Deep within a meadow,
Underneath a willow,
There was a long gravel
path,
And a tall black shadow.
It stood by a curve,
In the winding road,
And nobody dared, none had
the nerve,
To travel down the uncanny
crook.
And so the figure was free
to move,
He travelled to and from
the grooves,
That lay along the winding
road.
Old legends surrounded
this black shadow,
Legends about it haunting
the meadow.
And it was said;
Whoever neared the
silhouette,
Soon ended up upon his
deathbed.
When it was time for the
sun to rise,
The shadow considered it a
reprieve,
Thus it disappeared behind
the willow,
Only to return when the
sun had set,
When the golden orb had
gone back to bed.
The moon shone among the
misty clouds,
Accompanied by the
werewolves howls,
And the bats hung upside
down,
From the branches of the
trees around.
And the shadow strode
lonely, bored,
On the path, led by the
winding road.
This is a very intriguing poem, Azka. I like the way you've created and maintained mystery and suspense throughout the poem. It is quite a literary masterpiece. The vocabulary you've used, coupled with the rhyming words, are so fantastic to read.
ReplyDeleteKeep writing and posting more amazing stuff on your blog! :)
i do not make loooooong poems like this one but here is one of mine
ReplyDeleteevery one wants happiness
but not a bit of pain
but you can't have a rainbow
without a little rain