For Children Everywhere

Childhood

- Rainer Maria Rilke.

It would be good to give much thought, before
you try to find words for something so lost,
for those long childhood afternoons you knew
that vanished so completely –and why?

We’re still reminded–: sometimes by a rain,
but we can no longer say what it means;
life was never again so filled with meeting,
with reunion and with passing on

as back then, when nothing happened to us
except what happens to things and creatures:
we lived their world as something human,
and became filled to the brim with figures.

And became as lonely as a shepherd
and as overburdened by vast distances,
and summoned and stirred as from far away,
and slowly, like a long new thread,
introduced into that picture-sequence
where now having to go on bewilders us.

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8 thoughts on “For Children Everywhere

  1. Marya says:

    I just left you a comment, but my password was confused. Life takes me in so many directions. I have missed blogging and re-blogging with you. I see your posts and rather enjoy them when I read LIly and Lisa’s blogs. You are one wonderful soul.

    A timely entry on this day of days. We lived in Denver 8 years ago, for three years. (You do the math.) Columbine happened two years prior. (Do the math, again…I’m too tired.) A few years into our Denver stint, my hair stylist casually told me that he was under the cafeteria tables during the Columbine incident. The event had taken place five years prior. (Math again.) The chap was still numb. Still in shock. Telling me of being under the table during Columbine was as bland and mundane as giving someone a crock pot recipe for pot roast.

    Unforgettable.

  2. It goes fast – that’s why we should treasure everyday. I like this poem,
    it’s stirs up childhood magic.

  3. El Guapo says:

    That’s a beautiful poem that I’d never known before.
    Thank you.

  4. Brigitte says:

    Addie, this is so beautiful — thank you. And the little snowflakes falling on your site is soothing.

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