Scout’s Song
In Eastern skies, the sun does rise
above a crystal sea.
Cerulean blues or stormy hues,
It matters not to me.
For I shall fly, I'll fly away
between the sky and sea.
And I shall fly; I'll fly away;
Forever I'll be free.
The sun midday, blazes away
on sand and rocky shore.
Over greens and browns and coastal towns,
Above them all I soar.
For I shall fly, I'll fly away
O’er the land and sea.
And I shall fly; I'll fly away;
Wherever I'll be free.
In evening skies, the mountains rise,
crowned in gold and red.
In shadows gray deep forests lay
with winds I've learned to dread.
But I shall fly, I'll fly away
above each peak and tree.
And I shall fly; I'll fly away;
Hoping I'll be free.
In darkest night, with stars alight,
no earth below to see,
Surrounded by each glimmering sigh,
the stars sing songs to me.
O I shall fly; I'll fly away,
In stars’ melodic sea;
And I shall fly; I'll fly away.
Will ever I be free?
In soul's dark plight, no guiding light,
to fly away with me.
With no one there, no one to share,
a bird alone's not free.
O I shall fly; I'll fly away,
to love one who loves me.
Then I’ll not fly; not fly away,
For then shall I be free.
Note:
This was completed response to a challenge of writing a poem from the view point of an animal. I wrote
the first pass of this poem about a decade ago from the view point of a
character in a fantasy story: a young woman who could turn into an eagle.
In the original, the first chorus repeated without variation. Because of
the text, I dug it out, modified the chorus and added a new final verse.
Copyright © 2016 by Robert W. Dills