April 22 Word of the Day: Jerusalem
City of my childhood
prayerbook
Acres retold, promise unseen
Temples pool sides stone
golden gates
I have not a rhyme for those
Promises retold, aches unseen
Ancient columns of politics.
I have not a rhyme for those
Saints who deal with all the
damage
Modern columns of politics,
There aren’t the words to
express that.
Saints have acts for all the
damage
Morning after to start again,
There aren’t the words to
express this.
Here are some: light, home,
food, warmth, rest
Mornings after. To start
again
Is enough to hope for in this
world.
Here are some lights, homes,
food, warmth, rest
Ample on hill lovely afar
Quite enough to lose in this
world.
Enough to sing when they’re
quite gone.
Ample on hill lovely afar
All languages reiterate
Enough to sing when almost
gone,
Adults understood at best in
part.
Languages reiterate
The city of my childhood
prayerbook,
Adults understand at best in
part
Temples pool sides stone
golden gates.
[August 2020 & April 2026]
Images: Iso-mandala No. 85 – Jerusalem (September
2020). In online poetry group during lockdown, as an exercise I invited members
to write a poem about a city that they currently could not visit: “The poem can
go anywhere. It can be descriptive. Memories may fill the poem. Longing to
return is possibly at work. By imagining the city then and now and even in the
future, you play with one of poetry’s strongest devices, which is tense. The
reader is left with a strong sense of the city.” I chose the pantoum and wrote
three poems for the group (Florence, Jerusalem, Tokyo) in August 2020, which
are released here, with little alteration, in April 2026.


