It’s old,
that’s for sure. Old silver.
I don’t
know how old and where it comes from.
Maybe it
belonged to your mother or grandmother
who are now
no more. And you are no more.
It stands
on the kitchen table, in the sea jumble of it
like a lighthouse
on its rock in a sea storm.
I unearthed
it one day when my small one broke,
I unearthed
it from down under in that huge
cabin of a
cupboard, the hoard house you left me.
It looks
regal to me, a silver acorn on the lid top
in its rind
like a pedestal, like those on gravel paths
in the
mountains among pine needles and dirt,
like one of
the many thoughts scattered in the world
we keep
treading on.
My morning
tea.
I like
brewing in it.
I love
starting my day with it,
as if
feeling the swaddle of history,
at once
bathed in my memory of you.
Oh, the
handle. It gets so hot
I always
need something to cover it,
a napkin,
my own sweater even,
not to get
scalded when I pour.
I am gazing
at it now and breakfast is over,
it looks
alone and great, undefeated I dare say.
I gaze at
the darker spots on its metal, a sky
that will
outlive me.
Nothing
really can be grasped of the soul
but it
sings, silently, like on this silver
and sits,
while we just pass, on its own sea.
4 comments:
the swaddle of history
What a great phrase...
Lovely this: I was impressed with the lines
It stands on the kitchen table, in the sea jumble of it
like a lighthouse on its rock in a sea storm.
but the whole poem resonated with me. It is a story well imagined and beautifully told.
Thank you Jinksy and Dave, actually I would like to try to put a photo of the teapot in the blog...even if last time I tried to publish a photo it took me ages to be able to do that.
I'd love to see a photo of the teapot, though your words really do make it seem very real without a picture...
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