My Daughter Asks When Numbers End by Matthew J. Andrews
and I struggle to explain infinity,
that there is a road with no terminus
at either end, the concept so foreign
to the finitude that surrounds us:
the orange rotting in the fruit bowl,
the wilted flower, the dead cat
we found in the street on our walk.
Even the greatest of human minds,
the ones that calculate the dilation
of time when it is twisted and warped,
can only fathom that all things begin,
that all things must eventually end,
eternity a leap too far into imagination.
But she presses, so I do my best,
telling her that while everything falls
like leaves from a tired branch
after autumn casts its dreary twilight,
the numbers keep rising, one digit
at a time, like rungs of a ladder,
evidence that there is a place
in the sky to which we can climb.
Matthew J. Andrews is a private investigator and writer. He is the author of the chapbook I Close My Eyes and I Almost Remember, and his poetry has appeared in Rust + Moth, Pithead Chapel, and EcoTheo Review, among others. He can be contacted at matthewjandrews.com.