Who will volunteer to search yesterday's years for buried slightest traces
Of a people born to be weather-torn from their prized and precious places?
No more can chore of labor's scorn, scar or mar their worry-ridden faces
That rest in peace from harm, wrapped in gentle arms of God's embracing graces, For a torrent bound to drown a culture found its way through golden ages, To wash lives away with torrid tempests fed by unbound river rages.
Who will volunteer to scout today's fears led by dog-sniffed scented traces
Of a people floating on rapid's rafts carrying death on frozen faces?
While stricken scavengers stumble cart-wheels 'cross musty mud-washed lawns, Filling filthy pockets with trinket treasures of the "somewhere up and gone", Magic moments from a trouble's rubble 'cross the sad-tossed curious minds, Seeking meaningful understanding of God's will, drawn dark between fine lines.
Who will volunteer to nurture a nature, proven cruel and most unkind,
While a people's children sob away laughter, after deluge of mankind?
Where crowds of boots stomped flat-foot romps to rowdy Saturday night jamborees, Half-sipped sarsaparilla soda pops strewn atop mountains of piled debris,Shiny shards of shattered mason jars adorn treetops wind-freed to fly,
Weary roots worn-torn defy the storm to stab the tearless cyclops eye.
Who will volunteer to unbury lingering corpses of unforgotten ghosts,
Once glad people who danced to love song romance in kin begotten hosts?
The weary woke singing on Sabbath mornings, crowding sunlit parish pews,
Through stained glass windows, tear-gaze grieved, bereaved epitaph's graveyard news. Life storms wept by their mourning loved ones, overflowed creek banks swelled with sorrows. "Old Rugged Cross" sang their loss and bore aloft their soaked hopes of tomorrows.
Who will volunteer to rebuild years of modest memories fondly cradle-rocked
As people brought forth worth from the rich furrowed earth a harvest fully stocked? Now the plow unearths remains, bones washed by pounding rains to rot and rest alone
In solemn mud bank graves they spend eternal days far from their comfort's home. Stain dirtied curtains flap full fury as lost hopes hurry-drift downstream.
A handmade "Bless this Home" embroidery, no longer cushions night's safe-sleep dreams.
Who will volunteer to feed starved years of poverty's meek and meager favors,
Met by a people's care to freely share with others, with friends, with neighbors?
A handy Country Store sinks ruined into a rubble on boggy ground,
Penny candy sticks in lumps of icky licorice and soggy sweet horehound,
Clumped gobs on dank planks split-splintered waste on a damp sawdust windswept floor Scraped by shovels, raped by whisk brooms, that gaping workers leaned against the door.
Who will volunteer to bind the beaten heart that bleeds tears of travail's pain,
Healing people battered, walking wounded, that they may rise to thrive again?
Broken clock hands no longer tick moments, tock seconds, or chime happy years, Fiercely flung from a wall, time can no more recall its rusted, crusted gears. Forever will it scream four-fifteen, when deep night fell into a hell-drenched day. Fate's wicked whisper turned mean, spoke the name, "Helene", then churned men's lives away.
P.S. Colley
Nov. 2024
Songs of Appalachia
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