Elizabeth Buttimer


 


Red clay, white painted church, and shape notes


eight children with a war in between


crimson blood on the ground with


a mini-ball piercing flesh and bone.


An arm no good for farming, but a voice


hearty for singing harmony.


in songs that shaped a nation with


robust alleluias and melodies,


as haunting the battle fields which


were filled with husbands,


brothers and sons, with neighbors


friends and strangers who in the night


sang to each other from opposing campfires.


In the blackness, as disembodied voices


floating across the silent, bloody fields.


Songs that they took with them to the war


came home with some, or stayed


as melody in a meadow for


those who sang no more,


For those who found rest in the green fields


that had become a red washed theater


for conflict and fallen comrades.


The” fasola” harmony rang discordant with war.


Songs of the everlasting and the eternal,


while the temporal came in rifle shots


and canon blasts and fires that leveled cities,


ripping arms, limbs and families forever.


Red clay and crimson flood from the


blood of soldiers and the Lamb.


Melancholy music sung as community,


strengthening those who sang in accord


to still the cacophony of battle


and sweeten life with the soil,


mending the view from behind the plow.


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Elizabeth Buttimer, an entrepreneur, a manufacturer and former educator, she received her Ph.D. from Georgia State University and her M.S.C. and B.A. degrees from Auburn University.

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Published on October 01, 2018 17:00
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