Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography. The ocarina call of a mourning dove, a woman mourning the death of a pet, and yet it all comes to looking forward to more and more life, whatever is there, wherever the mourning dove will lead her.
Linda Parsons lives in Knoxville, and her most recent book is Candescent, from Iris Press.
Valediction
I hear before seeing, no need to see to know morning’s ocarina, plaintive call, soft strut on leafmeal. It was the first creature I saw when the needle was done and my sheepdog limped into last night. That dove, I thought, will house his sable spirit, coat feathered like joy in the wind. Dove comes when my scattered mind
needs herding—bitter anniversaries, leavings dire as tornadic rumble. Comes when sky rivers blue, cooing all’s well after all. Comes not to forbid mourning, but trills core deep, beyond the senses, glances back to make sure I follow its white-tipped tail. Plaintive ocarina, call me to bear all the light coming.
Ted Kooser. Photo credit: UNL Publications and Photography. The ocarina call of a mourning dove, a woman mourning the death of a pet, and yet it all comes to looking forward to more and more life, whatever is there, wherever the mourning dove will lead her.
Linda Parsons lives in Knoxville, and her most recent book is Candescent, from Iris Press.
Valediction
I hear before seeing, no need to see to know morning’s ocarina, plaintive call, soft strut on leafmeal. It was the first creature I saw when the needle was done and my sheepdog limped into last night. That dove, I thought, will house his sable spirit, coat feathered like joy in the wind. Dove comes when my scattered mind
needs herding—bitter anniversaries, leavings dire as tornadic rumble. Comes when sky rivers blue, cooing all’s well after all. Comes not to forbid mourning, but trills core deep, beyond the senses, glances back to make sure I follow its white-tipped tail. Plaintive ocarina, call me to bear all the light coming.