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If Joy is an Echo
I’m sure I was happy once,
 And  a child too,
 But if I was,
 There is not much more to remind me so.
 If memories are treasure,
 I packed them in a box,
 Long ago, and promised to open them,
 I must have forgotten where they are.
 There are still a few lying around,
 So I remember rays of sunshine on playgrounds,
 The cool drink of water under a fall tree,
 Listening to music all day while it rained.
 Happy was as everyday a word as any,
 But I hadn’t noticed it leaving me slowly
 Until now, as if I had scraped it off
 Until I forgot what it looked like in the first place.
 Once everything was magical to me,
 I saw it in the eyes of other kids
 Like me, shining upon my shining
 Eyes upon theirs, two endless mirrors of wonder we all loved.
 Silver claret bells were our bells of laughter then,
 Though we knew nothing of the sort,
 Just as we would forget by end of day, where we had been,
 Whether in the trees, underwater, in a fort.
 If only I call back to myself this time, now.
 I would call up a boy as alien and far
 As a creature of the lake, foggy and distant, offshore.
 We could stare at each other across the glass, and nothing.
 His cries of surprise would match my own,
 Filled with wonder and confusion true,
 Ever as the reverberations showed our voices
 No longer the same, as estranged the same can be.
 His song is a high-pitched call
 The mysterious quiet siren only present 
 In the ethereal such that the old no longer 
 Recognize as reality, but confine to such as we.
 Tones of joy bring back the quiet shadows
 Of trees so green, sitting quietly in their
 Forests and fields, watching maternally over
 You, young master and young ward.
 Bring back the stormy days of fearless
 Elves, of never-seen druids playing to you from
 The wild, where certain creatures go,
 A fearless day, raining on you and perilous joy.
 Exuberant is his song, of such that raises
 Bristles and hair, calls to the joy of friends 
 While scattering made-up foes back to their
 Holes, windowless in the dark evil deep. 
 He finished his past-time song,
 And I was glad, recalling the pride and joy
 It is to be a young, unbridled flame,
 How there was nothing better in the world than to be a boy.
 He peered at me then, tilted his head to wait
 For the second part of song, but there was nothing
 To sing, nothing to be proud of.
 I had grown, but done nothing great.
 My song is tame, my physique now worn,
 Pride is gone, courage has fallen quiet.
 I wept at this, at promises left, at oaths once sworn,
 My youth had been clever and lively; I left it nothing.
 I waited in a stupor, stupefied and stupid,
 Adjacent a pond, a drop of water, with only
 Fear. I’m not sure what was on my face,
 But it mattered not: my silence sufficed.
 He left me by that lake staring into the gray.
 I’m sure he was disappointed if not confused;
 Where was his beloved future, now king of kings?
 I left that lake for a while yet.
 I did not leave it blank, for now feeling had returned,
 I did not leave it cold, for now there was anger undeterred,
 I left that lake nonetheless.
 I spent that day climbing a mountain,
 Pondering the beautiful mystery of childhood,
 And how captive it holds us all.
 A willing stone I’d been, and even now, more willing so.
 A powerful sweat I worked myself into that day,
 Passing grass among grass after each and every
 Mighty stone: Pain shook my strength, but
 Only of the body, and angered my mind yet.
 Perhaps the sun as I reached the top was
 Too reminiscent, perhaps the elegant and familiar wind’s whisper
 Brought me back, perhaps I knew that losing my past
 Was my greatest mistake. I stared there awhile,
 Sun, wind, and the lake below, and I vowed
 To return and sing back one day, after I had
 Done something to make him proud, to live and enjoy 
 Without restraint, this time one I would not break.
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