Breed Not Violence Poem by Albert Boima

Breed Not Violence



How worthless is he who paves violence:
Is not he who bewilders the land of peace?
With his thoughts, moulding it to corrupt the people;
In the interest of satisfying himself.

But I tell you: violence spells complete anarchy!
Of that land: will development be prevented,
In the face of unaccountability;
Bad reputations altogether.
It steals the land of peace with and love for one another.

O but if, we in this, can change our forceful acts,
And be submissive to the norms of the land,
Shadowy we in the ink of joy.
I beseech you the people of land—
To watch and set your minds off violence—
For the growth of our region.

Let us march not with the shoe of violence
Rather the shoe of love and equanimity, I pray!
Worthless is he who paves destruction,
And worthy is he who resists it;
Indeed, choose:
Worthy or worthless are you?

POET'S NOTES ABOUT THE POEM
This is an appealing poem, in which the persona pleads to his people (everyone) to be devoid of VIOLENCE. He mentions the adverse effects Violence would cause, and heavily cautions those who create it. The speaker ends his last line in the poem in order to get the minds of everyone —to be peaceful. When anyone reads it, he is subjected to answer the question: whether he purports Violence or not.
COMMENTS OF THE POEM
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