeze
Or grasp for the wind
But death waits for us all
At this journey’s end.”
Randall Madden

September 21, 2014

No comments:

Post a Comment