Sunset Phases
By Margarita Filar
This work was published in the Fall 2015 issue of The Lost Country. You may purchase a copy of this issue from us or, if you prefer, from Amazon.
I. Grace
In streams of liquid light
        the low sun pours its glory through the clouds:
        first in bright white rays
        seeming just ahead,
        then streaming in bright cascades that split
        the silken shadowed clouds,
        fringing them with golden fire,
        brightening them with celestial glow.
        From the vast heavens above
        pour down the beauteous rays
        in three great fountains,
        defying the gathered clouds in the Kansas sky,
        while we pass on
        with a steady pace—
        on to our next destination.
        Cannot the weary traveler
        pause on his grinding way
        to see and wonder at
        the rivers of golden light?
        But most pass on,
        and we, a happy few,
        are left to gaze and drink the lovely draught,
        in memory for others,
        till time and it pass on.
II. Death
Huge and red, like an agéd sun,
        sets the fiery phoenix of the day.
        Low and long it hangs
        over the wide horizon,
        while white cotton clouds with gentle touch
        wipe its swollen, bloody face.
        Shedding a rosy light
        he leaves his traces there
        on their soft edges.
        Lower sinks the sun,
        drenched with crimson,
        through a creamy sea of clouds
        all splashed with pink,
        and edged with gold-vermillion,
        till only a thin edge of the deep red sphere
        is left, glowing,
        like a bright ruby among a thousand pearls.
        Then,
        it is gone.
III. Memory
Where last beneath the cloudy billows
        sank the departing sun,
        remains a rosy glow
        spreading and slowly flowing
        over the azure sky,
        that,
        like glistening scales on a dragon’s back,
        or light-tipped feathers on goshawks’ wings,
        is all mottled and streaked with clouds.
        There, where the rose-red glow is brightest,
        strongest,
        near its source,
        the sky is etched,
        scratched with streaks of crimson,
        as if some god had used it for a slate,
        and written there but one word:
            if.
        The eternal, everlasting if,
        that cries out down the ages till the end:
        if you have hope indeed,
        then you will see me come again.