Sonnet: The Hidden Chrysoprase


These years are winter. The skies are overcast with dramatic clouds.
When they break  heavily, as they will, all around us the snows will begin.
Fallen too wet for the slopes to  hold, they will fall underneath, loosening
an avalanche of rubble upon too frail and kind a  thing to live in such cold.
     This is possible.

These years are winter. The stars on glassy nights still wheel in the old
constellations according to law, abiding the brink, the space, the vacant abyss.
Turning under and rising away from the horizons, going from us and coming back
forever to us, starfalls are the hidden promises we hold.
      This also is possible.

These years are winter. Cereus, night-blooming in a warm house, has one flower to
be borne. Cactus, the crooking stems keep safe the nectar in their flesh. Their spines
are cruel. We do not know the time w hen we will open the door of a room upon a
 strange glow of apple-green chalcedony, chrysoprase, in whose white blossom
deeply cupped is  held the pollen all these years have gathered.       And this is possible.
      Or they are nothing.

 

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