Collection of equine themed poems

Story by Amethyst Mare on SoFurry

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#1 of Poetry

Some were interested in seeing my poetry so...here is a small collection that I used in my writing portfolio for my final university year (first semester). Equine themed and I submitted three together as there is no "poetry" section on SoFurry...yet! (please, admins? <3 ).

Poems (c) amethystmare


The Red Mare

They say we lead to borrow freedom,

Freedom to let us be.

Perhaps, my dear, you'd be so kind

As to share your freedom with me?

Forget distress, to hell with the rest,

Curling onward - you think the shadows care?

Honey, what danger? They do no more than stare

At you and I, our passing by.

Clip-clop, clip-soft hooves to pine spines,

Sharp and stale from time's fall.

We shall take heed of flight, dare not stall,

Hooves flicked airborne, lost moment.

Two are one but one is two

And must farewell on life's way.

I do so wish that I could stay

In the shadow of your musty sweetness.

When twilight groans, do you watch

For a figure, rearing from dark?

Scrambling up bareback, that forbidden lark,

Now the gate is latched and you graze alone.

Dance with me

A stable houses many heads,

Well groomed manes and tails.

Some are schooled, quick to prance,

One or two prick ears at a jump

And others were bred to dance.

The grey mare is not for the harness -

She snorts and trots on a dime.

Delicate to defy human gravity,

Her hooves light as feathers

Lost measure of severity.

Collect your canter,

Now twenty metre circle.

She pivots over sand,

Ears flicked to and fro

Over sweated brow band.

They call it a half-pass,

But she knows only

Movement: precise, calm.

Hoof after hoof, stretch to the left,

Reins tucked firm in rider's palm.

Piaffe, passage,

A flawless dance,

Hoof raised, hoof placed:

Her dancer's idealism

In keeping pace.

The Empty Stall

A tribute to 'Twiggy'

She licked salt blocks,

Gentled children on lead rein.

Thirteen hands to the wither,

They could barely stretch to reach her nose

Or reach to feed her grain.

She steamed in winter,

Children scrambled to groom

The hard-working school pony,

Who was quiet in the little hands,

Though her pale side did loom.

Lowering her pink nose

Into dark buckets, she drank,

Taking her fill and snorting droplets,

To the delight of those standing alert:

They never thought to thank.

One day, she did not come to call,

We wondered where she hid.

Upon searching Bryndias up and down,

We stumbled upon a sight:

A broken body below the hole.

No peaceful death with her dam

Standing sentry, as at a birth.

She went in a painful, sudden fashion

Somewhere unpredictable

That we fail to impassion.

Day dawns, cock crows,

Yearling nickers.

Her stall is empty now.