A Body of Love

Since I was born
and now I am young,
I have never seen the ant
drag down the sky,
nor the elephant headbutt Heaven
though it learns to fly.
I have never seen the fly
perch on the stars,
or the cricket lights dim the moon.

But dewdrops stalk the air,
into withholding its fury,
perch on leaves of grass,
fall on the boughs of trees,
drop tenderly on the ground,
and cloud the sky with love;
I have seen the lavishing of time
caress the dew’s dire death
into lingering a moment longer.

Since I was born
and now I am old,
I have never seen the faithful
taken to the cleaners;
the soul may die,
the spirit may go through hell,
though the elephant shoves the sky
with hooves and horns,
a body of love is waiting.

There will be no fresh hell,
like music in the grave,
or the sun leaving the rubble
untouched, uncomforted;
there will be no chandeliers
spread out for mosquitoes to sleep
and suck the blood of babies,
nothing like splashing pebbled mud
against us who stew in wait.

But there will be roses in the attic,
dandelions in the snow;
there will be tulips on the moon
where the lips of the stars
wait to sip their juices.
The silent smiles of the lilies
will drown the groans of Hell,
and every lurking monster in the lake
will no longer swim ashore.

 

 



Click here to read Jonathan Chibuike Ukah on the origin of the poem.

Image by Marcel Smits on unsplash.com, licensed under CC 2.0.

Jonathan Chibuike Ukah:

The title of the poem is “A Body of Love”. I use this to make reference to the love Christ has for those who put their faith and trust in Him. As a Christian, I make use of Christian motifs in my poetry. Even church music plays a great role in my poems. For instance, the opening lines of the poem, Since I was Born…is a line in a praise and worship song which my church choir often sings during services. The lines go like this:

Since I was born, and now I’m getting old,

I have never seen the Lord changeth

It’s a reference to the permanent love of God for us irrespective of our shortcomings. Everything may change, but the love of God does not change. This is the inspiration behind the poem and it’s what the poem is about.

Jonathan Chibuike Ukah
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