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Endless Night – poems by doctors

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

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Abstract

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2013 

These winter nights lie long and cold before you, like an icy road that grants your well worn wheels no hold. And so you spin around and round, tossed to and fro, in frozen sin.

You rev your engine, not to gain some hoped for ground, instead, to drain your heart of salted slushy pain. But it won't bate. For what goes round, comes back in veins and circulates.

Your heart alone can not reduce your load of pain. You need to use some organs that change old for new. Light, warm, fresh air is waiting where you travel to on this black glacier.

An astronaut sent through such space, would, with drugs, dilute to trace the time and mind the travel takes. But drugs won't work. You'd fall asleep, only to wake back at the start.

Others sleep without a sound. You hear their silence all around, sliding over the frictionless ground. Blind to night's stare, deaf to their own baying hounds. Life is not fair.

So curse the Gods that made you be but gave you eyes so you could see, the distance that exists between the man you are and the man they made your eyes to see as mankind's par.

But pull and turn this rage inside to burn the bane of your poor mind. Your ice will melt. Your time will bide. The sun goes down. Another summer sinks behind the long drawn blackout blind.

© Shaun Love

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