Every Day I Touch Things

Autumn came before I realized.

Sharpness flew up like gull cries,

the swan turned upside down

in the water, pulling up grass,

rolling its big hips upward,

which made me wonder

if words are necessary for pleasure, if

without them, sparkles on the water

would be useless baubles.

I have so many of them, touching

would feel like a wound without

them. When they lag behind,

where have they been? The nuns

are sure that inside the glass case

is a piece of the Cross. They’ve hung

that word around its neck.

Over many years, wood and word

have caught up with each other.

Even the fierce knot of fibers

might be glad to hear, before

it’s undone, the story it held together.