Rain tick tocks in the downspouts. |
We rise to ordinary time too soon returned. Yellow buses take children away |
to periodic tables, uncomfortable desks. |
Bad news arrives on the gravel, wrapped in plastic |
These last four days of wonder, always lost. |
Before the parade has ended, we are halfway home |
preparing to steer our little barks of resolution |
out into a new sea as deep and unpredictable as the old. |
We hover on the edge of epiphany. |
In a pasture a shepherd will pause and reflect |
on his solitary life surrounded by wool, and ancient |
kings yield up treasure to a boy gathering stones. |
All kinds of miracles will display their wares |
disguised as clothespins or piano keys. |
No one will ask, what is the purpose of my life? |
In a sudden burst of certainty, Julian shouts |
from her window in the 14th century, "All shall be well!" |
Be within shouting distance. For this moment, |
be exactly who you are, holy and aflame. |
Marilyn Robertson was a northern California poet and folksinger who brought traditional songs and stories into elementary school classrooms when this poem appeared.
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