Seagull Poem by ANDREW BLAKEMORE

Seagull

Rating: 5.0


The seagull does fly over suburban rooftops,
So far inland and is lost to the sea,
Soaring and shearing and gliding and turning,
And high up above it moves so gracefully,
Through the air it does travel fast
I listen to its call,
And carried on the summer wind
The echoes of its cry.

The sunlight does shine on its silver white wingtips,
As it does move through the great blue unknown,
Searching for food and for scraps it can live on,
Exploring the landscape it heads all alone,
And it views all the scenery
So unfamiliar from,
The coast where it was born and raised
From which it now does fly.

High over the fields and the green hills beyond them,
Factories and chimneys the seagull does roam,
Over the towers and noise of the city,
So lonely it travels and so far from home,
To seek a good resting place
And some companionship,
As evening falls its sillhouette
Against the amber sky.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Ernestine Northover 19 March 2008

I can hear its raucous cry when reading this one Andrew. Well captured. Times change, one never saw a seagull inland when I was a child. love and hugs Ernestine XXX

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Duncan Wyllie 18 March 2008

High over the fields and the green hills beyond them, Factories and chimneys the seagull does roam, Such a timeless piece Andrew, you have such a fine art Love duncan X

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Bonnie Collins 16 February 2008

Andrew, I trully enjoyed this as I am an animal lover and just today I saw a small flock of gulls feasting in my back yard at the scraps I through out for the birds, and all though they are aggresive, I somehow felt so sorry, as they have no land by sea to call thier own anymore, a few miles east is the River however your poem hit my feelings today on the head! ! ! Very good... Bonnie Collins

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