FOXES AND HARES.

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(Here goes nothing: as I've said earlier, I don't really 'do' poetry, but this, like the few others I've posted were written a long time ago, and I'm really just uploading them here to 'test the water,' as it were and to see how this damn site works before I start with any 'proper' posts!)

This particular effort was written when I was lot younger and it was meant to draw an analogy between the apartheid system that was at that time present in South Africa, and the British attitude to blood-sports, particularly fox-hunting and hare-coursing.

FOXES AND HARES

As the sinking sun set slowly at dusk,

Casting long warm shadows that engulfed the dust,

The Hunters would return from the tall-grassed plain,

Tired but happy, their sacks filled with game.

Soon food-flavoured smoke would linger till light

And the African herdsman would sleep well that night.

Life then was so simple - free from worries and cares,

For they were born to be free - like the Foxes and Hares.

The years flickered by and Time brought with it Change;

And Time brought the White-Man - alien and strange.

And the White-Man was 'civilised' and so started a reign

Of torture and killings and anguish and pain.

And families were driven from homes lovingly made

And the Herdsmen were herded to start the slave-trade.

They were used to being free in that Land that was theirs,

But now they were hounded - like the Foxes and Hares.

Where the Herdsman once lived off the fat of the land, 

The White-Man now lives - the Herdsman's been banned:

Bannished to 'Townships' - ramshakle and crude,

Condemned to exist like no White-Man ever could.

Found guilty of living, He's been sentenced to die - 

But though His body is broken , his spirits are high.

The Herdsman's been captured in White-Man's evil snares,

But he's screaming and fighting - just like those Foxes and Hares.

Chased and tormented by White-Man's power lust,

The Foxes and Hares are running - lungs fit to burst.

And the red-coated Huntsman sits astride his sturdy mount

As his blood-crazed hounds rip their victim's heart out.

And the terror-filled screams carry back here to UK;

"We'll do something (tomorrow)" is what the politicians say.

And the public is outraged, but does anyone really care

About what's happening to those poor Foxes and Hares?

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(Just proves that my 'poetry' is anything but 'timeless!)    ;)

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