Midnight Oil
by
Jill Crainshaw
A solitary light beaconed
from the distance
in
the wee hours just before
dawn
cracked open the darkness.
Burning the midnight oil.
The Creating One in the
beginning of beginnings
—sewing and
seaming, stitching
roots
into the earth, fashioning fine
spring
things to adorn bluebirds and bumblebees
daffodils
and dandelions, embroidering soulful
soil
with a smile and breathing into it a
sigh
of delight.
Burning the midnight oil.
A solitary light beaconed
from another window
in the wee hours just before
dawn cracked open the darkness.
dawn cracked open the darkness.
Burning the midnight oil.
She, created by the
Creating One
—whirring and
chirring, snipping and clipping,
weary-wise
fingers urging one more scrap
of
this bit of blue, that piece of red
beneath the ever-marching
needle-foot of that old Singer Sewer
Model 301A she kept coaxing and
needle-foot of that old Singer Sewer
Model 301A she kept coaxing and
cajoling
into action one more time
to
fashion an Easter dress or a pair
of
jeans or, one time, a man’s leisure suit.
Burning the midnight oil.
All other eyes in the
house, on the street, shuttered tight
while
she followed with single-hearted gaze
thread
that danced and dipped beneath the
material
surface, not noticing the
pale winter moon kissing her hand
as the clock
ticked on until she sat back
and embroidered
into a girl’s last minute
request a tired
sigh of delight.
Burning the midnight oil.
The light in that window
rests now, but vital
sacred strands
spool on at the unfurling edge
of a new crack
in a resurrecting dawn, fervent
fibers holding
us together
—held in our
hands—
you
and I piecing together hope from
torn
and tearing hearts, called by the
Creating
One
“Burn the midnight oil.”
* * * * *
Jill Crainshaw is a
professor at Wake Forest University School of Divinity in Winston-Salem, North
Carolina. She enjoys exploring how words give voice to unexpected ideas,
insights and visions.
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