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Gratefulness
It is a simple garment, this slipped-on world. We wake into it daily—open eyes, braid hair— a robe unfurled in rose-silk flowering, then laid bare.
And yes, it is a simple enough task we’ve taken on, though also vast: from dusk to dawn,
from dawn to dusk, to praise, and not be blinded by the praising. To lie like a cat in the sun, fur fully blazing,
and dream the mouse; and to keep too the mouse’s patient, waking watch within the deep rooms of the house, where the leaf-flocked
sunlight never reaches, but the earth still blooms.
Copyright 1994 by Jane Hirshfield from The October Palace, (Harper Perennial) and used by kind permission of the author.
Beloved, you know who I’m calling to, though I mistake you for the bird’s song,…
This was a day when nothing happened, the children went off to school without a…
You darken as my knife slices blushing at what you become. I save your thick…
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