
If I were a crystal,
I might be a citrine mushroom,
holding rain from my face,
or a stone bowl pebbled with malachite
that collects the rain,
but more likely I’d lift my
crystalline arms in surrender
because from earth we came
and to earth we return, yet
my heart rings like struck
crystal as I remember
too many gone too soon.
Copyright 2025 Brenda Davis Harsham
Notes: So much news is sad or baffling, but most especially the campers lost to the Gaudalupe River in Texas. My sympathies to the families, the neighbors, and the communities. I started a different poem for this photograph from the National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., but sometimes poems take us to places we don’t expect.
In a Station of the Metro
by Ezra Pound
The apparition of these faces in the crowd;
Petals on a wet, black bough.
And a quote:
“I think all writing is a disease. You can’t stop it.”
―
Lovely.
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So sad and beautiful and poems take us on paths we often don’t expect but they have a mind of their own.
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As they should. Or they wouldn’t be poems.
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Beautiful…so thought-provoking…smiling, trying not to fall into melancholy.
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It’s easy to spiral, but it’s so empowering to feel empathy and gratitude. I’m grateful to you for reading and wish you the very best.
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Beautiful poem and lovely crystal arrangement.
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We have to thank the Smithsonian and the earth for the crystal. 🙂
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