Mary Overheard in Conversation with Herself by Lesley-Anne Evans

I do not say this swaddling blanket.

I say remember the smell of those shepherds

with their eyes as big as moons.

I do not say this chisel.

I say it seems like yesterday

when you helped me know 

the weight a cornerstone must bear. 

I do not say this burial shroud. I ask how 

is it possible we are each so capable

of cruelty? It has never been 

about what I wrap and carry from one tent 

to the next. I fear

I will forget your essence. When I hold 

your blanket, chisel, shroud 

in the bowl of my hands, each is a scroll 

unfurling with stories. I sense your presence—

as I did when I lost and found you 

in the temple—my heart 

like knotweed in the wadis, 

your voice, the coming of rain.

 

Lesley-Anne Evans' poetry has been commissioned and performed as opera, cantata, and is published widely in periodicals, including CV-2, The Antigonish Review, Barren Magazine, Presence Journal, and Faith Today. Her work is also awarded. Lesley-Anne's debut poetry collection, Mute Swan, Poems for Maria Queen of the World, was published by the St. Thomas Poetry Series (Toronto) in 2021. She lives a quiet life at Feeny Wood, with her partner and two dogs, in the company of wild things.  https://laevans.ca/  https://www.feenywood.ca/

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