Homage to Elizabeth Jennings

I’m sure had we met I would have overlooked you
as plain, ordinary; yet reading you now, twelve years after you died, is a
bit like the light you wrote about in Delay, which left the star
years ago, and glowed on a face below after it was spent.

You wrote of the road up Calvary, and how idle  onlookers may have joined in
the scorn heaped upon the Savior for a  thrill. Isn’t that the way it works;
two or three with a stake in the  matter,
the rest indifferent until caught up in the madness of  others.

Barred from hotel bars and restaurants because  you drank too much,
and perhaps because of a failure to attend to your person  and dress,
you won the prizes but seemed to disdain the people who gave  them,
mere merchants of art who saw the light but felt not the  fire.

They put you away in the mental home, where you
could see yourself as if from afar, still vibrating like an electric  coil.
In youth you’d gone to the circus, but now remembered only the bus ride there,
your mind making a better show than the one before your  eyes.

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