More my shadow than my shadow,
it is mute, as it must be.
I walk it along the world’s wide road,
chanting its reticence; what I think it might say
if it could, or wished to.
If it snags on the hedgerow,
a nest is a choir I could hold on a glove.
In love, its surface shines like ink;
I dip my pen again.
But it hoards grief, sometimes for years.
So I am supplicant; alert at the lip
of wordlessness, how can I tell?
Or it circles me, a sundial’s slow arrow,
patient, waiting to cover my face
with its scrap of black silk.
Though should it stand still in the lane,
Even the empty chapel speaks in chimes.
I have known it: difficult, accessible.
It is the taste of imminent weather.
If its eyes smell onions, I shall weep anon.
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