Carol Ann Duffy — Death and The Moon

(for Catherine Marcangeli) The moon is nearer than where death took you at the end of the old year. Cold as cash in the sky's dark pocket, its hard old face is gold as a mask tonight. I break the ice over the fish in my frozen pond, look up as the ghosts of my wordless breath reach for the stars. If I stood on the tip of my toes and stretched, I could touch the edge of the moon. I stooped at the lip of your open grave to gather a fistful of earth, hard rain, tough confetti, and tossed it down. It stuttered like morse on the wood over your eyes, your tongue, your soundless ears. Then as I slept my living sleep the ground gulped you, swallowed you whole, and though I was there when you died, in the red cave of your widow's unbearable cry, and measured the space between last words and silence, I cannot say where you are. Unreachable by prayer, even if poems are prayers. Unseeable in the air, even if souls are stars. I turn to the house, its windows tender with light, the moon, surely, only as far again as the roof. The goldfish are tongues in the water's mouth. The black night is huge, mute, and you are further forever than that.


Other Carol Ann Duffy songs:
all Carol Ann Duffy songs all songs from 2002