
Moon
The moon
is full tonight
an illustration for sheet music,
an image in Matthew
Arnold
glimmering on the English Channel,
or a ghost over a smoldering
battlefield
in one of the history plays.
It's as full as it
was
in that poem by Coleridge
where he carries his year-old son
into
the orchard behind the cottage
and turns the baby's face to the sky
to see
for the first time
the earth's bright companion,
something amazing to make
his crying seem small.
And if you wanted to follow this
example,
tonight would be the night
to carry some tiny creature
outside
and introduce him to the moon.
And if your house has no
child,
you can always gather into your arms
the sleeping infant of
yourself,
as I have done tonight,
and carry him outdoors,
all limp in
his tattered blanket,
making sure to steady his lolling head
with the palm
of your hand.
And while the wind ruffles the pear trees
in the
corner of the orchard
and dark roses wave against a stone wall,
you can
turn him on your shoulder
and walk in circles on the lawn
drunk with the
light.
You can lift him up into the sky,
your eyes nearly as wide as
his,
as the moon climbs high into the night.
~ Billy Collins
~
(Picnic,
Lightning)
(left button to play, right button
to save)