Sunday, July 5, 2020

If I could tell you just one thing (Day 1263)

If I could tell you just one thing, I would 

tell you about the light before a storm, glittering 

with suppressed energy, colors heightened,

shapes defined, as clouds collapse over one another 

on the western rim — the birds’ bacchanalian chorus,

the crickets’ and katydids’ and cicadas’ 

frenzied whir and buzz — then


silence.


A far-off wind rumbles low, growing ever louder, 

rolling over the fields, and breaking over the trees, 

just moments before the first drop falls, 

soon a torrent. How air becomes liquid, drowning 

the dessicated world, until you wonder 

how breathing is even possible. 

Surely nothing can survive this falling flood.

And, for a moment, some ancient animal 

deep inside panics — anxious, claustrophibic, 

desperate to flee — then  


silence.


In a blink, each droplet flashes its captured sunlight, 

and the renascent world blazes with incandescent steam.  

A single bird calls, and then another. 

One cricket tests his wings.

If I could tell you just one thing, I would tell you this.


(c) 2020 by Hannah Six


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