Oct 18 2005

A History of Madness

Published by at 5:34 pm under Art,Poetry

A History Of Madness
by Sander Roscoe Wolff ©

The cigarette ash burns long as the song plays out on the stout man’s handsome victrola, turned softly toward the dawn. Music becomes a pawn in this game of life. His wife, a slight thing, wrings her hands and cries with eyes full of tears. Years pass and no one knows of the faded memories of seas and songs, of travels beyond this conduit of moments. Tents rise, and nomads rest, the dust and sand caressed their skin and eyes. Horses and camels with detailed enameled reins spit and whinny as the sun lights upon the face of Albert Finney as Geoffrey Firmin, drunk on loss and draped in ermine, waiting for Jacqueline, beset by ghosts that never rest. The faded streets that run along these ancient ways bring faded days to faded ends, resplendent in the dust of history.

This clarity, it comes and goes. Who knows the whys and wherefores? The stores of moldy grain contain the essence of our inner vision, driven out by fear. A shout or whisper, echoes still, the mill stone turns its secrets into dross. The year has passed, the moments too, when color drained from every face, when disgrace and sadness rained. The shame of living grew too great, the hate and anger tossed into a pale melange. The hail stones fell, the stories tell, upon the souls whose peace they had dismissed. The glistening shine of ice in brine blinded them, and so they came to naught.

We taught the children of this place, of passions fierce, and great disgrace, of lives that burned so brightly then that, nightly, we must tell of them again, and again. We tell them so they too can know, and live to hope and hope to grow, that heart-felt truths slip fast away, and history becomes a gray shroud upon these memories. If we forget, or they forget, the past that brought us to this state, the suffering, the fear and hate, will all come back, and not abate. These precious moments, fragments all, deny the future’s clarion call to arms, to harm, and misery. Lay not upon this mired bed, cold comfort for your heart and head. Instead, walk on, or stand, or fall. There’s nothing more, in fact, that’s all.

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One Response to “A History of Madness”

  1. Administratoron 23 Nov 2005 at 4:09 pm

    Here’s a reformatted version:

    A History Of Madness
    by Sander Roscoe Wolff ©

    The cigarette ash burns long
    as the song plays out
    on the stout man’s
    handsome victrola,
    turned softly toward the dawn.
    Music becomes a pawn
    in this game of life.
    His wife, a slight thing,
    wrings her hands and cries
    with eyes full of tears.
    Years pass and no one knows
    of the faded memories
    of seas and songs, of travels beyond
    this conduit of moments.
    Tents rise, and nomads rest,
    the dust and sand caressed
    their skin and eyes.
    Horses and camels
    with detailed enameled
    reins spit and whinny
    as the sun lights upon
    the face of Albert Finney
    as Geoffrey Firmin,
    drunk on loss and draped in ermine,
    waiting for Jacqueline, beset
    by ghosts that never rest.
    The faded streets
    that run along these ancient ways
    bring faded days
    to faded ends,
    resplendent in the dust of history.

    This clarity, it comes and goes.
    Who knows the whys and wherefores?
    The stores of moldy grain
    contain the essence of our
    inner vision,
    driven out by fear.
    A shout or whisper, echoes still,
    the mill stone turns its secrets into dross.
    The year has passed, the moments too,
    when color drained from every face,
    when disgrace and sadness rained.
    The shame of living grew too great,
    the hate and anger tossed into a pale melange.
    The hail stones fell, the stories tell,
    upon the souls whose peace
    they had dismissed.
    The glistening shine of ice in brine
    blinded them,
    and so they came to naught.

    We taught the children of this place,
    of passions fierce, and great disgrace,
    of lives that burned so brightly then
    that, nightly, we must tell of them again,
    and again.
    We tell them so they too can know,
    and live to hope and hope to grow,
    that heart-felt truths slip fast away,
    and history becomes a gray
    shroud upon these memories.
    If we forget, or they forget,
    the past that brought us to this state,
    the suffering, the fear and hate,
    will all come back, and not abate.
    These precious moments, fragments all,
    deny the future’s clarion call
    to arms, to harm, and misery.
    Lay not upon this mired bed,
    cold comfort for your heart and head.
    Instead, walk on, or stand, or fall.
    There’s nothing more,
    in fact, that’s all.

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