a time for
everything
seasons for
every purpose
love and hate
stones to gather
history gets
muddled, its
pleasures, its
pains die in time
~kat
A Blackout/Found Poem. See the source poem below:
A Man In His Life
by Yehuda Amichai
A man doesn’t have time in his life
to have time for everything.
He doesn’t have seasons enough to have
a season for every purpose. Ecclesiastes
Was wrong about that.
A man needs to love and to hate at the same moment,
to laugh and cry with the same eyes,
with the same hands to throw stones and to gather them,
to make love in war and war in love.
And to hate and forgive and remember and forget,
to arrange and confuse, to eat and to digest
what history
takes years and years to do.
A man doesn’t have time.
When he loses he seeks, when he finds
he forgets, when he forgets he loves, when he loves
he begins to forget.
And his soul is seasoned, his soul
is very professional.
Only his body remains forever
an amateur. It tries and it misses,
gets muddled, doesn’t learn a thing,
drunk and blind in its pleasures
and its pains.
He will die as figs die in autumn,
Shriveled and full of himself and sweet,
the leaves growing dry on the ground,
the bare branches pointing to the place
where there’s time for everything.
April 8th, 2019 at 12:07 am
How beautifully you have written this.
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April 8th, 2019 at 6:16 am
Thank you Sadje.
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April 8th, 2019 at 8:19 am
A pleasure
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April 8th, 2019 at 5:46 am
Nicely penned, Kat–interesting, because earlier I was thinking of the verses in Ecclesiastes…
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April 8th, 2019 at 6:15 am
Yep. That was where the poet got it from.
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April 8th, 2019 at 6:32 am
Timing is everything.
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April 8th, 2019 at 11:19 am
I had to sing the song:
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April 8th, 2019 at 1:46 pm
Great song Peter. Take me back…”and a time to every purpose under heaven…” 🙂
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