Sonnet 659

I bid her lay with me, but she said no;
‘Not ‘til the creed of holy love be proved
For with no man here ever would I go,
Save in a covenant of honor true…
For goodness given lightly bears scarce worth,
As when it has been squandered times before—
There men of virtue ever bear the hurt
That chastity was given cheap afore.’
You are wise I said, wise beyond your years
And serve a standard that most hearts belie,
Fair knowing that base lust courts bitter tears
To stay a trouble, ever souls shall try.
No greater grace in love than probity;
—Of heart and soul, no higher dignity.

© Loubert S Suddaby.  All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 658

My peerless pen shall here account our time
In hallowed ink distilled from heaven’s rain—
A tale of kindred spirits fate entwined…
In proud embrace, no power e’er to twain.
What mystic might yet melds two hearts as one
That they pledge fealty ‘til life beyond,
Eternal surety to match the sun
Vowed still to thrive when mortal breath is gone?
Yes, once upon a love there beat two hearts
By rhythm set to stay lock step in kind
To share in hope all life’s sweet loving parts
And chart a course pure rhapsody enshrined.
I swear these words by every sense stand true
As in this paean—ever me and you.

© Loubert S Suddaby.  All Rights Reserved.

Ectodermal Plight

The brain from ectodermal tissue rose,
As hair, the skin and eyes their forms disclose,
And from these embryonic roots, in fact,
Spring whims to which all human fancies act.
 
Who taught the robin how to weave her nest
Or showed the tern which route of flight is best?
Who bid the bat hang silent, upside down
Or taught the babe to suckle at the mound?
 
The ant with head of most minute design
Still with his brethren builds a vast combine;
Yet let his color alter overnight,
And all his kin will turn on him to fight.
 
Here science speaks: the genome holds the key
Its codes explaining instinct’s mystery.
If these remain immutable and true,
The human race is wedded here to rue.
                             _____
 
Belief in God may yet afford us hope
But bound in genes, through darkness we still grope;
In liberal dreams the lamb lies down in peace,
While close beside the lion grants no cease.
 
Through rainbow glass, the hopeful eyes see ruth,
But fail to recognize the darker truth.
Still hoping nature’s compromise is nigh,
They hear the lamb, but only in good-bye.
 
Yet man is surely not a beast alone—
Here too, by reason, higher gifts are shown.
And still, of all the species life began,
None slew his brethren more than mortal man.
 
A leopard cannot change his dappled skin,
And men but rarely change their hearts within;
A distant gait, a shadowed form, a face,
Proclaims the tribe, the kin, the blood, the place.
                          _____
 
In prison yards allegiance oft we find
Declared as quickly as a smile in kind;
Reduced unto the lowest human rung,
Where fealty in blood is harshly sung.
 
Where difference rises, gods are split apart
All tribes to worship in their chosen art;
To rationalize some ancient, endless game,
That finds in others yet another blame.
 
“They’re not like us!” the ancient cry attends
And with harsh words, we hasten to our ends.
As ants in red and black wage endless war,
So too do men embrace this tragic lore.
 
No history that glows in kind or good,
But more a tale inscribed in tears and blood.
Though lesser acts may hate awhile restrained,
The lamb and lion fall to fate again.
                            _____
 
We cannot halt a falling star in flight,
Nor hope to change the human heart by might.
Though taught to turn and show the other cheek,
How truly blest the long enduring meek?
 
The only peace, though oft debated, known—
Is peace through strength, all history has shown.
As birds of feather join in flocks of kind
Complexion’d thoughts will ever rule the mind.
 
Though many still embrace the dream of will
From  nurtured neurons, all our thoughts distill,
The sooner men embrace this bitter truth
The sooner they may spare themselves self-ruth.
 
Natural selection grants no choice;
In competition, love has little voice—
The fossil record, etched in silent strife,
Bears witness to the endless war of life.
 
Though caustic thoughts may damn all hope in rue,
All DNA is acid, burning true.
 
© Loubert S Suddaby.  All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 657

I burned my hand that day I touched the sun
But soothed it later cradling the moon,
Soft silver clouds became a healing balm
While starlit acupuncture numbed the wound.
A gentle zephyr kissed away the pain
As cool grasses played moist poultice there;
Elf owls hooted out a plaintive strain
That dryads come to render mending care.
Sweet denizens a shadowed vigil kept
As fireflies dispelled the waxing gloom,
Cicadas sang that I not feel bereft…
And in that grotto green, I felt at home.
The cosmos smiled and my heart swelled in mirth;
A child at peace in one grand universe.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 656

A sprightly chook by every standard known
She ruled the roost, all eyes upon her there;
Bright boa feathers round about her thrown
Made every cockerel stop, stand and stare.
Yes strut she did upon that gilded stage
As scratch fell all about in lusty praise;
She scoffed it up, sure nimbleness displayed
Each gesture stilled the crowd in wild amaze.
She danced her bird dance nearly every night
‘Midst clucking jeers and thunder winged applause
And flapped false pinions that near gave her flight,
Still craftily arranged to hide her flaws.
Her sultry body so did bide in fame;
For never rose a cock she couldn’t tame.

© Loubert S Suddaby.  All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 655

What might I say that would return us now,
Back to those happy sun filled days of yore
When we, love-spun, embraced and lived as one—
Not jagged shattered fragments on the floor?
Glass hearts glued back with tears and honey words
Still flaunt as crazing cracks—the worst of time,
With all the weakness of spit-jointed shards
Where only tender eyes discern the crime.
You cannot stick shorn petals on a flower,
Return the yolk unto a broken egg,
Restrain the sun a second or an hour
Or alter yet the course that fate has laid.
These stabbing splinters smite my heart today
With all love’s poignant spears of yesterday…

© Loubert S Suddaby.  All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 654

What see you in this ragged ravaged frame
That bore the spleen life’s gauntlet set to prove
And by long love, you share my deepest stains
That God set forth here not to be removed?
What faith keeps you steadfastly by my side—
No pride of man could wield such loyal power,
For by your beauty could you else abide
Not squander here the waning of youth’s hours?
Perhaps unto yourself you are untrue
Or yet strange potion plied puts you part blind,
Or some spell cast bade lowly servitude
That you stay helot to my dwindling time.
By love’s great grace I here now set you free,
That you yet thrive beyond this curse and me.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 653

Love is sweet comfort that is ever lived
In quiet joy where true hearts joined abide,
With endless peccadilloes to forgive
And errant spats that test firm faith’s reply.
It is a lesson in decorum quite
Where every thought is yet by kindness weighed
So every drop of anger’s venomed blight
Be held in check, there ever to be stayed.
Love is fond caring borne on winds divine,
Arrayed in rainbows, by benediction blessed
That though harsh discord test of peace sublime,
By soft embrace, most conflict there redressed.
Love is the power to see through others eyes;
One heart, one soul, to face all fate contrives.

© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 652

Soft showers came to wash the lifeless land,
Aspersion right to rid all evil there;
Marasmic trees on grey horizons stand
With crooked hands clasped up in solemn prayer.
The somber night implores the whippoorwill
To bless or curse by first heard calls of spring
And guide departing souls beyond the hill
That they may hear celestial joy bells ring.
So then as Eleazar raised from dead
Sweet colors lift their heads from earthen brown
To rise above the last of winter’s dregs
That late ensconced them in an icy tomb.
Now feathered angels hail at dawn to choir
The rising Sungod decked in bold attire.

© Loubert S Suddaby.  All Rights Reserved.

Sonnet 651

What does it matter that we lived or died
Save that we left the world a better place?
The joyous smiles or sorrowed tears we cried,
Most serve life’s purpose blessed by Heaven’s grace.
To live dear life bestowed for self alone
Is yet perhaps the heavier cross to bear
For still on earth, it’s seldom we bemoan
The great or simple pleasures that we share.
By measure, only soulless creatures bide
In singularity— all acts for one;
So by analogy the selfish pride
In egocentric deeds benevolence shuns.
May grace and mercy guide our earthly ways,
That love and kindness pure, all evil raze.
 
© Loubert S Suddaby. All Rights Reserved.