Based on a copper enamel
         by Skip Allen

Perhaps there was a rug
There once, a hooked one
Originally owned by someone
Else’s aunt. If so, it has been
Transported, and is floating light-
Years away—for now, if you looked,
You would only see a distant
Galaxy or two, whirling in the middle
Of a smallish oval void, just
There, where the cat was accustomed
To curl on winter nights.

By luck, there is no one at home.
They had just gone out when it came—
And a good thing, too. Who knows
what might have gone on
If the children had been around?
But matters are perfectly
Safe as they stand just now.
Only an old straight chair is anywhere
Near it—not too great a loss
Should the thing get bigger suddenly
And let more stars burn through.

That is enough for a life to do. But a poem
Is so much less—a poem is even smaller
Than a fraction of a breath, than a momentary gleam
Of sunlight on water, than a leaf that falls deep
In a forest, at night, when no one is there to see.
In fact, these words I offer you now are so miniscule
That, unless you are scanning the air around you every
          moment
With the most sensitive instruments, you will never know
What they are. They will shoot right by you, penetrate the
          earth
Like cosmic rays, and vanish toward a star.
But whether you know it or not, they are passing through
Your bones this very instant—they are striking the marrow
Where your clear red blood bubbles up like water from a
          spring—
They are bursting into your groin, they are altering the faces
Of your unborn children, changing the color of their hair—
But that is no miracle. Everything does that.
Every heart that beats, every eye that flickers open
Anywhere, illuminates us all like X-rays, leaving
Photographs of our insides glittering in the twilight.