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Gratefulness
Dazzling, even under glass, the sky’s blue plate special shimmers up from the creek bed, enticing a lunchtime crowd of floaters and fly-by-nights to make their rest stop here. Lost in reflection, a pair of rocks idle in the shallows, undisturbed by the honking and jostling as the ducks file downstream, dodging the water’s bones as easily as bedroom slippers navigate the dark.
This is what I do not understand: how all this happens without an answer. Without, even, a question.
The Wissahickon spills endlessly, like the night love poured through me, nearly, I thought, uncontainable as it rushed from my fingers and out the window into people passing on the street, over fire hydrants, pigeons, and boom boxes, through police cars, stop signs, and cockroaches, between two dogs circling in heat. I did not need an answer then. I would have understood the indifferent delight of the ducks. But I asked, and my question scattered like mercury, into a million trembling globules magnetic with yearning.
Copyright 2002 by Deidra Greenleaf Allan Posted by kind permission of the poet.
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