Very well done JO , so true in many respects , a lot of us could relate to that .
smiddy
by Julia Orwell 27 Replies latest social entertainment
Very well done JO , so true in many respects , a lot of us could relate to that .
smiddy
This prison I was in
Clutched me deep into my soul
Taunted me, controlled me
Haunted me...owned me
But now I am free
Like a flower blossoming
On a warm spring day
The breeze opens my mind.
I see now those prison gates
They were all in my head
I trusted, I believed
But now I know I was misled
It's so hard to let go
When you think your losing life
When you think it's Satan's world out there
When shunning is your price...
But oh the wonders of this world
Precious moments have been lost
But here now, I am free!
I no longer see the devil
Lurking with those "worldly" friends
To judge others, to fear I no longer feel
I love all and care instead
My heart has been opened.
Beating strong, I am free!
Okay, that's all I got right now. Draft one - I Am Free
It's 2am, I apologize for any 2am-isms.
2 A.M or not, that is a wonderful, beautiful piece of Poetry Hey There, thanks, it expresses how I feel each day, so glad to be FREE !
Yours is equally as good Julia, perhaps if yours first, then Hey There's were printed out and given to a JW to read they may have some effect ?
Hey There, yes that is well done. It's very raw, like a fountain of emotion straight from your heart.
And MissFit, I've started a fable about a parrot in a cage. You inspired me. It's actually gonna make one hell of a kids' book one day! I will illustrate it myself. It starts like this:
The Little Lorikeet
The little lorikeet never knew what it was like to fly. To find her own tasty seed. To join the other lorikeets as they spread their magnificent emerald wings and bore away on the wind to new exotic locations.
The little lorikeet was hardly what you’d call splendid. Her plumage was neat, but it didn’t shine. Her eyes were clean, but were like dull glass rather than red jewels. She had wings, but her owner regularly clipped them. Even if the owner didn’t, the little lorikeet wouldn’t have been able to fly very far. Her muscles were too underdeveloped from sitting in that cage day in, day out.
So the little lorikeet sat on her perch and stood on one foot and then the other, day in and day out. Her cage was inside a house and the little lorikeet could see all sorts of birdlife through the windows. Magnificent red king parrot calls pealed from the trees like bells, pink and grey galahs grazed on the new grass seed shoots and rainbow lorikeets filled the skies like multi-coloured clouds. All the little lorikeet could do was watch them through the windows.
Every day her owner bought her seed. Sometimes it was fresh, and other times it was reused seed sifted from the bottom of the cage. It was always the same. “This is wonderful seed!” her owner would tell her. “You are lucky to have someone who feeds and cares for you like this! You don’t want to be like those parrots outside who have to find their own food. There’s no good food outside anyway. Those parrots eat garbage!” So although the seed was bland, the little lorikeet was glad to have it.
One day the little lorikeet felt lonely and frustrated. The parrots outside seemed to be having so much fun! They could go where they liked, eat what they liked and make friends with any bird at all. She began calling out to them, though her calls were clumsy and she didn’t really know what to say.
For those of you who may not have ever seen a rainbow lorikeet:
Julia: I love the beginning of your story. I cant wait for more.
Great poems, spot on! And also looking forward to read more on the story of the little lorikeet. Keep 'em coming Julia!
Nice poems Julia and Hey there. Thanks Kate xx
Sad but true.
Julia, are you Sheree Stokell then?