By Madeleine Roberts
When we are lost in the woods the sight of a signpost is a great matter. –C.S. Lewis
He called it joy—
An almost-forgotten state of the spirit
Wearied by the humdrum
And rubbish held in common with the world
Dreaming in a shade of morning
That is not for the poet to collect. Sometimes
I stumble into strings of words crafted
where only a part remembers, the true language of myself
Before I assumed the weight of passing seasons. At this
The spirit cracks a slit through the deepening fears
Of autumnal days. Ah, she sighs, you see? And I recall
Visions of places I have never seen in raindrops clinging to window glass,
A doubly crystalline display of transience
And otherworldly beauty.
Then comes a dull aching of the chest,
As if pricked with a sudden remembrance of
The rightness of a melodious golden niche
Eager to assume the unbelonging.
In this I sense more than my share of life, the invisible axis of
Shortening days, a wordless groaning. Candlelight in the night sky—
when I fervently pray for illumination in the watches of a red evening,
This is a way of response. For within the somber stillness before
That sweet grief dissolves into everyday fabricated pleasures,
each soul lights a candle
in memory of home.
1 Comment
James · February 17, 2023 at 7:16 PM
Beautiful!