The
Holy
Sorrow
Like Sundays,
my sadness
is holy.
I am
resigned
like the rain
to falling.
I have my
own gravity.
Am I
the only one
to find
living under
a cloud
brings out
the world’s
colors?
Life is a ruin
and maybe
that’s
its splendor,
its rococo
mystery.
Consider
the ancient
Colosseum
built
for combat,
with
only our
suffering
as spectacle.
A theatre
of cruelty
designed
to fleece
the breath
from the
crowd.
Only an
earthquake
could
increase
the grandeur
of its rubble.
But I'm after
wholeness.
A liquid
intelligence
is how I
make my
way.
I embrace
my grief
to ward off
the perils
of unfeeling.
My sorrow
is love
for what was
and will
not
come again.
If you're
like me
you've
stumbled
upon
a pilgrimage
to find
a shard
of silver
in a gold
quarry;
a recognition
of yourself in
unforgiving
light.
Life is in
the gravel
unloading its
grief at
our feet.
Did I say
gold quarry?
I meant a
salt mine.
Our tears
seep
through
its
cracks
like light
from the
moon.
Still,
don't you
want
to live
as long as
grit can
make
a flower
and sorrow
form
a pearl?
I do.
I live
as in a
terrarium.
I could
be
Lazarus,
recycling
my breath
in order
to bring
more humidity
to my
retort.
My soul,
uprooted
as an
open hand,
reaches
upward
like a faith.
If I'd not
found
sadness
beautiful,
I’d never
have survived,
and this year
would have
been merely
for coming
to terms with
just so
unlikely
a grace.
Peter Valentyne
December 2020