Steven Outram |
What the Light Teaches
Language is the house
with lamplight in its windows,
visible across
fields. Approaching, you can hear
music; closer, smell
soup, bay leaves,
bread - a meal for anyone
who has only his
tongue left.
It's a country; home,
family;
abandoned, burned
down; whole lines dead, unmarried.
For those who can't
read their way in the streets,
or in the gestures
and faces of strangers,
language is the house
to run to;
in wild nights,
chased by dogs and other sounds,
when you've been lost
a long time,
when you have no
other place.
There are nights in
the forest of words
when I panic, every
step into thicker darkness,
the only way out to
write myself into a clearing,
which is silence.
Nights in the forest
of words
when I'm afraid we
won't hear each other
over clattering
branches, over
both our voices
calling.
In winter, in the
hour
when the sun runs
liquid then freezes,
caught in the
mantilla of empty trees;
when my heart listens
through the cold
stethoscope of fear,
your voice in my head
reminds me
what the light
teaches.
Slowly you translate
fear into love,
the way the moon's
blood is the sea.
Anne Michaels
This is one of my favorite
images - light from a distant window. If you’ve ever been out for a long walk at
night when the air turns chill, you’ll know that nothing can make you feel more
lonesome or full of longing than the light of a home window. It can be either
the anticipation of warmth and welcome, or the cruel reminder that you are
outside. I absolutely love the line, “Language
is the house with lamplight in its windows, visible across fields.” I have to
pause and think. Is she saying that language is the hope of warmth and
belonging, the invitation to relationships, to shelter? “Language is the house
to run to.” How interesting. Until this poem, I had not thought of it like
that. Writing, speech, language, can be a place to find yourself when you’ve
been lost. It’s true, isn’t it? “Slowly you translate fear into love.” And isn’t
that exactly what we’re attempting? To write out (or speak out) the darkness,
the lostness, the loneliness – to work our way Home? Is Language that magic?
Can words do all that?
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