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marilynmcentyre
First light offers its quiet consolation to the wakeful. In the dark you discover day already begun. The black branches of the piñon tree hold night like water. Moonlight lingers on rock and sand, slow to let the earth resume its dusty colors after the silver hours. The last star gives way, submitting to the greater light. Day does not break, but touches each surface with slow and secret blue, the color of blessing.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:43 AM UTC
First Light
After years you know this: that the course of reliable love runs not through a slough of habit but along a curving hillside where even familiar landscape offers daily surprises. Those palms, those pine trees outside the window, that stretch of shoreline, this sleeping face, so surprisingly familiar, still catch you unawares in a shock of recognition. What you have done before you do again: you say yes. You wake, and turn, and are thankful to rise even from the happiest dream into what, solid, factual, still strange, you keep choosing. Practice makes more deliberate the thing you’ve done a thousand times, each time an act of consent: you pour the coffee you feed the cat you turn off the bedside lamp, loving the simple labors of shared life, loving the changing light, evening and morning and the currents of dailiness that run deep under the whitecaps and the waves.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:39 AM UTC
Anniversary
We call it “a beautiful hand,” the trace a practiced pen leaves on its travels across the page. Or a fine hand, whose sleight, swift and surprising, makes old letters new and delights the dulled and scampering eye. Swash and tail entice the reader to look again, slow and consider what it is that catches the breath just where a spur leaves the stem, or where the spine curves. Men and women of letters learn by inscription: the shape and space of an O teases the mind to a place just beyond reason. The S summons us to a winding way and the T offers a place to alight. Alight and watch the alphabet unfold its thicket of veins and tendrils, its solid declarations, its secrets.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:33 AM UTC
Calligraphy
From the cliff's edge you can watch the earth move. Hover over the waters and see how the Spirit blows and broods. The sea and all its creatures still crash and tumble and return to their deep silences. The sun rises and sinks below the waves. The curved ocean clings to earth’s edge, obedient, except where something urges it upward. The voice that calls forth the mountains and summons pelicans and wild geese says to all things, Rise. Consent to the upward urge that calls you out of gravity into the welter of heat and sound and color that will not stay, that you do not own, but may have for a day, and then for a night when it falls.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:25 AM UTC
Wide Angle
Kale greens. Beets grow fat and wine-dark. Carrots spin sun into fibrous orange. Someone carried soil up these stairs. Onions open long fingers into the morning fog. Small herbs and winter squash keep quiet company here on the rooftop while sirens pass below. In the afternoon one or two leave their e-mail and ascend to this improbable place. “Put your hands into the dirt,” a doctor advised, and you’ll feel better.” There is a time to plant and a time to reap. A time when nature, nearly spent, needs tending in small places. Boat-weary immigrants lay bok choy along the sidewalk’s edge. Geraniums bloom in window boxes. Here and there insistent chilis dangle on a bush in a half- barrel. A rooftop is world enough for now. You don’t need forty acres or a mule. A few square yards, drip line, a couple of spades and willing hands suffice. The rest is blessing.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:20 AM UTC
Rooftop Garden
The bee broaching this flowering **** alone in late afternoon doesn’t know the hives are dying. Her work lies between these white petals. Still, she may have noticed how few butterflies color the air.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:18 AM UTC
One Bee
Invitation Come into the dark, and let your pupils widen, and don’t reach too quickly for the wall. It isn’t there. There is no switch, no match, only the space around you. But it is yours. Step into it and see where your foot falls. Find your balance. Accustom your eyes to the light that remains, slow and spreading and subtle like first light, looking more like night than day.
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Jun 19, 2017
Jun 19, 2017 at 11:05 AM UTC
Invitation