Conrad Potter Aiken

Here you will find the Poem Miracles of poet Conrad Potter Aiken

Miracles

Twilight is spacious, near things in it seem far, 
And distant things seem near. 
Now in the green west hangs a yellow star. 
And now across old waters you may hear 
The profound gloom of bells among still trees, 
Like a rolling of huge boulders beneath seas. 

Silent as though in evening contemplation 
Weaves the bat under the gathering stars. 
Silent as dew, we seek new incarnation, 
Meditate new avatars. 
In a clear dusk like this 
Mary climbed up the hill to seek her son, 
To lower him down from the cross, and kiss 
The mauve wounds, every one. 

Men with wings 
In the dusk walked softly after her. 
She did not see them, but may have felt 
The winnowed air around her stir; 
She did not see them, but may have known 
Why her son's body was light as a little stone. 
She may have guessed that other hands were there 
Moving the watchful air. 

Now, unless persuaded by searching music 
Which suddenly opens the portals of the mind, 
We guess no angels, 
And are contented to be blind. 
Let us blow silver horns in the twilight, 
And lift our hearts to the yellow star in the green, 
To find perhaps, if, while the dew is rising, 
Clear things may not be seen.