www.whyville.net Aug 2, 2009 Weekly Issue



Morganna
Whyville Poet

I'm Sorry

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FRONT PAGE
CREATIVE WRITING
SCIENCE
HOT TOPICS
POLITICS
HEALTH
PANDEMIC
It was noontime,
and you were outside,
roaming the garden view
like you always do.
But you were gone longer,
blind peregrinator.
A test to my mettle
as unease settled
in, and then came the fear
of what we had all sheered
to one day happen.
You, so small, had stumbled in,
a fell twist of fate,
and I was too late.
No one knew
until I found you,
soaked and struggling,
choked and clinging
to the slab and frond
cornered in the fish pond.
I jumped in after you;
it was all I could do.
Apace, I pulled you out.
Our bodies wept on the grout
an ocean of freshwater,
as you began breathing harder.
Kept you calm in sun's heat,
and mislead by a hopeful beat,
I had to leave,
believed you had retrieved.
But I had been too late.
I'm sorry I was too late.
Because when I returned,
your expression gurned,
and you lay limp on the floor,
lungs flooded and blue, your
stale heart straining,
and a life slowly waning
before my very eyes.
A cruel fate surmised.
Sped down the road,
your crippled body in tow.
Your eyes swelling ajar,
I assured you, "We're not far."
I swore at the traffic.
I'm sorry for the traffic,
I'm sorry I was too late,
and I'm sorry this was your fate.
When the silence took you,
without a sound, I knew.
Fifteen years you've been
in my life, and then
to just go out like a light.
Hair matted, soaked, and white.
Death you could not cheat
'cause my tries failed feat,
but you deserved better,
and these thoughts will fetter
me for some time;
a heart numb from rime,
because I was too late.
I'm sorry my words cannot sate
all that betides.
If only I could turn the tides.
And I'm sorry for this sake.
I'm sorry for my mistake.
I'm sorry.
I'm so sorry.

 

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