Ground Touch

"Ground Touch," by Rethabile Masilo

Ground Touch
Last Wednesday a man threw himself under a train, and they had to peel him off the rails. One can add to tragedy, but nothing can be removed from it— you can't stop a road-map of life, and that's what that man was trying to do. They peeled him off and laid his form on a tarp; covered him with quicklime. After scraping the rest off with trowels and other implements, they dropped him on top of his own heap, folded the tarp into a body bag they dragged away. Always wanting more has a cost. But I guess love is the hardest to want more of, for it is already at its ultimate; even if there exists today no limit to keep it at bay, it is what there is, a dove that flies ever so high and can never keep itself fully off the ground but must descend, perch, and want to be with earth again.
Poet: Rethabile Masilo
Source: Qoaling
Books: @Abebooks

Love is the hardest to want more of, for it is already at its ultimate

Comments

Anonymous said…
At its ultimate indeed. Wondrous poem.