This poet resonates deeply with the Biblical definition of faith as “evidence of things unseen.”
Evidence.
She has waded through veritable drifts of such evidence all of her life ~ starting, as will be seen below, at an early age…
*****
Recorded Reading (4:31):
https://www.dropbox.com/scl/fi/r8r99xrt62mrb57hutodw/Bringing-the-Comfort-Through.mp3?rlkey=hp4xyr2wijz5sxqckpe1d5qcj&st=rhqdb7zn&dl=0
*****
Bringing the Comfort Through
I was but a teenager —
A dizzy teenager, at that —
My boyfriend a jazz drummer was
He was a real hep cat
Who didn’t fit in very well
With his conservative family
Who, in return, found they did not
Approve so very much of me
Because in such an artsy way
I stuck out from the crowd
Their rules said overnight to stay
I was not allowed
But off they went one summer day
For about a week
And he and I about it were
Just too happy to speak
Seven days in which we might
Enjoy each others’ company
Without forever looking where
Our next restriction be
One afternoon he held a “jam”
To which came many a good friend
When they were tired of playing
Didn’t want the night to end
So I cooked them dinner
We all had a glass of wine
Deciding that the afternoon
And evening had been fine!
And it was late when we lay down
Together, unaccustomedly ~
It seemed that I behind my
Overtired closed eyelids see
Gauzy ghostly curtains
Waving some near window from;
It seemed to me that suddenly
The night sorrowful had become
A headache blossomed at the base
Of my skull where it met the neck
The kind of pain that any prospect
Pleasure of completely wreck
And in my inner ear
Via some ghostly sonic stream
I could have sworn I heard
A deeply grieving woman’s scream
At that age, kept my virgin mind
As pure as effort could it make ~
I would not medicine so much
As e’en an aspirin take
So did my conscientious
Very best to lie back down,
Soothe from my mind those curtains,
Smooth from my face that frown
When suddenly my torso
Popped straight up those cushions from,
My hands up to my aching eyes,
For convinced I had become
Of a course of action
No logic had writ down:
I told him that if I might
Only don an airy gown
With flounces at the neck and hem,
Ope the upstairs sliding door
And lie with my head to it, then
I wouldn’t suffer any more…
That’s when his upper body
Rose, as mine had, from the bed,
With both his hands, the same as mine,
Wrapped around his head
Another couple minutes
He sat there silently
Before he slowly turned a newly
Wond’ring gaze to me
Said he, “I had forgot the date,
But four years gone this very day
My own suffering mother
Next to that same window lay
“In her housedress with its flounce
At neck, and too, at heel,
Trying from her headache
Some sweet how to better feel
“Ambulance next morning
It took her away
She fatally hemorrhaged
Within another day
“That evening was the last I saw
My wonderful dear mother of,
And every single day since then
I’ve thought of her with love
“But you — you had no way to know
If she dead or living be
How could you so confident
Her final moments see?”
I answered it had been a gift
A loving mother from
To let him know ’twere not so far
Away from him, where she had come
And that she hovers caringly,
And that she watches still,
That with her loving pray’rs and
Her entire angelic will
She seeks to smooth the pathway
Her beloved young man of
To whom she’d not been able
To communicate her love
At that most crucial moment
She would have extended comfort to
The one of all family brought
Lowest by her death unto
And seeing my proximity
To that one, in the cosmic dance,
Had seized this opportunity,
Our unusual chance
To set up resonance in true
Tantric intimacy
By which she might, at last, to him,
Bring that comfort through, by me
*****
This poet/editor is physically disabled, and lives at a fraction of her nation’s poverty level.
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Bringing the Comfort Through
… And that she hovers caringly / And that she watches still…
3–5 minutes




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