A Light Dawns
Darren Schulz
The sun was falling in a constant stream of warmth
as tenderly as a sleeping potion on parted lips.
All she could remember was a hammock,stretched between two enormous fingers
and rocked with an infinite patience;
then a calm feeling of being towered over,as if by high trees, between which she felt raised up
and removed from sight; and finally a nothingness,
which in some incomprehensible way had atangible content: All these were transitory images
of suggestion and imagination in which
her longing had found solace. Truly, a light dawns,spreading the longer it lasts. For what she once
imagined seemed to be in almost everything
that was standing around her, calm and enduring,as often as she dispatched a glance to look.
What she imagined soundlessly entered the
world. But she was no longer alone: these werethe changes that distinguished fulfillment from
presentiment, and they were changes
in favor of earthly naturalness.
Next Poem Previous Poem Contents Cover 2RP The 2River View, 1_3 (Spring 1997)