Tuesday, August 5, 2014

A Thievery Comes to Naught But An End of Two

Inspired by A Smuggler’s Song written by Rudyard Kipling located in A Children’s Book of Verse, Illustrated by Eric Kincaid, Poems selected by Marjorie Rogers. (Brimax Books)

Unbeknown an end comes true for each carry a toil of years

Cresting through life as waves hit the invisible shore it lurks far near inside it churns

A thief is a thief as a night is to sin but a naught is to end a beginning to fret

Fact of false it reflects that incidence is another attribute to study meticulous or not it ponders full the thought of analysis

Assistance assistance to stall but inkeep the naught and locate value eligible of a end of two suns of moon

Criminal crimes are protected maybe a block or a shield to disguise the intervals of true intent of self-disguised

Distractions practice the purpose of stall halt postpone regulate a mock of amusement for upper is the hand of deceit treachery known and acknowledge of futile

Borderline riches of sadness prevail the keep of protection of a change as priority comes to challenge all to protect the young

Narrow perceptions are what when challenged for a thievery is not to obtain for protection will aid us all future bright

Age of none reveals the all of another keep down the seed of great country until slaved all original of cast the stone who used to make it built great

End of two naught here for established pride will reveal eternity of a fight revealed by one who sees a ridicule of all we
Proven over over will they all that contenders we are for a thievery is not an end but a stimulus of mental

By

Felicia McCaw

No comments:

Post a Comment