How my heart longs for that garden budding symbol of repair where the roots the old man planted still his dreams and wishes bear an extra plot besides his neighbors, paths of brick still shapely laid statue’s blunt remaining foot tell the dream of eyes that fade ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * a garden could be here again I long to clear these paths and roots to find and blend the ancient plantings pruned with added springing shoots I long to tear the broken shed down not crudely with some business might but giving each grain reverence in the slant of golden sunlight on the shelves of his old work shed find the savings of his craft the tools and products age makes curious let knowing hands preserve at last ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * live inside his house of darkness walls and ceilings lined with soot slowly, carefully, clean the rubbish this blind man kept near hand and foot in the image of his darkness change the world from dark to light with the vision I am given return the rooms to pleasing sight ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * Send remains to rest, old man, not without sympathy, thought and care though a stranger to your days, restoring this – a final prayer perhaps the prayer you asked for who without family gave your land choosing Church to redistribute wealth with loving, generous hand and while the outer world fell on you, your savings brought to disrepair, only inner hope as light, beyond earth’s hope, could give life there in your image of aloneness in your darkness of despair when sight of human love had left you you chose a symbol of repair ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * impersonal, an institution, still it serves to bring a share of the good you wished to others their thanks, remote, will thank you fair and through this symbol, built for goodness your life has measure, even least, from thoughts of others, far or dim whose lives your leaving finally blessed So, when church is paid its penny, I with hands would heal these wounds I who wish to plunge my life into this house and its dark rooms ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * Why seek the damaged and outworn and grasp what others would ignore, of men, the sick, enslaved, unborn, and not the wholesome and the sure? Is my universe one of blindness where others live in daily light, am I also reaching outwards against an unseen inner blight, touching in others the damaged part which I would fix in my own heart? And can these efforts placed elsewhere through others, be my own repair? ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * Old man, the desolated world you lived, alone and blind and poor, if my strength I say can conquer not just for you, who passed life’s door, but for some part of me that’s broken and seeks on earth salvation some need that seeks for healing in worldly restoration to bring to life, no, not your image not what you were or wished to be but all the best of all your striving born in my possibility ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ * somehow, from all these hopes you started in my hands this house, my prayer, would be, more than in some others’ hands, for you, a symbol of repair (1980s and 90s) Comments are closed.
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Poems by Janet
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von Gumppenberg | Earth's Creatures |
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