A Feather from an Angel

Anton’s box of treasures held

a silver key and a glassy stone,

a figurine made of polished bone

and a feather from an angel.

The figurine was from Borneo,

the stone from France or Italy,

the silver key was a mystery

but the feather came from an angel.

We might have believed him if he’d said

the feather fell from a bleached white crow

but he always replied, ‘It’s an angel’s, I know,

a feather from an angel.’

We might have believed him if he’d said,

‘An albatross let the feather fall.’

But he had no doubt, no doubt at all,

his feather came from an angel.

‘I thought I’d dreamt him one night,’ he’d say,

‘but in the morning I knew he’d been there;

he left a feather on my bedside chair,

a feather from an angel.’

And it seems that all my life I’ve looked

for that sort of belief that nothing could shift,

something simple yet precious as Anton’s gift,

a feather from an angel.

Brian Moses