Poetry International Poetry International
Poem

Kerry Hardie

After My Father Died

After My Father Died

After My Father Died

The sky didn’t fall.

It stayed up there,
luminous, tattered with crows,
all through
January’s short days,
February’s short days.

Now the year
creeps towards March.
Damp days, grass springing.
The poplars’ bare branches
are fruited with starlings and thrushes.
The world is the body of God.
And we –
you, me, him, the starlings and thrushes –
we are all buried here,
mouths made of clay,
mouths filled with clay,
we are all buried here, singing.
Close

After My Father Died

The sky didn’t fall.

It stayed up there,
luminous, tattered with crows,
all through
January’s short days,
February’s short days.

Now the year
creeps towards March.
Damp days, grass springing.
The poplars’ bare branches
are fruited with starlings and thrushes.
The world is the body of God.
And we –
you, me, him, the starlings and thrushes –
we are all buried here,
mouths made of clay,
mouths filled with clay,
we are all buried here, singing.

After My Father Died

Sponsors
Gemeente Rotterdam
Nederlands Letterenfonds
Stichting Van Beuningen Peterich-fonds
Ludo Pieters Gastschrijver Fonds
Lira fonds
Partners
LantarenVenster – Verhalenhuis Belvédère