Poems | The Tree
The tree stood silent in the square, This sentinel, sombre, overlooked by the ravages of time: 'Til yesterday, but never once showed we a care, What vain memorial, this short passage – of rhyme (and time).
Two men came, took but one day, If it had a heart, well they it stole. Now on the ground, this tree (they didst slay), Remembers not what it might have told:
Of lovers who beneath its sheltering cloak Spent well many hours before their ways dispersing Here their mightiest flames of passion didst stoke, And such secrets divulge; was this tree then listening ?
To traitors who plotted to topple the king; To soldiers who came and trampled the land; Simple girls leaving, ne'er returning; And a duel fought for ? only this tree recalled, whose hand.
But enough;
these deeds must take their place, And join their actors, long since died, 'Til tomorrow we'll not their journeys trace, This tree - remembers not today.
(sitting on a favourite tree, -felled!)
Charles Loft.
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