Thursday, October 3, 2024

Orange Hill Hymn


 Orange Hill Hymn

John Clare Stokes


Today the tree that moves me is atop Orange Hill Cemetery in Williston, Fla, place where so many of my loved ones and friends rest from their battles, their struggles, their quest to find the light amid their darkness.

The poem is dedicated to our common battle.

Does a new day bring light?

Has the light swallowed the dark?

Come day a squint into bright

The beams still painfully sharp.


On goes the gauze again

In streams the soothing dark

Not ready to walk in gleams

of light beams deadly sharp.


Many meant for the night

Few called to walk wide waking

Freed from the terrible fright

Always giving, never once taking.


In countless wards the halt

The little wars raging on

Light brigades assault for naught

the darkness ever so strong.


Allured to the prospect of sight

We wave the truce flag and stare

into the blinding beams of night

as captured we fall into the lair.


Hand on shoulder on shoulder on

the line of the lame snakes along

Til all glimmers are finally gone

No one remaining to recall home.


And on the Orange Hill quiet

Faint songs from old hymns

A remnant chants into the night

Pulls the weeds and remembers

Pearl and all of them

Awaiting.

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