Absences
More than advantages it’s absences
we should acknowledge, being most in debt
to what’s unhappened for our happiness.
How easy, though, to let
what could have been lie in oblivion:
The wayward lymph, for instance, spurred to
course
helter-skelter, reckless as a Hun
scouring west, his horse
hoared with foam. Who thinks to thank a fever
passing by uncaught; the pretty mole,
round and innocent on the skin, that never
burrows beyond control;
the lottery that lets the horsemen turn
their horses’ heads and, riding off, forbear
to run us down; the die we don’t discern,
unrolled; the stars that spare
us their disasters? Not for what they
give;
what they withhold, what isn’t, what therefore
remains as unknown as a negative
unproved. No, we ignore
the mercy of the lump that isn’t there:
Make us alive to what does not exist—
our sufferance to live so unaware
of all that we have missed.
Deborah Warren
(c) 2000; originally printed in
the Cumberland Poetry
Review. Reprinted by permission of the
author.
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