Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Rosemary Nissen-Wade #7: The Gift of Sight


The Gift of Sight

A girl who was going blind,
who loved unicorns, poetry
and 'the Violet Saint' (Germaine)
and was a poet herself,

gave me a tiny kaleidoscope
of bright brass, like gold,
about the length of my forefinger,
in a black drawstring bag.

I lost her long ago
and rue my carelessness.
Her gift lies on my desk
for the times I take it up and play.

Through its minuscule aperture,
pointed at the nearest source of light,
I gaze at glittering shards
of turquoise, ruby, palest pink

and clear, shiny glass
moving and shifting as I twirl,
settling briefly as diamond shapes,
rhomboids, or intricate circles.

She gave it because I was going away.
She knew I would want magic
and a toy that was all my own.
(And indeed, I never share it.)

She gave me a gift to delight my sight
when she was more and more losing hers.
I see her face as I swirl the colours…. Herself, 
she could always see what wasn't there.


5 comments:

  1. how lovely, plus you get to play with this poetic technology of insight :)

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  2. What a wonderful poem. I really like the third stanza - how you rue the day you lost the girl, but still have the gift. Both the kaleidoscope and the gift of her touching your life. Thoughtful and lovely.

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  3. delightful and insightful poem; where can I get one myself?

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    Replies
    1. Oh Robbie, I have no idea – it was over 20 years ago! Google, perhaps? :-)

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