Wednesday, April 28, 2021

Aubade by Louise Glück


The world was very large. 

Then the world was small. O

very small, small enough

to fit in a brain.

It had no color, it was all

interior space: nothing

got in or out. But time

seeped in anyway, that

was the tragic dimension.

I took time very seriously in those years,

if I remember accurately.

A room with a chair, a window.

A small window, filled with the patterns light makes.

In its emptiness the world

was whole always, not

a chip of something, with

the self at the center.

And at the center of the self,

grief I thought I couldn't survive.

A room with a bed, a table. Flashes

of light on the naked surfaces.

I had two desires: desire

to be safe and desire to feel. As though

the world were making

a decision against white

because it disdained potential

and wanted in its place substance:

panels

of gold where the light struck.

In the window, reddish

leaves of the copper beech tree.

Out of the stasis, facts, objects

blurred or knitted together: somewhere

time stirring, time

crying to be touched, to be

palpable,

the polished wood

shimmering with distinctions--

and then I was once more

a child in the presence of riches

and I didn't know what the riches were made of.