Why I Write...

Symphony
I am not quite sure what movement we're in.


The bows seem to be moving faster,
raking my pulse across dark strings.
Dissonance seems to dissolve what's left of a melody
I am not quite sure 
we've learned.

Yet, some of the saddest strains seem familiar:
ancient moans of cellos fainting against knees,
reeds weeping along souls grown deep like the rivers,
cycles of notes we are trusting to not climax in chaos.


Ancient or further decay, death-tones color each interlude
and leave me 
                   straining to hear sounds that one day will swell.


I am not quite sure what movement we're in.


The Composer is famous for arrangements not expected.
I know there was a measure by which we measure history.
I know there will be a day when chords will break 
every cord.
I know we wait:
somewhere,                
                       suspended,
in that second day.

So, I am not quite sure what movement we're in.

The bows seem to be moving faster,
but it matters less 
and less:

I am invited to enter a symphony where
a still, small Story exists amidst minor keys.

I scratch to tap its melody
on the breadth of my out-of-tune days.



Mosaic Maker
The mosaic maker stands
in piles of stained-glass shrapnel,
sifting through verbs and nouns
with bloodied fingers.

She struggles to find places for
     stillborn
     starvation
     minefields
    fault-lines
    midnight-hued -cides and
    sold

She seeks a strong cement
and strains to see the Pattern
in which all things (hard beauty)
hold together.






Grateful acknowledgement to On the Road: Journal of the Anabaptist Association of Australia and New Zealand, the publication in which these poems first appeared. 

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