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Upon a Visit to My Lonesome Father (Lyric) by mtk0630
In five long years Iâve had to mourn
And find in loss a good,
Time has not relieved the tears I shed
But leaves me weak and overworn.
I try to visit my lonesome father
In the early spring and in the dying day,
To release my woes into the ether.
But I cannot; and so I stay.
Five years have passed and still the thoughts
And memories of happy arrivals with plagued
Departures remind me of my grief and recall
To me the times I ventured to his grave:
I once did go on his fifty-third year,
In crisp winterâs chill and the cold frost
Of a December morning. I wept
As I walked through tombstones and crossed
To his plot. My sadness reborn
for what Iâd lost;
And once I came on Fatherâs Day with flowers
That I withdrew fast, so I
Did not highlight his sorry state
And have him ponder why
Even flowers have an unannouncéd fate.
They slowly wither, and wilt, and die;
And once in the highest point
Of summers brightest sun
I went to picnic by his grave
For sake of validation.
But I felt alone amidst the stones
And ate my lunch as one.
I went again when leaves were falling and under
My feet they crackled and crunched as I, brave
In the field of storied stamps of history
That gave their ages, approached my fatherâs grave.
I came across the plots that bear my name:
Four in order rest, as four in order died
In lives of fifty years, of woes the same;
Names etched in rock and each below their bride.
All their lives from fatherâs son to fatherâs son
The latest still with a coat of glossy shine
To contrast, from setting sun to setting sun,
The engrossed graves: now a mossy shrine.
And so it came that I denounced in fear
This, my familial fraternity,
In the clarity of autumnâs fading days
And cool, crisp air; with leaves from branches falling
Separately, but in the same lonesome fall
That each must make and times before was made.
Because I spite the movement of my grief
And Death for changes brought and still to come,
I cannot go back to that solitary site
Where my confined and coffined father lies,
I reject the nature of this life, his gift,
And so, reject mortality.
So I ask you (from a distance), Father,
Excuse this fear and know:
Soon these long five years will become five more
And from me these wary woes will flee.
Whether in a passing afternoon
On a lazy summerâs day; or a picnic at
Your marble door among the budding blossoms
Of spring; Iâll think of you and be
Forever in your company.
Or in my death, when winter snow falls âround
Our majestic hill in a perfect row of five
Weâll lie and share the ground
In eternal company.
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