I went on a bike ride at about sundown today with some friends. One of them pointed out the setting sun, which was a radiant pink that faded into peach and then into the ever-slowly darkening sky. I have paid attention to at least 20 sunsets in my life, and yet, it is breathtaking every time. Why? C. S. Lewis would argue, I think, that the longing one feels is actually part of a deeper longing for something else, that is, heaven. This is why even though a sunset happens every day, it still feels like a holiday, or an anniversary, or a surprise. If an everyday sunset can affect us like it does, and is only a taste… well then…
The sun, with rosy cheeks,
said goodnight,
and peeked one last time
over the horizon.
His countenance was soft,
yet fiery, and I could feel
his affectionate heat
disintegrating.
But I was not sad.
It made me long
for his sudden warmth that appears
in the morning, or unexpectedly,
like leaving shadows,
like weaving him into a window,
for behind the curtain, he is blind
to your interiors.
I like this but you said 20 like that was alot of sunset gazing! Thats not even one per year i guess I need to point out the sun more
ReplyDeleteI meant there is only 20 or so that I have really looked at. silly.
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