4 mins
THE GIFT
Kenneth Steven
POEM
That night they knew the foal would be born. They went down, she and he, with all the day done – the summer in heat and the night skies still, A blue like the shallows of a white shell cove and the bats about them with pattering wings. They went down, the quiet easy between them, till suddenly the whole moon broke from the hilltop – scarred and shining. They stopped to watch, faces illed as the moon rose up like some balloon and held there in the silent skies. Only then they went on to the hollow where the pear trees grew, and the scent rose sweet. There before them the mare and foal: he staggered to his feet, the strangeness of those stilts, and she mothering him, tender and slow, her eyes full of him, giving and giving her tongue to bring him complete to this world, to this life. And the girl and the man knelt down, for this was bigger than they understood.
This article appears in the August 2018 Issue of Life and Work
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This article appears in the August 2018 Issue of Life and Work