At twenty after eight the sun is already strong. Walking up
the gravel path, eighteen twenty through eighteen eighty-nine, eighteen
seventy-three through nineteen oh-one, the shadows are still long enough and
forgiving. Junipers stand straight, whose roots do not up-end the stones. The
light old flat ones are cool, the new dark shiny ones are already taking on the
day’s heat. Summer comes, too, to the cemetery.
(Q:
Can I forgive these narrow thoughts?
A:
Does the world forgive the sunset?)
The crow scolds. I want to be him, inky feathers folded,
head cocked, at home on a tombstone. Here in the heat autumn auditions, at once
I see the corner oak turning copper, the maples scarlet and blowing. Without
invitation snow settles and the sun arcs low. Something in me stays, with the
crow, while the seasons swiftly ebb. Thank goodness for the prism, the sight
that sees two sides. Small things fall away. And we are (gladly) left like living stones.
1 comment:
I have always had a loving for cemeteries and now I can understand why. My feelings in poetry.
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