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Riders of the Moon-Tide

To the Wild Hunt

By Rebecca A Hyde GonzalesPublished 4 months ago 1 min read
Riders of the Moon-Tide
Photo by Pramod Tiwari on Unsplash

Moon,

your horns call them forth—

riders of storm and shadow,

their hounds baying across the marrow of the hills.

The earth shivers when their hooves strike the sky.

I lay myself low among roots and stones,

but still I see them:

helmets glinting like cold stars,

eyes like coals,

a thousand strong,

thunder bound to fire.

Moon, tell me—

if they take me,

will I vanish into their number?

Or return as echo only,

a horn in the hollow trees,

a hoofprint pressed in moss?

Still, I watch.

Still, I listen.

For even fear longs to join the procession

that runs forever beneath your light.

Elegynature poetry

About the Creator

Rebecca A Hyde Gonzales

I love to write. I have a deep love for words and language; a budding philologist (a late bloomer according to my father). I have been fascinated with the construction of sentences and how meaning is derived from the order of words.

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