The Apple Orchard Poem by John F. McCullagh

The Apple Orchard

Rating: 5.0


When I was first brought here,
There was some doubt that I'd survive.
Confined by Fate to this wheelchair;
barely half alive.

The accident that shattered me
had also brought a darkening mood.
Some kind soul had suggested
Nature's embrace would do me good.

So now on every day, that's' clear
I sojourn here among the trees
Whose faithful stolid company
Is medicine to my disease.

I cannot climb or pick the fruit,
I've two dead legs and one good arm.
Instead, I sketch and paint from Life
until the morning light is gone.

We understand each other now.
I almost hear the arbor speak
They gift me with a purpose now
And lend me strength when I am weak.

With pen and paper, paint and ink
I learn a healthier way to live
And though I can no longer run,
I accept I still have much to give.

Thursday, September 26, 2019
Topic(s) of this poem: poets
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
Some ten years after serving in Union hospitals during the Civil War, Walt Whitman was felled by a stroke. He recuperated near a friend's apple orchard and wrote of his experiences in his journal "Specimen Days".
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Chinedu Dike 26 September 2019

Well expressed thoughts and feelings. An insightful piece of poetry nicely embellished with poetic rhyme and rhythm. Thanks for sharing, John.

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