Parents and Departing Train

For all the wavering truth of trees reflected in rainwater, or the undulant

For all the wavering truth of trees reflected in rainwater, or the undulant

disappearing bulk of the white-tail deer into the deer-coloured dusk

of the apple orchard, its raised tail a pennant of life on the run, its

pure white glimmer-candle gone as soon as seen; for all that I believe

READ MORE

of transience – each moment murdered by the next one, each breath

dying into its twin – it still seems impossible to find a right language

for how our daughter shoulders her own heavy bags and boards the train

and is taken from us, just a shadow of a shadow kissing its fingers

at where our shadows stand outside, me settling an arm around

your shoulders, your pale face and hair nearly ghostly in the air that’s

otherwise all gold, saffron, rust, Bordeaux, as our girl – speedy as

any express – is taken into the distance her own life is now, a place

set well beyond lullaby or open-eyed angel, a nameless space we keep

peering into for that sheer glimmer, girl-shaped, flickering into dusk.

Eamon Grennan