This time I’d like to present something very special for your enjoyment. As many of
you know, I teach high school English at Websterville Christian Academy. (It is
a school I highly recommend you consider for your children’s and
grandchildren’s education.) Last week my
sophomore class was assigned the task of authoring a poem on a subject of their
choosing. Miss Sera Fecher, a student in that class, handed in a truly
brilliant and thoughtful creation which states, better than I ever could, just
how writers, and especially poets, feel about the power of words. Sera writes
with a level of maturity far beyond her years and I have often felt that she
could just be our next Emily Dickinson, or Edna St. Vincent Millay. I’m privileged to share Sera’s beautiful poem
with you now.
Ink –
Seraphina E. Fecher
She voyaged oceans, deserts, skies
And never took a trip
She touched a hundred thousand lives
And never moved her lips
She sang a song, her mouth closed tight
The audience still heard
She drew a picture, black and white
And colored it with words
She gave life to a hundred dreams
And never saw their deaths
Her mind - it raced - and still it seemed
To never lose its breath
She built a city in no time
She only had to think
For all she needed was her mind
And a little bit of ink
She voyaged oceans, deserts, skies
And never took a trip
She touched a hundred thousand lives
And never moved her lips
She sang a song, her mouth closed tight
The audience still heard
She drew a picture, black and white
And colored it with words
She gave life to a hundred dreams
And never saw their deaths
Her mind - it raced - and still it seemed
To never lose its breath
She built a city in no time
She only had to think
For all she needed was her mind
And a little bit of ink
1 comment:
Magnificent poem!! The rhythm, the rhyme, the imagery! Brilliant! Thank you for sharing!
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