Flickering Rooms
This bittersweet singularity.
Low light gives an appearance
of candles. Short days, long nights.
The crowd sings alone with
full orchestra. Last chutes of sun
are—gone without knowing, like
tin whistles barely able to hide
sadness; gone to southern lines
drawn across maps of warm water;
and gone too is the color green
except the fields of winter grass.
But here in flickering rooms
we paint our words with bright
colors to cast-out minor
spirits.
Short days, long nights—
the twirl of ages.
Where the town turns to field
is a moving target like breathing
or weather, the clouds come and leave
like all the mass of everything
that ever was and combined
with the restless seed
of beating hearts and living.
People say that life hits a wall as
the lights go out, but it flows down
like water to somewhere else.
The pools—each has a face,
each in small places, a skin
that keeps all souls separate
and blood that flows lonesome
—were once part of
an ocean so small as to be one
place, one thought, one word. Just
look at them now, everywhere.
Short days, long nights give
the illusion of a pause before
utterance. But only nothing
pauses.
L. Ward Abel’s work has appeared in Rattle, The Reader, The Istanbul Review, The Worcester Review, The Honest Ulsterman, hundreds of others, and is the author of three full collections and ten chapbooks of poetry, including Jonesing For Byzantium (UK Authors Press, 2006), American Bruise (Parallel Press, 2012), Little Town gods (Folded Word Press, 2016), A Jerusalem of Ponds (erbacce-Press, 2016), The Rainflock Sings Again (Unsolicited Press, 2019), Floodlit (Beakful, 2019), and The Width of Here (Silver Bow, 2021).