February 16, 2010
Tuesday Poem
How to Photograph the HeartYou remember how the lens squeezed
unimportant details into stillness:
the essential trail of rain down glass,
the plummet of autumn dead leaves,
your grandfather's last blink when
the breath moved on.
Your startled hands compressed
the shutter when you realized: this is it,
this is the last movement he will take
away from the silent fall of morphine,
beyond the soft gasp of the nurse,
past the sick, slow thud of your heart
moving in the luminous silence.
by Christine Klocek-Lim
from How to Photograph the Heart;
The Lives You Touch Publications, 2009
Posted by Jim Culleny at 08:20 AM | Permalink






















Comments
Lovely! Thanks, Jim.
Posted by: Abbas Raza | Feb 16, 2010 9:17:48 AM
Thank you for posting my poem Jim!
Posted by: Christine | Feb 16, 2010 10:59:57 AM
Poignant. Thanks.
Posted by: Norman Costa | Feb 16, 2010 11:28:36 AM
Beautiful, beautiful.
-H
Posted by: -H | Feb 16, 2010 11:34:02 AM
Thank you Christine, for capturing such a moment. So sad for remembering that light-filled room, and us, and my own father. Grateful to you for making me remember.
Posted by: Carlos | Feb 16, 2010 12:00:04 PM
Beautiful poem. Very moving. Jim, thanks for posting such marvelous poems.
Posted by: Shehla Anjum | Feb 16, 2010 4:49:56 PM
Thanks for reading and all your kinds words about my poem.
Posted by: Christine | Feb 17, 2010 2:49:23 PM
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