Surprisingly, I've taken a recent poetic turn in my writings. I wrote a sonnet, a couple limericks, and a few haikus. I rather liked the haikus and so thought to share them. After some polishing, I may publish the sonnet but only time will tell I suppose.
The cherry tree blooms,
Signaling the come of spring
And love's arrival.
The wind moves through grass
Like love in a maiden's heart,
Playfully gentle.
The blossoms soon fade,
Falling like pastel raindrops
On your hair and face.
Tuesday, June 10, 2014
Thursday, June 5, 2014
Sound the Bugle
Prompted by my sister, I am posting some of my older writing. "You have the blog to post your writing, right?" she asked me. And she's right. Predominantly, my finished works are Lord of the Rings fanfiction so here is a piece of writing that I am particularly proud of. The way I wrote several pieces was to take a song and break up the verses and choruses with related story bits. This song is from the movie "Spirit: Stallion of the Cimmeron" and, if you read, you'll figure out who it's about. Enjoy! I sure did.
Sound the Bugle
Sound
the bugle now - play it just for me
As
the seasons change - remember how I used to be
Now I can't go on - I can't even start
I've got nothing left - just an empty heart
Now I can't go on - I can't even start
I've got nothing left - just an empty heart
Rising
from where he had fallen, Boromir looked around him anxiously.
"Frodo?" he called quietly. Not hearing anything, Boromir
turned around, hoping to see the Ring-bearer. "Frodo," he
repeated, "forgive me." Desperate for the hobbit to hear
him, he yelled, "Frodo, I'm sorry!" The steward's son fell
to his knees crying bitter tears. What anguish of soul he felt. He
had betrayed the very person he had sworn to protect. Not only
betrayed but had accused him
of thoughts of betrayal, had even cursed him and fellow halflings.
How could he have done it? Boromir mourned even more bitterly knowing
that Frodo would never see him in the same light, possibly never to
remember the noble knight of Gondor with whom he had set out on the
journey at the beginning. In his grief, a thought flitted through his
mind. He had disgraced Gondor. He, the eldest son of the steward of
the White City, the city of kings, had fallen and taken the honor of
that city with him. A new feeling of horror and revulsion pierced
Boromir’s breaking heart, leaving the pieces now empty of all hope
and pride.
I'm a soldier - wounded so I must give up the fight
There's nothing more for me - lead me away...
Or leave me lying here
There
was nothing left for him now. Without honor, what was a soldier? A
warmonger. A murderer. Every part of his being cringed from these
ideas. Yet this was what he had done to himself. Hearing the sounds
of battle, Boromir was roused from his hopeless reverie into action.
He rushed forward with a yell, eyes blazing, sword unsheathed.
Perhaps in this his final battle. Yes, it would be his last. In
death, there was always honor for a soldier. He would remain here
forever to sleep without waking. In death, there would be no
condemnation, no agonizing disbelief. He would fade away. The company
would leave his body to be taken by the oncoming orcs and they would
be right in doing so. For what honor should be given the body of a
traitor than to be taken by the enemy?
Sound the bugle now - tell them I don't care
There's not a road I know - that leads to anywhere
Without a light I fear that I will - stumble in the dark
Lay right down - decide not to go on
As
he was fighting the Uruk-hai, Boromir's mind was not following the
motions of his body. Instead he was thinking of home. How could he
return to Minas Tirith now? Disgraced and dishonored. His father
would be harsh with him, he knew, but Denethor would get over it,
thinking it some mistake on the part of the fellowship and not any
fault of his son's. But Faramir . . . Boromir could not bear to
think of what his brother would think of him. His dear brother, the
embodiment of all the honor and grace and wisdom of the kings of
Gondor to Boromir, would be crushed. To his brother, his idol, a fall
from his pedestal would be a blow that nothing could heal. In his
mind's eye, the steward's son could see Faramir's eyes fill with
inexplicable shock to hear of his brother's doings. Those eyes that
had always expressed the younger son's inner emotions. Boromir could
not face him, those eyes, with the guilt that now lay darkly and
heavily upon him. Even if he said nothing, Faramir would know of it.
He had always been perceptive and could read what his brother was
feeling no matter how Boromir tried to hide it. Pain in his chest
immediately brought him back to Henneth Anuin. He looked down to see
a black feathered arrow protruding from his breast. Looking up, he
saw the assailant and continued to fight the orcs closest to him. How
could he have been so blind as to miss the archer in the group?
Truly, he was no longer worthy to be called the Captain of Gondor. No
captain would have allowed such a thing. But that title had been
stripped from him the moment he had attacked Frodo. He cared no
longer as many more arrows pelted him. He would fall here then, far
from all those who had retained their honor, amid those who knew not
what honor was at all.
Then from on high - somewhere in the distance
There's a voice that calls - remember who you are
If you lose yourself - your courage soon will follow
So be strong tonight - remember who you are
Preparing
for his death blow, the steward's son watched, in a haze, a man ram
and engage his assailant. When the fight was finished, he was finally
able to see his savior. To Boromir's utter shame, it was Aragorn. He
who claimed to be the heir to the throne of Gondor. He who had
nothing dishonorable in or about him in any way. He would be the one
to find the disgraced son of Gondor. Slowly he spoke to the Ranger of
the North. "They've taken the little ones!" Again he had
failed, failed to keep those innocent halflings from falling into the
hands of the orcs. "Stay still," Aragorn told him. But
Boromir could not rest. "Frodo! Where is Frodo?" All his
thoughts were now focused on the one he had wronged the most. "I
let him go" was the reply. Pain ran through him that came not
from the arrows. "Then you did what I could not. I tried to take
the Ring from him." He could not look his leader in the eyes.
Aragorn answered, "The Ring is beyond our reach now."
"Forgive me," persisted the dying man, "I did not see.
I have failed you all." Comforting the fallen man, the Ranger
said, "No, Boromir. You have fought bravely. You have kept your
honor."
Ya you're a soldier now - fighting in a battle
To be free once more -Ya that's worth fighting for
Barely
hearing Aragorn's answer, Boromir continued. "It is over. The
world of men will fall and all will come to darkness, and my city to
ruin." All the despair that had welled up in his heart broke
forth in his statement. He could see it now. The White City in ruins
and its people afraid and enslaved. Through his nightmare, he could
hear Aragorn speaking. "I
do not know what strength is in my blood, but I swear to you, I will
not let the White City fall. Nor our people fail!" Did he
truly just hear what he thought he heard? "Our people."
Truly, this Ranger deserved to be the hero of the White City, its
true hero. Never would he know how much those words rang brilliantly
within the fallen man. "Our people." From this man, this
seemingly beggar and renegade of the North, he has returned his
honor. "I would have followed you my brother, my Captain,"
yes "my King." And so passed the great Son of Gondor, his
honor yet gilding him as shining mail.
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