Because I dream, I’m told my punishment is that I should always be the first to see dawn arrive at the edge of the world. But ever one to question the edict handed down, I demand proof: why punishment? Today it arrives in darkness, like a soft grey scarf of pulled fiber. So fleecy it seems the animal still breathes softly in its tent of skin. Rain ripples along its sequined flanks. There’s enough light soon to see how it noses into the day— and even when light floods the porch, fills the hollows like tea poured into cups, quilts the wooden planks beneath the window— I’ll always have the echo of its first muted sound in my ear. Tendril wound through my hair; small whisk of breath: I love your ambiguous arrivals. Reminder of what might leap into flame, thicken into honey, should I rub my two hands, stone and flint, together.
In response to an entry from the Morning Porch.
I love this one. And hey, congratulations on the completion of another seasonal series!
Hi Dave! Thanks – should today’s poem then be the first of the Winter series 2011?
Nah, we’ll start it tomorrow. The solstice occurs at 12:30 am on Dec. 22 in our time zone (5:30 am UTC).
“Like A Tendril” is my response to Luisa’s “Morning Song” and is posted in http://ambitsgambit.blogspot.com/2011/12/like-tendril.html
“Like a Tendril” is also posted in http://albertbcasuga.blogspot.com/2011/12/like-tendril.html and in the Facebook.