Probably Originally Written On a Business Trip in the mid-1990s.
The Poems that are Written on Hotel Pads
The poems that are written on hotel pads,
Or other scraps of paper,
Those that are written from a heart
driven to words
Are those at times written in pain –
As an open heart scarred with a knife.
She was a beautiful child,
Yet a woman of twenty plus years
A face flawless in grace, and
Round and wide and eager
For someone to touch
A face touched too often by the world.
A beautiful woman softly black,
Wide cheeks, Wide eyes,
Sitting against a storefront
On a busy Chicago Street.
She sang in high notes,
A child’s voice within her ripe womanly frame
– and her smile was a child’s,
Frozen with a fear so deep,
The child was even deeper still.
I saw the woman,
But heard a child,
Who long ago sang to her father, who
Caressed her face and gently said,
“Rest child, I’m here, no need to fear.”
Here sang a child who grew
Safe in the love of her father
Who danced and sang and sang and danced
Blessed by a father
Who came when she called.
And now upon the street she sang
The fear and the knowledge complete,
That not every time she sang
Could the man, her father come.
The woman sang the child’s fear,
A fear so deep in darkness –
It extinguished the light within her eyes.
She sang seeing,
And yet perhaps sweetly blind
To the awful reality
Of her complete aloneness.
The eyes saw not, save the visions
Of happier times
The mind divided now between the street
And the comfort of her father’s arms.
Why is she lost?
May God bless her, for now doing the best she knows how,
And gently echo within her ear and soul,
“Rest child, I’m here, no need to fear.”
I can picture her. This is beautiful.