Thompson/Ford |
Silent Noon
Your hands lie open in the
long fresh grass,—
The finger-points look through
like rosy blooms:
Your eyes smile peace. The
pasture gleams and glooms
'Neath billowing skies that
scatter and amass.
All round our nest, far as the
eye can pass,
Are golden kingcup fields with
silver edge
Where the cow-parsley skirts
the hawthorn-hedge.
'Tis visible silence, still as
the hour-glass.
Deep in the sun-searched
growths the dragon-fly
Hangs like a blue thread
loosened from the sky:—
So this wing'd hour is dropt
to us from above.
Oh! clasp we to our hearts,
for deathless dower,
This close-companioned
inarticulate hour
When twofold silence was the song of love.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti
from The Penguin Book of the Sonnet, ed. Phillis Levin
(To find just the right illustration/photo/painting – almost impossible!
I have loved this poem for so long, it’s frustrating not to pair it the way I
want to. However! This poem.) This poem is about as close to perfection as you can get.
When you read something and it’s like second nature, like a second skin,
an articulation of your experience – it’s magic. I read this poem and it could
be me. I have done this, been here, thought this, and yet – Rossetti wrote it.
How can it be? He lived nearly 200 years ago. A world and time away. The
difference between my world and the world of the person walking down the
sidewalk toward me is spectacular enough – Rossetti? And yet here we are –
occupying the same moment, the same place, the same mind. I just shake my head.
“This close-companioned inarticulate hour/When twofold silence was the the song
of love.” So help me, I hear these words in person – I mean, as if Rossetti
were speaking to us, reaching his hand across the years, calling us his
close-companions. If there is anything beneficial about poetry (!) this is
right up there, this connecting of minds and lives, this, yes, I will say it at
the risk of sounding maudlin, love.
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