Goldmoon’s Song

Enjoy this reading of the poem Goldmoon’s Song by Michael Williams. This poem first appeared in Leaves from the Inn of the Last Home, released in 1987. Buy Leaves from the Inn of the Last Home: https://amzn.to/39TClwb

Goldmoon’s Song

The grasslands are endless,
And summer sings on,
And Goldmoon the princess
Loves a poor man’s son.

Her father the chieftain
Makes long roads between them:
The grasslands are endless, and summer sings on.

The grasslands are waving,
The sky’s rim is gray,
The chieftain sends Riverwind
Ease and away,

To search for strong magic
At the lip of the morning,
The grasslands are waving, the sky’s rim is gray.

O Riverwind, where have you gone?
O Riverwind, autumn comes on.
I sit by the river
And look to the sunrise,
Bue the sun rises over the mountains alone.

The grasslands are fading,
The summer wind dies,
He comes back, the darkness
Of stones in his eyes.

He carries a blue staff
As bright as a glacier:
The grasslands are fading, the summer wind dies.

The grasslands are fragile,
As yellow as flame,
The chieftain makes mockery
Of Riverwind’s claim.

He orders the people
To stone the young warrior:
The grasslands are fragile, as yellow as flame.

The grassland has faded,
And autumn is here.
The girl joins her lover,
The stones whistle near,

The staff flares in blue light
And both of them vanish:
The grasslands are faded, and autumn is here.

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