Ancestry Poem by Paul Butters

Ancestry

Rating: 4.5


If Mankind perished:
Exterminated cataclysmically
Like the dragon dinosaurs,
How long would our cities stand?
How long before our cars rusted
And buildings toppled,
To leave the odd dam or pyramid
Poking through the tangled jungle mass?
A few hundred years they say.
Then nothing.
All gone.

Yet have such holocausts
Blighted Man before
Back through those swirling mists of time,
Thousands of years ago?
Great civilisations built by clever men and women,
Only to be dashed to the ground
By who knows what.
Atlantis and much more.
Advancement cruelly culled.

For Man,
Like the world,
Is much older than we thought
Or think.
Some say that aliens helped us build
Those ancient wonders.
Yet maybe we should cast away this
Self – effacing view:
Acknowledge that
We did it all
Ourselves.


(W) and © PB 7\6\08 at c.01.30 AM.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Vidyadhar Durgekar 12 July 2008

Beautiful poem with excellent imagery......

1 0 Reply
Greenwolfe 1962 14 June 2008

A bit of prose philosophy. A rare thing indeed. To read. I was wrapped up in your words. I wanted you to continue to espouse on this theme. That's good stuff. The kind of thing I like personally. Thank you. GW62

1 0 Reply
Paul Butters 14 May 2015

This is a theme I will stick with for sure my friend.

0 0
Vidyadhar Durgekar 08 June 2008

goodd poem.................

1 0 Reply
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Paul Butters

Paul Butters

Leeds, West Yorkshire.
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