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17 November 2024

"To Brighid of despair” by Jenne Micale

 


To Brighid of despair 
 
She is there for you, beloved, in the warmth
of fire, in the strong walls warding off the chill,
in the softness of bread against your lips.
It doesn’t matter if you believe, if
you can feel her hand against your back.
The candle drives back the shadow: belief
is not required, only wax and a spark.
You press palms against your eyes and look for signs
You press palms against your ears and listen
for a word and nothing trickles through the shell
that encases you, an accretion of grief.
You say there are no signs, there are no words
and nothing shining that can possibly
touch you, and those conversations you once
delighted in the false lake that appears
in the sand on parched days, that guiding hand
only the cruel illusion offered to
the lonely staggering in the desert
that only the senses can measure truth,
and the truth they measure only despair.
She knows this story, she remembers when
Ruadán lay crumpled at her feet, a spear
cast through, her head thrown back and a wailing
that cracked even the hardest stone. Eyes closed
and ears deafened to everything but the hole
gobbling the very dimensions of his
familiar shape, only a silence there
that swallowed every prayer. And so she knows
you can’t hear her now, feel her hand in your hair,
that your eyes cannot see the signs she sends:
yellow asters burning by the highway,
the dawn wind subtly humming your gold name.
So friend, don’t look for her there, not quite yet.
She is the fire and the furnace, the light
dancing in the bulb, the warmth of your flesh.
Start with light and heat: those others will come
for every swan must first peck through that shell
driven by the warmth of their mother’s long
sitting, every seed must first break
after weathering by winter and wind
until the light sparks that very first leaf
and once again you feel her rushing in



Image: "Despair 1" painting by Lette Valeska, 1954. Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported license.