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Conjuring Marble into Cloud
Grand-Mère en Ciel
after ‘Young Girl in Pursuit’ (or ‘Jeune Fille en Marche’) by Marc Chagall, 1927-28
The glitter of this memory
is sticky. As I lean moonward,
its pixels thicken into substance,
each rising limb dreamriding until it
finds indigo foothold.
Stars silverprickle my back,
brightwiring me
deeper into the firmament.
Pearls orbit my neck. I remember:
I was her sun.
I pull her in my wake,
barefoot, threshing flames of barley,
and she wings my hair with a fan of lavender,
calming me
in its smoky powder.
Her cane curls warm in my hand,
a membrane of soul veiling my palm,
propelling me,
a white comet on a black run,
to the pinnacle of the glowing space
from where she watches me,
so that we can see the light
of each other
across the emptiness,
knowing that energy
never dies.

This poem was published at 'After Poetry',
curated by Mark Antony Owen
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