What is usual is not what is always. |
As sometimes, in old age, hearing comes back. |
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Footsteps resume their clipped edges, |
birds quiet for decades migrate back to the ear. |
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Where were they? By what route did they return? |
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A woman mute for years |
forms one perfect sentence before she dies. |
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The bitter young man tires; |
the aged one sitting now in his body is tender, |
his face carries no regret for his choices. |
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What is usual is not what is always, the day says again. |
It is all it can offer. |
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Not ungraspable hope, not the consolation of stories. |
Only the reminder that there is exception. |
|
Jane Hirshfield |