Winter Poem by Chris Zachariou

Winter



Camelot, cloaked in mists,
shimmers on the distant hilltops.
I see my footprints, faint and cracked
at its bolted gates.

She dresses quietly, our eyes
never meet and Guinevere leaves
even before the door has closed.

In silence, I sit late into the night
listening for her footsteps, but I know
the trains have stopped running.

In a panic, I run into my world
between the pencil and the page.
I write all my memories,
some true, most imagined—
imagined memories are better
than no memories of her at all.

Snow is falling on the roof.
May's poems shiver on the page,
the garden spiders died in September
and the nights are drawing in.

Winter has arrived.

Winter
POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
'Winter' explores themes of loss, memory, and the passage of time through a narrative imbued with a subtle sense of melancholy. The poem opens with a vision of Camelot, cloaked in mists and shimmering on distant hilltops, invoking a sense of mythical beauty that contrasts with the stark reality of the speaker's present.
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