Nahnu Fee Rawdati & Poem: Shy Hemlocks Brash Niagaras
The song, Nahnu fee Rawdati, from the Diwan of Shaykh ibn al-Habib, raheemahullah, s…
When we look at death’s door it
looks like nothing at all
Blank and featureless
a serious expression on a featureless
face that could be gazing across
empty desert or a crowded room
at a dark frail flower limp on its
stem or a king propped up on his
ermine pillows surrounded by wives and viziers
or at a wall as blank as itself
in front of unfathomable space
full of indifferent planetary matter
whirling to its own music
a camel sleeping by a tent-flap
waiting to be mounted for a month’s trek
a plane smoothly gliding twelve hours homeward
a mortally sick pre-teen boisterously
chatting with ten best-friend schoolmates
a lone spider waiting too long on an
unprofitable web in a dusty under-populated
corner
This side of the door is the
only side of the door we can see
Centuries pass through the moment
and it remains the only
side we can see though before it in its
shady light and unambiguous atmosphere
huge ceremonies take place
and backwards celebrations with the
celebrants holding their breath
Oh ocean behind the door of true pure
silence
Ocean behind death’s door in us of true pure silence
by the shore of the living and most alive
daily ocean of silence
none of us alone for an instant
from your thralldom’s kingdom
have mercy on the little ones and the
afraid
You are God’s door in your
starry radiance
standing with no walls in
emptiness of space
each creature eyeing you with
fond hope and expectation
knowing the annals of your
complicated mythologies and your direct
irrefutable invitations
So many symphonies written to
woo you
so many choirs written to call up your
most sympathetic angels to soften the blow
so many doors for each one of us
erected in the stir and softness of
each one’s cosmos with their exact
particulars and names whispered or said out loud
God King of all this
King and Master of our allotted breaths
unmistakable recognition as the
door squeaks open a tiniest crack
and one sharp ray of Your Light pours out
even should we live many decades more
in perfect or in dubious health
our own bodies Your
death door behind which our
organs play their parts to the
best of their energies and according to
Your decree’s calculated speed
a lightning flash splatter shock above a
sleeping town
the irritable nose twitch on a
deeply hibernating bear
the first smile not from intestinal gas
on a new baby’s face
fairy lights over a meadow
bird flocks gathering in a spring
birdbath ten or twenty at a
time
time suddenly at the end of its
tether with no length left
Let the blast of Your sweet
Mercy never subside on all of us
one creature at a time
and all of us together
at once
Death’s door’s
silent smart momentary
ding dong bell
tart dewdrop
on our silent tongues
All’s well
3/25/14 (from The Sweet Enigma of it All)