In the beginning was the dream
and the dream was made woman
and the woman took her brushes
and washed the sky clean
picked up her broom
and swept the desert of all its bones
with her shovel
she cracked open
the mute clay.
She called hunger by its true name
and strode through the forests of fear,
gathering up the broken limbs
and fallen flowers.
In the landscape of an unspoken morning
she piled the bones and stars
the sand and clay and twigs
the stillborn hearts
and unspent angers.
High was the pile
hot the center of creation.
Deep in her elation
she plunged her hands
into the burning sky,
she stirred the dying sea,
she lifted the rim and scrabble
pressed fast the fish and feather
crumbled the clumps of stubborn clay.
She turned and turned the pile
of what was,
then spread it like a blanket
on the infant land naked of hope and
unadorned with memory.
On the blanket of what was
she rested from her work
and dreamed she was a seed
and the seed dreamed it was a garden
and the garden dreamed this beginning into being.
And then . . . she wrote a poem about it.
Beautiful words, Janet. So glad to have met you at the poetry swarm, and to have found your writing home here in the great wide world!
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