The Wait

 




                                                                                             

The Wait

 

Sprinkles of time pushing through

To meet in a day, month or year

Everything comes to a pause

And breaks the promise that was so near

Colors of spring kindle the sun

Petals of flower cover the grass

And the man is still waiting

Fearing for the moments to pass

 

Days elope with water in between

Brushing the ocean’s shore

No one to see and no one to feel

As if we were in a war

The wind caresses her face

On Sunday when she goes to mass

And the man is still waiting

Fearing for the moments to pass

 

People engrave their marks

In praise of her beauty and things

Not worrying about revelations

As if in the company of kings

Daring bums approach her with grace

The troubadour polishes his trumpet’s brass

And the man is still waiting

Fearing for the moments to pass

 

Nights fall to the ground

The days quickly arise

Empty streets, cathedrals and bars

And a walk in the park in disguise

An eerie breeze looms over

With heavy, steady feeling, alas,

And the man is still waiting

Fearing for the moments to pass

 

The book says they will meet

Wishfully before a year

Whether here, there, or anywhere

Be it in a very far place or near

The story will be revealed and told

In a golden cloth of world class

And the man is still waiting

                                                    Fearing for the moments to pass

 

 

Ramzi Albert Rihani

  

Born to a literary family among poets, writers, novelists, and critics, Ramzi Albert Rihani has been writing and publishing poetry since 1995. His poems have appeared in several publications including Goats Milk Magazine, Poetic Sun, Last Leaves Magazine, and The Silent Journey Anthology. He is a published music critic, wrote and published a travel book "The Other Color - a Trip Around the World in Six Months" and has been living in the Washington, DC area most of his life.

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