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MORNING M.C. Gardner
Strange it was that night When the Yuletide airs of birth Were companioned to the earth With a father’s toiled passing. The infant Jesus Is often pictured With a tiny cross Held sweetly in that hand That will one day know a knife, And the Magi surely knew That their journey to that cave Was also to the grave Of their loved and splendid Gods. And the turning of the world Was the winding of a shroud That Christmas throe of birth In a dying dispensation.
On a field outside of Midland The snow glistened and was gone Dew scenting sweet the hour’s Anticipation of the dawn. Death came like a soothing Magdalene Releasing in a whispered Anointing touch of flame The burden of the fever From its charge to there remain. And a wind stirred softly on those waters Darker than a depth Than those known by any sea. Each night faith wings in caverns A captive chrysalis of dreams And what is often reenacted We’ve rarely since believed. Three timbers wine-stained wood grain And a boulder barring entrance to a grave Are among remembered fragments When flesh returns to clay. For in the end The man some call the Christ Was laid again to stone As if returning home Where as an infant he had lain.
Only the dead Can speak knowingly of death And perhaps Lovingly, as well. Of this family’s father I knew little more than name But I’ve come to love his daughter And believe that love sustains. For the windows of her eyes Now seem the portals of his feeling And what in the end was ash Was mingled to the clasp Of an infant evergreen Growing deathless in a field Which once knew only stones But now it seems a home As if a cradle in a cave Where a stone was rolled away In the quiet lilt of morning. |