Alessia Degraeve
[after Louise Gluck’s “Grandmother in the Garden”]
The dirt below your tomb
has bloomed
with earthworms, and the sun
still keeps time
in lines and lines
of wind-smoothed stones,
elf-cap moss slow tip
toes over me
as I mourn you.
My lifelong flame,
I sit here with last words.
I close my eyes,
and all my offerings burn,
blue breath curls
into wings, unfurls:
You are still angry with me.
I can still see the lining of your soul,
bright like mother-of-pearl,
crying, lighter than air.