To a Horse, Dozing in the Sun
for Quinn
A cocoon of September sun
has settled over you.
Late summer’s pale amber
tucks itself around your haunches,
seals your sleep and burnishes the edges
of your eyes.
You do not hear my footsteps on the road,
do not see me standing at the fence, waiting for an opening,
a single spot into which I might slip
but for a moment.
Hay has loosed itself from a round bale and lays at your feet.
Still, you sleep.
Do you dream of ranges,
greener and deeper than this small place?
Have your eyes found the great frontiers that sprawl surely
across a stallion’s soul?
Tomorrow, my son will turn 25.
Soon the fragile surface of our cocoon will burst,
its intimate corners revealed, and memories that were cached
released.
Unleashed for a season, all will be large and possible,
an arena of grand prospects and new light.
And for a time, my son will travel the world
singularly, searching.
But know this:
I will be standing at the fence in the late summer sun,
waiting for that single spot—once closed around mother and son—
into which I might enter again.
With love, Mom