With you as my eyes I have seen
With you as my hands I have felt
With you as my wings I have flown
With you as my shelter I have hidden
With you as my sun I shone
With you as my thunder I flashed
I fought with you as my sword
I believed with you as my scripture
You were the cup from which I drank
The scale in which I trusted
The riverbank where I settled
The garden that kept me there
Here you laid me down
When you breathed out I breathed in the life you left
and your eyes opened a passage
with a quieted body I entered the forest path
and to me appeared life in full, debarked
And beyond the forest a burning horizon spanned across
There was a peace I found in your breath
Yes, there was a peace I found in your breath
And I rested my hands on your pain and your thoughts
and felt them enter my strong body and heart
which I made refuges for your pain and your thoughts
Yes, you were the cloud and I were the soil
and my love was the dew that rose in the morning and evening,
and yours the rain that fell, day and night
Yes, you were the wax and I were the wick
And your love was the blue flame burning
and mine the yellow embracing it, even when wind shaken
Yes, you were the tree and I were the seed
and our love the play of light
which guided our growth
and echoed our movements in those of each other
And yes, we created now and then destroyed again
But do clouds, too, not create and destroy with their rain?
Do flames, too, not create and destroy when it blows?
Do trees, too, not create and destroy in their growth?
Our creation and destruction reflects not how we were, now and then
but the potency of what we could have been, always
Yes, we created and destroyed
How many long for this power?
To rain down on the soil that cradles the child tree?
But then, out of the dew that forms, cast a thunder and burn it to ashes?
Only to allow it to rise out of its dying bed?
And, after all, guide its growth and support its movements with a play of light?
If you want love,
see destruction precede creation
If you do not want love,
see destruction succeed creation
For does love not settle in the fragile peace that follows war?
Does it not sail in spring after the blistering winter?
Does love not resonate in the final farewell?
Be the light in that dark of war
the warmth in that cold of night
the sound in that mournful silence
Be even as a cloud that sheds itself to form a river
as a tree that offers itself to the birds
as a flame that burns to stay alive
For destruction is the mother of creation
and, in this way, is creation
Knowing of this is the peace I found in your breath
And why my strong body and heart became refuges for your pain and thoughts
And why I watched the horizon burn quietly
Yes, this is the peace I found in your breath
And I think of this when the wind blows,
There at the garden where you laid me down