Archaeology
From this side, the window doesn't glisten, even though the errant sun is just as furious fingering the knots in my stomach like a string of prayer beads, I watch you disappear again into another graveyard, your haunted eyes bend the light– not one gleam of emerging bone, not one shard of glass is lost. They reach for you, like so many lost children, hoping you can tell them their names.
Sean Downing, poet, musician, teaches high school English and Theater Arts in Pagosa Springs, Colorado. He can often be found in his woodshop, coaxing music from odd scraps of junk, or haunting the trout streams around southwest Colorado. If you see him, don't tell anyone: they're probably looking to get an honest day's work out of him.
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It is good to see your poetry here, Sean, though I also read your poems on your Facebook page. The opening for "Archaeology" is memorable:
From this side,
the window doesn't
glisten,
It suggests a way of seeing. Then we learn of other ways we might see. And yes, there is the gift of names. Who should name us? Who might carry our names? I value your search.