your muse has black wings but
your words, breeze-light as rain
falling on heads, pink-pleated & flower-crowned
may your hours be filled with white
crisp pages & pen, smell of lavender & lemon
tea rising from the warm pot, taste of
freshly buttered bread, seranade of
birdsongs from robins, calls of owls,
laughter of children, chicory flowers,
sights of life unfolding
and vibrant river moving, you
are lifted
out of the silence of your space, out of
the skein of your clothes
the limbs of your books
the roots of your apple trees
(sorry, but the mail bag is full)
you are one with the rooks
rolling bowling calling squalling roiling boiling swirling whirling*
black wings glinting & stretching
& flying into starlit sky
I do not know the notes of your songs
nor do I know where you are heading to
but the windows are open
and i only know this:
thank you
for the gifts of wings & words
~~~
Inspired by her lines in Always Fire:
From ‘No mail – no post’:
“No words.
No rhymes, no poeming tonight,
just this blank space,
this white page,
stretching endlessly”
and
“Find me a space here,
tucked into the silence.”
‘This Doesn’t Feel Like Home Yet’:
“A bird sings,
but you don’t know the notes,
this window opens
onto streets you cannot name
and words you can’t decipher.”
Posted for dVerse Poets Pub- Poetics : In Conversation with Sarah Connor. Hosted by Kim Russell. Thank you Kim for the wonderful interview. Thank you Sarah for all the time you have shared with us at the dVerse Poets Pub.
Beautifully written, Grace, and what a way to thank Sarah! I love the idea that her ‘muse has black wings’ and her words are ‘breeze-light as rain’, and your wishes for her are so Sarah: the ‘white crisp pages & pen, smell of lavender & lemon’, the serenade of birdsong, and especially the rooks.
ReplyDeleteMay your words wing their way to her, Grace, saying what we cannot say with your "mailbag" full of images alight with love and gratitude, and expressive of your shared love of nature.
ReplyDeleteThis is so beautiful! I especially love; "seranade of birdsongs from robins, calls of owls, laughter of children, chicory flowers,
ReplyDeletesights of life unfolding." Yes! ππ
Oh, Grace! This is so beautiful. A lovely, gentle tribute to Sarah, and you even included her rooks. π
ReplyDeleteGrace, what a precious "full bag" of items for Sarah to carry close to her heart. The "smell of lavender & lemon" is lifting.
ReplyDeleteAh, Grace, thank you for this beautiful poem. So many things I love. I'm crying already - good tears. This is very special.
ReplyDeleteThanks for your lovely words Sarah.
DeleteThis hovers gorgeously over Sarah's gift to us and those she so loves like a sheet on the breeze of a heartbreakingly blue sky. Tears and gratitude for this and the one who so inspires us all.
ReplyDeleteLuv this!!!
ReplyDeletemuchπ€love
This is so beautiful and words, wings and a poetic spirit all come together with your graceful flow. Thank you all.
ReplyDeleteSorry didnt press google, comment was from Georgina at navasola after a few years of not writing poetry.
ReplyDeleteA beautifully written tribute, Grace—even without knowing Sarah myself before today, your verses capture her poetic craft and its many gifts very poignantly. Many thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful.
ReplyDeleteA beautifully written tribute to Sarah!
ReplyDeleteA very calming poem.π§π»♀️
ReplyDeleteSuch a beautiful poem with the serenades of birdsong. A beautiful tribute that would bring so much comfort.
ReplyDeleteSo very beautiful, Grace. Your verse embodies all that is dear to Sarah. Such a heartfelt, heartwarming write.
ReplyDeleteYour best poems are the ones that come from the heart. Like this one. Beautiful.
ReplyDeleteFantastic writing!
ReplyDeleteA beautiful tribute, Grace...
ReplyDeletefull to the brim with lightness and love for Sarah's poetry
ReplyDeleteOh Grace, this is so beautiful and thoughtfully done, full of lovely gifts and wishes for Sarah. I'm so glad you added the link to her "Rooks at Twilight" and I noticed the line "my muse has black wings" in her comments. How special that is to include. A heartfelt and comforting tribute, Grace. ❤️
ReplyDeleteThis is so beautifully written. You capture something of Sarah's way of seeing the world here. I found your poem deeply moving, particularly the last verse. Suzanne of Wordpress blog "Wayfaring'.
ReplyDelete