The Voice of Poetry
There is a great din in this world
Bellowing and clanging, crashing and banging,
It consumes all voices
Too timid to shout above the clamor.
I was one such timid voice -
I feared make a sound
Or stick my head above ground
Lest my words go unnoticed
In the world’s thunderous tumult.
You see, a word can be swallowed
With one gust of wind
It could dip and spin, vanish into thin
Air, as if it had never been.
And the voices around me,
Cyclones of wind,
Joined with the world’s clamor
Until my words turned to birds
That flew away
Never to be heard again.
And so I tip-toed through the shouts
That filled me with doubts
About whether my voice
Was strong enough for this world.
I opened my mouth
But only to let out
A sigh.
I raised my hand
But only to grip
The edge of a ship
That sailed me deeper into silence.
I stood on the brink
Not daring to move or to think
About whether I’d have to smile and nod
Forever
Instead of speaking my mind.
Wondering whether I’d be thought of as odd
Forever
Because of my too-timid voice
In a world that will rejoice
The screamers.
And then, in the silence
Of my own wordlessness
I found a way to speak
Through the din.
I did not shout back
Against the roaring ruckus.
I did not scream against
The ugly uproar.
Instead I took the words
Gathered over years
Of silences.
I took words of hay
And spun them into gold
And behold; they told
My story of silence.
I wrote them upon quiet parchment
And slipped them into
The world’s chaotic stream.
They dipped and flipped
Merging with the noise.
My words were no longer pushed away
They were finally in the world to stay.
So if poetry’s taught me anything
It’s to create my own voice
Amidst the orchestra of chaos
In this world.