Gently touch her, gently care, For the day may come — swiftly when That endless cruel knocking on doors bolted from the inside Dies down and turns into gray silence.
She, irksome as it is, goes round and round in circles Looking for the missing pair She wears the other one, anyway, And sits down in grief.
She says, “I want to go home. Let me go home.” “Mama, you are home,” you answer. Vexation rears its ugly head And you force each horn, one at a time, to recede: To vanish from sight.
Then gaining composure you say: “Mama, let’s pray.” God hears, and you are healed. Set free. Instantly. Of the agony of bearing about in your own body The weight of selfishness And sin And sheer ignorance of what it feels like To have Time ****** away Memory From you and those you love.
The stark feebleness of this bent, white creature With veined hands and bony feet Reminds you of your own Utter helplessness. Mortality.