
Through the window, quiet rain.
Through the window, a woman’s
hands arced in morning prayer.
If not rain, I would be a Thumbelina
sliding into the silky bell-bottoms
of flowers. If not hands, I would be
the day cupped between,
still secret-sweet.
If a flower, I would proceed brazenly
blossom by ecstatic blossom
down the winding April streets.
If the day, I would warble amazed
through all my encounters.
And if from a dark cave of longing
came the strength to thrust aside logs
of bark mulch, I would say love
itself sprouted green and slender
in the sun-slanted garden.
From across the room, you come
toward me. What would it take
to meet the horizon most feared
and sails flapping, drop anchor
in the storied harbour of your arms?
Through the window, the steam of rain
falling now into light, the backyard
cedars leaning toward us, generous
limbs outstretched, as if to say—
all it takes is yes.
Another older poem, first published in North Shore Magazine in 2008.
This deserved a second and third read through, Lyne, so exquisitely expressed.
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VJ, thank you so much – I appreciate your close reading!
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The pleasure was all mine!
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YES! ❤
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Haha, love that, Francoise – thank you!😘
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I love the image of love sprouted green and slender in the sun-slanted garden. A lot in this poem, Lynne
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Thank you so much, Dan! Love that that image resonated💙
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