If I followed dawn,
I’d rise in my slow climb
high above the sycamores,
high above the clouds,
the hills and valleys,
the mountains, lakes
and gleaming rivers rushing to the sea.
I’d follow the blue day
high above the groans of the dying,
the screams of lovers,
the cries of babies,
the horns and sirens
of crowded cities
where smoke and soot
soil the houses and tall buildings.
And following the day towards dusk,
past the moon and stars
I’d go where dawn
is rising once again
above the horizon
in the eastern sky
and there,
high above my life,
moving like a cloud,
my spirit glowing in the morning air,
I’d swallow my silence
and speak as if these were my final words,
my breath filling up my lungs
to sing my final song
as if, at last, I have the chance to say it all—
each word a cherished sound--
and I want my words
soaring through the sky
to touch the hearts below me,
praying I can love myself enough
to love the ugly, the evil, the killers,
the vultures and with my words
wake the innocence they were born with,
the goodness they’ve forgotten
and somehow open up the doors they’ve slammed behind,
and they would hear my words call them with forgiveness
to the quiet land where our gardens grow
and as I go with dawn across the sky,
looking from this place above the waking day
above the crowded cities,
the disappearing forests,
the lakes drying up,
I want my final words to heal their hearts,
and bring smiles and happy tears
believing, perhaps foolishly,
my final words can change the weather
of our world.
Oh, if only I could say these final words,
be heard and leave behind
one song that makes a difference,
I’d gladly leave the dawn to others.