Sunday 9 September 2018

Dead Men Tell No Tales


DEAD MEN TELL NO TALES

There, I sat, pruning weeds off his grave.
A great story teller he was,
Recounting his youthful deeds with great vigor;
He had not a match in sight.
Just as I would sit beside him listening in awe
With the raffia handfan working silently not to interrupt,
Today, I sat by his grave, quiet, 
Remembering his tales
Of long ago moments told with elderly insight,
About great sunny deeds told now with a longing sigh; 
O how the old envy the youth!
The Man is no more now, 
But his stories hold on,
Each passing day births a new detail,
Thinking I have heard it all,
I learn anew; in the Half Sun War, he was a soldier.
Why was this sealed in his lips I wonder?
"Why tell sordid tales of war
When there are sunny stories to go around?"
I hear him answer. 
But would he have thought differently 
If he had remembered that 
Dead men tell no tales?


Dona Curtis King
The Man who Lived
The Soldier Who Was
(1947-2010).