But there is no crash or shatter.
Only a hush, a slow rousing,
the eider ducks’ merest mutterings.
Light seeps into the sky
as though leaking from unfurled
fingers, and here, delivered
on an open palm, the bay against the sky
a margin of incandescence.
One by one, larks vie
for most intricate solo. An onshore wind,
helping things along, articulates
snaking ribbons of tidal current.
I, too, almost inexorably, start
to move into morning tasks, projects
I may not finish before this day’s lingering
is extinguished. But how abrupt
the radio’s news reminds me
that elsewhere on this insistent, revolving planet,
one more war lifts its head, awakened
or having never slept. In some other place,
in its morning’s first scattering light
bereft of bird-song and leaf-toss,
a village is blasted into rubble,
and a soldier, too young to have to know
such despair, dodges crosshairs.
A short while ago, he shrugged off half
a moon. Now he goes down with half a face
as all around him, day breaks.
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