Summer
What piece of silence
will finally break us
open—not shards
of golden clouds, not the
dark fading of day’s blue end
but morning’s flush of
orange, a patient prayer,
a womb unspent, sleeping
like clay. In these places
questions of spirit are posed
by heaven’s quickened pulse
to remind us that we have been given
a playground for evergreens with
urgent silver light descending,
passing gulls who know
we don’t belong but who
welcome us nonetheless.
They rise in currents of soft air
to squabble over the laws of grace
and water. They teach us to embrace
the hiss of imperceptible hours, the
vanquished words of longest days,
the rusted colors of autumn
which cover us when we sleep.