Poem
Kerry Hardie
After My Father Died
After My Father Died
After My Father Died
The sky didn’t fall.It stayed up there,
luminous, tattered with crows,
all through
January’s short days,
February’s short days.
Now the year
creeps towards March.
Damp days, grass springing.
The poplars’ bare branches
are fruited with starlings and thrushes.
The world is the body of God.
And we –
you, me, him, the starlings and thrushes –
we are all buried here,
mouths made of clay,
mouths filled with clay,
we are all buried here, singing.
© 2003, Kerry Hardie
From: The Sky Didn\'t Fall
Publisher: The Gallery Press, Oldcastle
From: The Sky Didn\'t Fall
Publisher: The Gallery Press, Oldcastle
Poems
Poems of Kerry Hardie
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After My Father Died
The sky didn’t fall.It stayed up there,
luminous, tattered with crows,
all through
January’s short days,
February’s short days.
Now the year
creeps towards March.
Damp days, grass springing.
The poplars’ bare branches
are fruited with starlings and thrushes.
The world is the body of God.
And we –
you, me, him, the starlings and thrushes –
we are all buried here,
mouths made of clay,
mouths filled with clay,
we are all buried here, singing.
From: The Sky Didn\'t Fall
After My Father Died
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