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A Life Well Lived
I look back at my fallen tail feather,
my wings folded in pain and ache.
I’m getting old and my time is almost to a close.
I can practically hear the raven’s call of death.
But death isn’t something I fear,
but rather welcome like a warm embrace.
I do not regret the way I lived.
I found the love of my life, we had chicks,
and we watched them grow into strong adults.
I now get to finally reunite with my love once I pass.
I now lay in a small box,
one that these fleshy creatures have put me in,
now looking down at me. They looked sad with tearful eyes.
I soon close my eyes and fall into my final sleep,
never to wake up.
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This is an ekphrastic poem written about Aleta Ross-Steward’s “Disintegration” (2020)