1279
I stood and watched a ewe give birth today;
Easily, her lamb slipped into life,
A twin, standing pristine, while she lay
Breathing softly, blooded, but the strife
Of transference, the time before the knife,
Hung easily, as though a benign earth
Held close reality, a silent midwife
Cosseting a child against the dearth
Of gentle dignity, which would deny it worth.
O looked up but saw no shepherd was in sight
No human hand had guided this gestation.
A ewe's instinct, an afternoon of bright
Spring sunshine, a meadow's germination
Out ran any human intervention,
Where silent nature, seeded to ensure
Another life, another generation,
Led the ewe to wash the lamb she bore
Then slowly turn to graze, as she had done before.
Between the blood of birth and sudden death
How little time to contemplate and dream.
No sooner on your feet than your life's breath
Is scattered to the elements, the gleam
Of promise, as your mother washed you clean,
Will vanish even quicker than my own
And all the hopes of youth, which now seem
Everything, be flushed away unknown
Long before you or I have time to sense we've grown.
Brian Hick May 2013
©copyright Sally Hick 9.6.25