Laure-Anne Bosselaar

Issue #
6
February 28, 2015

Room in Belgium

Dust covers the window, but light slips through —
it always does — through dust or cracks or under doors.

Every day at dusk, the sun, through branches,
hits a river’s bend & sends silver slivers to the walls.

                              No one’s there to see this. No one.
But it dances there anyway, that light,

        & when the wind weaves waves into the water
it’s as if lit syllables quivered on the bricks.

        Then the sun sinks, swallowed by the dark. In that dark
more dust, always more dust
                              settles — sighs over everything.

There is no silence there, something always stirs
not far away. Small rags of noise.

Rilke said most people will know only a small corner of their room.

I read this long ago & still don’t know how to understand
that word only, do you?

                              Where are you? I think of you so often
and search for you in every face that comes between me & dust,
me & dusk — love, torn corner from this life.


An earlier version of “Room in Belgium” © Laure-Anne Bosselaar, appeared on the website “Poem-A-Day” of the Academy of American Poets, on May 30th 2013.

© Laure-Anne Bosselaar

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