

Beginning With Light…
Beginning with light,
without it there can be no life on
top of this plain
where feet, toes curled
tickle dry brown
interspeckled with tender green
answering back,
listening, and yet, too cool
for bare arms, she accedes —— it is there
“Hope” is the thing with feathers –
Back and forth, black wings
from nest to Source
and back again. Dark night
sustenance, a treacherous stillness
unwelcome — but
a required embrasure
a grace miscalculated
a path toward light
That perches in the soul –
In her room a tiny brass box
with lid open spins — en pointe
balanced confidently
a mantram rhythm bound to Self
but free knowing
her purpose,
her path,
And sings the tune without the words –
She reaches down
fingers brush dry and green —
it is spring
and turns the wheel to the new
from dark night, to the light,
the constant springs
And never stops – at all –
……….
Author’s Note
From the kind folks at NaPoWriMo:
“And now for our (optional) prompt. This one is a bit complex, so I saved it for a Sunday. It’s a Spanish form called a “glosa” – literally a poem that glosses, or explains, or in some way responds to another poem. The idea is to take a quatrain from a poem that you like, and then write a four-stanza poem that explains or responds to each line of the quatrain, with each of the quatrain’s four lines in turn forming the last line of each stanza. Traditionally, each stanza has ten lines, but don’t feel obligated to hold yourself to that! Here’s a nice summary of the glosa form to help you get started.”
While I was still teaching, I always shared this video with my first graders during National Poetry Month. It is beauty and grace in words and action. They understood and it was magic watching them moving their arms and hands in concert with the girl even though no one knew her language. We watched it many times.
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/video/77372/hope-is-the-thing-with-feathers