Mortime Mortimer – Reflections on a production of Failure, a Love Story
Mortimer Mortimer
You came to the clock shop seeking love
and wanting to offer the gift to time
An engraved pocketwatch was to be
the engagement gift for your intended bride
You wanted to bring happiness and love – and you did
You wanted to give – and recieve – and you did
but before the wedding, your beloved one dies
and time was cut short
Oh death, if we could see you as a loving companion
offering love and companionship
perhaps we would look upon you differently
For love doesn’t end when our mortal bodies die
Love lives on
The wise Grandfather clock advises,
“Just becasue someting ends
doesn’t mean it wasn’t a success.”
Pictures in frames reveal the smiling faces
of those who are no longer physically present
Oh! How you were loved when your
presence was tangible and comforting
Now you are gone
But not forgotten
Your faces still bring joy as well as tears
How nostalgic it is to recall moments
when time seemed to stand still
and a smile or wordless hug
made everything right
Memories remain, and our minds are
filled with memorible moments that were
like grains of sand
fleeting
as
they passed
through the hourglass of life
Memories are now the priceless
remiders of the gifts of
love and time
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Clocks
Time
Memory
Love …
This worked for me, and then there was the ending becoming a shape poem of sorts, the sands of time …
Kevin