THE RAVEN REVIEW
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Support Us
  • Submit
  • Current Issue
  • Archive
    • Volume I >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume II >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume III >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume IV >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume V >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume VI >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
  • Home
  • About
    • About Us
    • Contributors
    • Support Us
  • Submit
  • Current Issue
  • Archive
    • Volume I >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume II >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume III >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume IV >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume V >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV
    • Volume VI >
      • Issue I
      • Issue II
      • Issue III
      • Issue IV

Graveyards for the Living

by Nicholas Payne
But I think graveyards are for the living
Much more than for the dead
It’s a place for us to go and say
The things we left unsaid
 
One might seek forgiveness
Another might just go to grieve
Often times, both wonder
Why their loved one had to leave
 
So, I think graveyards are for the living
Much more than for those who’ve gone
It’s a place for us to go and try
To find some way to move on.


Nicholas Payne is a math teacher from Enid, Oklahoma. Though new to poetry, he is an accomplished folk singer/songwriter, having released two albums of music thus far, most recently the concept album, Winter In Morristown.