The Missing PageA Poem by Paris HladThe poem that follows is about the last words
I may ever speak to my beloved mother. I was many miles away, and the attending
nurse held a cell phone to her ear. I am told that she showed some awareness of
my voice, but there is no way of knowing whether she understood what was said
to her or who was saying it. She made no effort to speak, and her eyes remained
fixed on a slowly turning ceiling fan.
As I reflected on that experience, it occurred
to me that I was not trying to recall the last moments I spent in conference
with a loved one, but a soliloquy that is lost in the deepest part of my
sorrow. In brief, I recall telling her that everything good was on the other
side and that she had succeeded as a person, as a wife and mother, and as a
child of God. But I spoke to her for at least thirty minutes and said many
things that I no longer remember.
The Missing Page: Words That Dwell With the Dead
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I did not know if you could hear The words I muttered in your ear, As you were taken with the light That fell upon the tears of night
I only know that things were said That freed a soul to join the dead, Where all are kept behind a door With good and ill forevermore
But I am lost, as I have aged And cannot find a missing page That I would read again for you If you could hear and I could do.
Oh, how it seemed as if I stood Upon a step of almond wood; And in a flood of faith, so pure, Poured all I love into your ear
I think I said that you were free To be at peace and not with me; I think I said that I would stay Until our book is put away
I did not know if you could hear The words I muttered in your ear; I only know that things were said That dwell forever with the dead. © 2023 Paris Hlad |
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Added on August 2, 2023 Last Updated on August 2, 2023 AuthorParis HladSouthport, NC, United States Minor Outlying IslandsAboutI am a 70-year-old retired New York state high school English teacher, living in Southport, NC. more..Writing
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