Small Things

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Small Things Page 5

by Jonathan Barnes


  but stop

  because your own

  entirely

  lacked

  all sin.

  BREATH

  Nothing was,

  all was beginning on that dew-soft morning

  far from now.

  The sound of distance

  gathered on the crystal air

  still cool before the rise of noon,

  and from the trees rose birdsong

  iridescent as the sun-soaked lawn.

  Far off, so far away

  the coming tide of what would be;

  for now, a quiet breath

  drew ripples on a still dark pool.

  I could not say what made me pause

  that day of days – the day of leaving,

  a moment snatched no more remarkable

  than one brief heartbeat from the next,

  but on that July day I understood

  and listened to the one heart,

  to the trusted trees,

  the blaze of green far greener than before,

  with the scent of lavender

  reminding me of all the lavender I'd ever smelled,

  and of all the summers.

  BEAUTY GROWS

  Beauty awakens beauty.

  It begets itself as a living thing,

  opens up its own eyes,

  makes its own ears a receptacle

  for remote oceans, for star sounds,

  for places that were once black

  but will never be so again.

  Like an incoming tide beauty invades us.

  It washes into our thirsty lives and never leaves.

  The odour of pines can never be forgotten,

  but will heap upon itself the wind,

  loneliness, memories of silent faces,

  many beginnings and ends,

  even those commonplace words once overheard.

  Through every aspect beauty speaks.

  It comes to us in silent fields

  and crowded halls,

  and every time its language grows,

  word upon word, image upon image,

  building spires in derelict lands,

  watering with song the stony unawoken air.

  Beauty is a lantern in a dark domain

  whose gleam illuminates far more

  than its own light; it grows,

  and bit by bit makes visible

  an unseen world:

  that part of life that we can touch

  and feel no pain.

  PERFECT WORLD

  A rose could not grow in a perfect world;

  bees would not visit it, and the shock of its perfume

  would be as music

  never played.

  There can be no manifestation of light

  where only light falls, for the shapes of all things

  are revealed

  in shadows.

  The warmth of the summer sleeps in the snows,

  just as reasons for joy are made plain in our sorrows.

  Our needs make us

  whole.

  The roots of a tree are bound in darkness.

  Death shows us life. Let the moon have its day,

  and the rose have

  the night.

  MATTER OF THE HEART

  What strange gift is this

  that lets me see beyond the curtain

  stained by light and dark?

  Soft moving in the night

  the hum of air,

  and voices breathing in and out;

  the constant bleat of monitors

  mark out the steady pace

  of heartbeat after heartbeat

  on and on -

  a sequence once deemed infinite,

  a line extending outward

  to tomorrows lost in haze.

  I had not planned this -

  to lie like this, awake,

  and hear the dramas of those others

  who, like me, have wandered near the edge.

  We are as vulnerable as liquid

  carried in an open cup,

  frail lights which one sigh can extinguish

  whilst the world moves on.

  How easily the summers pass

  whilst in our chests

  the mechanisms thump and pound.

  Now, in the quiet, the faces come,

  and memories of words that make a life,

  and smiles as warm as open hands

  on night-chilled flesh.

  Oh happy man

  who in the stillness and the dark

  finds all the fortune he has earned

  like soft rain falling;

  it's what remains when all else

  has been stripped away:

  the image we have built in others' hearts

  is who we are and what we've made.

  PASSING THROUGH

  Our story begins with a single sigh,

  an eddy of dust, a tremor on water.

  But it breaks the apple from its moorings,

  sets free the pollen, and embarks

  on a journey of no return.

  And bit by bit our sigh becomes thunder.

  How it unrolls in tumultuous seas!

  We are the waves that surge through creation,

  bobbing the flotsam of bells and laughter,

  the butter of flesh, the swarm of words.

  Nothing can stop us, however we alter.

  We are waves passing through the miraculous atoms;

  and the world heals behind us.

  Onward and onward and onward we move,

  shifting the silent mass of the universe.

  TODAY

  Nobody will ever know the name of this day

  in spring;

  it is just one more day,

  except that in this life of mine,

  now, as I live it,

  it is the whole of creation

  refined into this single point.

  Sounds have been brought to me

  from many sources.

  The essences of countless lives

  have worked their way

  like music in and out of mine.

  Without any warning today has emerged

  as a blue bowl bright with the din

  of insect wings.

  It is a tapestry whose threads

  are the many songs of birds.

  And all this revealed

  in the emerald breath of awakened leaves.

  Today is the culmination

  of everything that ever was.

  It is a miracle which trundles on

  through dusty hours,

  a road down which

  no man shall ever pass again.

  Even now, as pigeons call

  from lofty trees,

  the warmth evaporates

  from quiet stones,

  and shutters close

  to mark the end of one more day.

  The living edge moves on.

  Another day will come, and this one,

  this day in which all things

  were felt and done

  will fade away,

  a day in spring which has no name,

  no way to fasten it inside the heart,

  except through these few lines.

  SADNESS

  Sadness, I need you to go on calling to me

  from those far off places.

  It is not that I wish to be downcast,

  but that a man sometimes needs to measure his own life.

  I do not say that the past should haunt us,

  rather that the path we have trodden has some importance.

  To cast my eyes backwards and to see you, sadness,

  like the hulks of dead ships sunk in dark waters,

  is to know you have failed.

  You are wreckage, detritus I have decided to abandon,

  yet I do not wish to forget you existed.

 
Inside every sorrow lies the still beating heart

  of something sunlit, something which nourished

  that part which hungers, which quickened

  the song that lives inside us.

  There will always be night.

  Breathing in, breathing out is how the world flows.

  And shadows walk with us.

  So speak to me, sadness,

  remind me that life is an uphill path.

  In turn I will say that a road leading upwards

  will lend us a view of the whole world below.

  ACCOUNTING

  How has it happened that I have accumulated

  so many days?

  Twenty three thousand times I've awoken,

  and on each awakening a new chance to live,

  a fresh opportunity has shown me its face.

  And what have I done with this?

  I have eaten more than eight thousand loaves,

  I have quenched my thirst on an ocean of tea.

  More than a billion breaths have sustained me,

  with more than a billion beats of my heart.

  And how many words? How many dreams

  have I given birth to? How many kisses

  and curses have escaped me?

  Measuring a man is no simple task.

  His worst and his best may be written upon him,

  but how does one account for the weight of his smiles,

  for his fears which, like thistledown,

  have seeded whole pastures beyond his horizons?

  And what is the cost of the doubts he has held?

  What value should we give to those words unspoken?

  Each life that has entered this pool of creation

  has fallen like drops of ink into water;

  it blossoms, expands, is laughter

  and perfume lost in a crowd.

  But its hunger fills fields with barley and wheat.

  Twenty three thousand times I've awoken,

  and each day I follow the words of the song.

  But the music moves on,

  like a cloud drifting by

  that will never return.

  HOME

  I once found home

  inside a tree,

  a cramped place

  hollowed from an oak's deep chest,

  a cave so hidden

  by stout brambles

  that I nearly passed it

  as I ambled by.

  But it called me

  as trees will often do

  to small boys

  who have ears to hear

  and eyes to see.

  I went there

  when the clouds inside me

  turned to grey,

  and sat inside its scented walls

  and heard sap rise

  and insects go about their ways,

  and dreamt of other times,

  and possibilities

  of where a heart might wander

  under different skies.

  How strange to think

  a tree gave succour

  where a man could not,

  its wooden arms

  as warm and tender

  as a boy could want.

  It was my own.

  Down every lane since then

  my eyes have measured shadowed space.

  The boy is grown,

  no longer small enough

  to squeeze inside the fortress

  of green leaves, the safety

  formed by seasons out of time.

  But care grows roots inside the heart,

  and now I have a place in me

  the size and shape of comfort

  granted me by home I once found

  hollowed in an ancient oak.

  BECOMING

  You want to know

  what life is for?

  It is for more;

  more breath,

  more thought,

  another step,

  another day,

  another pain or pleasure,

  slap or kiss;

  another chance

  to make mistakes,

  to fail, succeed,

  to seek once more

  in some small thing

  the vastness

  of the state of being;

  to find

  in every inhaled breath,

  in every ray

  that strikes the eye

  that gift

  the unborn

  cannot have.

  Inside each moment

  every atom

  stirs and sings.

  This lit room

  in the darkness

  of eternity

  is all we know.

  We are the clay,

  the empty page,

  and with them

  we must work

  to find what,

  in the end,

  we gave to life.

  ON ENCOUNTERING A PLUM

  It could be, when your mind is out walking,

  you discover a plum that has hidden itself

  on the bough of a plum tree.

  The sight surprises you, though you are not surprised,

  and you wonder how this thing has happened:

  a plum in a tree; knowledge and reality

  meet amongst leaves.

  Perhaps you will measure its weight in your palm.

  It is naked, plump, a device

  which contains every day of the summer.

  Its flesh breaks open onto your tongue.

  You are five and twelve and twenty again.

  You spit out the stone. You have learned

  once again what you always have known.

  SONG OF THE EARTH

  Beautiful words should descend

  upon rain:

  lifeblood, elixir,

  each drop a kiss

  that opens the grain,

  a key which unlocks

  the seed and the dream,

  the maker of fish paths,

  the mother of green.

  An ocean of blessings should pour

  upon rain:

  fruit-giver, lake filler,

  whose pattering voice

  is a constant refrain.

  The cells of our bodies

  admit to its worth,

  the bringer of life,

  the song of the Earth.

  SEED

  Tiny pilgrim, you left upon the winds of autumn,

  applauded by the leaves with copper hands,

  and carried into unknown fields

  the history of your ancient kind.

  You did not know that in your wooden heart

  the tender genesis of future forests lay,

  but tumbling down the rocky cleft

  you told your whispered message to the stony ground.

  A pinch of dust, a drop of rain were start enough;

  you fastened harder to an unsure world

  and made your stand.

  I too have made my journey,

  grown from seed in distant lands,

  but here for one brief moment in your shade we meet,

  and share the cries of curlews in the arc of grey.

  I saw you from far off, gesturing like one

  whose arms describe the immensity of open sky.

  The seed in you has built strange highways

  into earth and air, and wormed its way

  inside the caverns of our human dreams.

  The code of chemistry in every cell

  has filled the hollow winter with its silent song:

  the promise of those shadowed flags

  and generous days woven from a tale of green.

  VAPOUR

  Daylight fails.

  Far off and silently

  a star is creeping.

  The roar of its great engines

  has all dropped away,

  but in it people sit

  in tidy rows, tethered

  by my gaze alone

  t
o all they've left.

  Down here a puddle

  is a fragment of the fallen sky.

  I hold the moment

  whilst the plane soars on,

  leaving behind it

  a visible memory.

  WITNESS

  Down the windy lane that day

  nobody came.

  Though the sea sent its voice to rush through the woods,

  how many heard it?

  Who saw the treetops scrabble at clouds,

  or the tall grass lean?

  Somewhere dark a willow was creaking,

  its sinews tight in the gathering rain.

  The calls of the crows scraped through the trees,

  and the wind was a sight in the churning leaves.

  But nobody came.

  EACH DAY I AM REMADE

  The empty hall of my stomach summons me.

  I am called upon to vouch for the wetness of rain.

  The mown grass describes every summer there was,

  and the voice of the pigeon contains all the evenings.

  The heart hears the song. Small things assail me;

  each day I am remade as a human.

 


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