China Poem by David Lewis Paget

China

Rating: 4.8


This land of ancients grows on me
Like a soft moss, damp-oozed in time,
Sad breezes churn each soul, unfree,
And sweep me over, like some tide.

Strange voices echo from dim pasts
Long littered with dead Mandarins
I hear, I understand them less
But feel their presence in old sins.

While grace and beauty walk each street
As daughters fan their coal-black hair
The future calls to them, at last
And the world waits, to meet them there.

25 October 2005

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Frank Cannon 02 August 2008

A friend of mine went to China, ostensibly for a year, to teach english and four years hence he has yet to return. He fell in love. Not with any one particular person but with the country and its people. I have sent him this poem. It says better than I ever could why it is I understand his staying.

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Angela Wright 24 October 2005

such a beautiful, dreamy feel. bravo.

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David Lewis Paget

David Lewis Paget

Nottingham, England/live in Australia
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