A tiny bowl slipped out of my hands this evening
as I stopped to gaze at a bird in flight,
light streaming from her wings, the curve
unimaginable to me, heavy on the floor of the world.
It was a dessert bowl, crystal, part of a set.
They are always part of a set, these cups
and saucers that fall and smash around my feet.
A pool of diamonds glinting in concrete cracks,
so beautiful, so dangerous. My heart missed
not a beat, as though inured now
to my unintentional, careless ways.
Sweep after sweep is not enough;
my faithful eyes find more shards, jewel bright,
shining still, for my faithless eyes.
A few days ago I heard the news that my friend and MA tutor, the Cambridge poet and novelist Caron Freeborn, had left this world, suddenly, and almost without notice. I didn’t know she had been recently diagnosed with cancer; I only knew I had been thinking of her and missing her. I wrote to her, but only silence came. When I heard the news, the silence was even more numbing. In the wake of a poet leaving, the air sounds a little different.
Into the companion of my shattered glass bowl, I floated something green, and every day she grows, reminding me of something... something I forget when the light is bleak.
(a poem shared with Dverse Poets, on Open Link Night)