NEW YEAR'S EVE ON THE MOON

You've got telescopes. You can see more
than the Great Wall of China. You can measure
the moving coastlines like someone on a train

watching the landscape gliding by, imagining
themselves a tireless runner, leaping hedges,
trees and houses, or in your case, oceans,

continents. The night reveals much more,
like turning a light on, like x-ray. You can choose
a city to focus on. It's almost New Year's Day

or it's already been for hours. For one whole day
you can watch the flare of fireworks in the darkness
as cities come alight and, in the distance,

the brighter sway of sunlight sweeping in
over the horizon. On the moon who knows
what time it is, what day or year or month.

What's to celebrate. What slow tides are moved
by the earth in all those dried up seas.


Comments

Ciarán Parkes's picture
Thanks a lot Regina, glad you liked it. New Year's Eve can certainly be both exhilarating and sad. I liked the quiet beauty of your elegy in this week's competition. I love how celebratory it is, especially liked the line: 'a place for the sparrows' songs'.

Ciarán

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