The End of One Chapter Leading to the Beginning of the Next

digital painting from a photoThe road is long; the way grows faint,

But with a song and no complaint,

I’ll walk it more at peace and ease

If you will shore me up, and please:

Your love for me is deep, I know,

Yet sing me to sleep and let me go—photoA path unclear as nighttime draws

Me ever near its end, because

I’ve had full count of wealth and known

Such joys a fountain might be thrown

Beyond its rim in rushing streams,

So if grown dim, the way holds dreams

Enough to lead me happy hence,

And I’ll not plead in self-defense:

Though ever deep your love, I know,

Sing me to sleep and let me go—photoInto the night that never ends,

Where dark is light, and waiting friends

And quiet rest and graceful peace

Draw every guest to sweet release

How-e’er the strain of verses went,

With this refrain as Testament

And Will: Deep is your love, I know;

Sing me to sleep and

Let me go—

10 thoughts on “The End of One Chapter Leading to the Beginning of the Next

    • I’m sure it won’t surprise you to know that I was thinking of it in terms not only of death but of all of the losses that come along on the way towards it–that we have to come to terms with each as it happens and then let go gracefully. An odd sort of comfort and happiness, perhaps, but truly so for me all the same.

      • What your poem reminded me of, in part because you used a refrain, is the lines by Christina Rossetti:

        When I am dead, my dearest,
        Sing no sad songs for me;
        Plant thou no roses at my head,
        Nor shady cypress tree:
        Be the green grass above me
        With showers and dewdrops wet;
        And if thou wilt, remember,
        And if thou wilt, forget.

        I shall not see the shadows,
        I shall not feel the rain;
        I shall not hear the nightingale
        Sing on, as if in pain:
        And dreaming through the twilight
        That doth not rise nor set,
        Haply I may remember,
        And haply may forget.

    • As seriously fond of lullabies as I am, it’s no surprise that I should choose the form to soothe my sorrows over loss, I suppose, and remind me of the perpetual promise of some kind of morning to come.

    • . . . and you remind me of that amazing phenomenon I’ve grown to love when it strikes, in music or in life: overtones. The harmonic convergence, if you will, of well-fitted musical frequencies–or like-minded persons. 🙂

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