Light Illumined Poem by Ernest Hilbert

Light Illumined

Mentre che sì per l'orlo, uno innanzi altro,
Ce n'andavamo, e spesso, il buon maestro
Diceami: "Guarda: giovi ch'io ti scaltro'

Wind conveys a muffled tune from a truck
Up from the valley, and they make out
Eddie Money's "Two Tickets to Paradise"
Under the crinkle of plastic bags stuck
In the trees. The wind goes on, and all's doubt.
The strong sun lights up thin ditches of ice.
They can't know how long anything will last,
But this winter has held on far too long,
Overhanging spring, squeezing them with suspense,
Suspicious that something is really wrong,
Keeping them, against their hopes, in the past.
They pick their way through marshy ground. Dense
Shadows stretch out in late sunlight as they
Gain the rising hillside of cut-down stalks
And desiccated cobs. He goes ahead
Of her, determined for the top, to see
If there is anything to view. She walks
More slowly her own way, never led
Or leading. The world is made, for a moment,
Of mud, bent stems, debris of harvested crops.
Below, silos and bare groves gather
Along the stream. Ending his ascent,
He turns to her at the top and she drops
Into the horizontal sunlight like a bather
Going under a western ocean at sunset.
The sun, almost unbearable by now
In its last minutes brands her to a dark
Shape enclosed by baffling glare and pure jet
Of haloed light, like the last of a bough
At a bonfire's core that still casts off sparks,
And he looks too long trying to see her,
The brightness bent over millions
Of miles, cold carried by its brilliance,
And before he can blink it makes her disappear.

Monday, February 26, 2018
Topic(s) of this poem: love
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