The Knotted Oak

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  • The World

    The Knotted Oak

    In a humble wooded grove
    perched above a peaceful sea
    stands a knotted brawny oak
    a symbol of atrocity

    Before the humble sea side hamlet
    before the village square
    the seed of growth was wafting
    through the cool and misty air

    Days blossomed into weeks
    maturing into years
    the denizens began their flocking
    while the oak was looming there

    The village finally sprouted
    near that wooded grove
    the people lived in peace
    more arriving by the drove

    Society was changing
    or so the foolish said
    “let us separate the differences
    let the foul go unfed”

    Nothing could stop
    these thriving new ideals
    that transformed a village
    into a place of blood and steel

    “the foul stole my guinea”
    “the wretched stole my coin”
    “never trust  the vile,
    they’ll pillage your daughter’s loins.”

    And so the hate continued
    until that fateful day
    when the magistrate announced,
    “I can make this go away.”


    And so the village was arranged
    through magisterial decree
    the hated to the grove
    towards that oaken tree

    the foul were herded
    through that wooden gate
    nearing the inevitable
    crescendo of man’s hate

    families were ripped and scattered
    torn at the seams
    the squawking of the gulls
    made inaudible by the screams

    A rope was tossed around a limb
    of a proper length and size
    something not accounted for:
    the pain in the children’s eyes

    The children were picked first
    by some savage lot
    “Save the men and women,
    let the parents watch”

    Next came the women
    the wives of the men
    “kill the race through the fruit
    may they never breathe again”

    The day grew long
    the sun hung low
    illuminating the bodies
    in an eerie auburn glow

    When a man stepped forth
    noose slid over head
    in a proud unwavering voice
    this is what he said:


     

    “Dozens slaughtered on this branch
    a part of your master plan
    but can’t you see beneath the skin
    fore I am still a man

    If I were not a man
    then why will I bleed
    after you have finished
    your heinous, wicked deed

    If what you say is true
    and if I were still not a man
    then why will I be remembered
    as the man who made the stand

    With this noose around my neck
    aware of impending fate
    I urge you to evolve,
    purge the village hate

    When that glorious day comes
    and  the tide of hate subsides
    never forget the anguish
    in the children’s eyes

    Let this bloodied tree
    this old and knotted oak
    symbolize the repercussions
    of thrusting hatred’s yoke.”

    And so it stands
    that knotted, gnarled tree
    an everlasting symbol
    of that day of infamy

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    Hampton commented on The Knotted Oak

    08-24-2009

    This is a very good poem full of imagination, messages galore and a story line that cannot help but depress all that read it. Work on your meter in future poems. I still am myself.

    If I feel physically as if the top of my head were taken off, I know that is poetry.

    Emily Dickinson (1830-1886) American poet.

    Matt99’s Poems (5)

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    The Knotted Oak 1
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