|
Look, the trees |
are turning |
their own bodies |
into pillars |
|
of light, |
are giving off the rich |
fragrance of cinnamon |
and fulfillment, |
|
the long tapers |
of cattails |
are bursting and floating away over |
the blue shoulders |
|
of the ponds, |
and every pond, |
no matter what its |
name is, is |
|
nameless now. |
Every year |
everything |
I have ever learned |
|
in my lifetime |
leads back to this: the fires |
and the black river of loss |
whose other side |
|
is salvation, |
whose meaning |
none of us will ever know. |
To live in this world |
|
you must be able |
to do three things: |
to love what is mortal; |
to hold it |
|
against your bones knowing |
your own life depends on it; |
and, when the time comes to let it |
go, |
to let it go. |