Solstice Poem by John F. McCullagh

Solstice



Solstice stirs my Druid roots.
Those roots entangle with my dreams.
A language, strange and musical,
celebrates the world unseen.

The druids issue from the grove,
solemn in their robes of white.
The doors of time are open wide
on this, the long year's shortest night.

Ovates divine and bards will speak,
Singing in the Cambric tongue.
The Druid raises arms on high
to praise the power of the Sun.

She lies upon the altar stone.
The victim of the gods' caprice
Sunlight pours between the stones
where blood was shed and breath has ceased.

Saturday, June 21, 2014
Topic(s) of this poem: religion
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
(Our ancestors did some pretty strange things. I believe some of mine painted themselves blue and ran around naked- but you won't catch me doing that.)
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