Barry Casey

Evensong by Barry Casey


That which is beyond our reach

remains with us. And do we hold

enough memories to feed ourselves

after we are alone, 

so alone?

I do not see the world as the crow flies, 

but as the dog sniffs: 

first here, then there, and after, 

over there. 

Suffering takes the shape of the vessel,

forms itself to fill the constant spaces

to the edges,

each breath delivered up the line,

like coal cars rocking slowly 

to the surface. 

Your wasted body, slumped

and folded against itself,

will rise — I know it — above this,

and the you, which suffered for no reason,

we will draw around us

as the light fades.

Tonight, once more I send a prayer out

upon the water 

like a folded paper boat

and wonder how long 

it can remain afloat.


Barry Casey is the author of Wandering, Not Lost, a collection of essays published by Wipf and Stock (2019). His recent work has appeared in Brevity, Faculty Focus, Detroit Lit Mag, Humans of the World, Lighthouse Weekly, Mountain Views, Patheos, Pensive Journal, Rockvale Review, Spectrum Magazine, The Dewdrop, and The Purpled Nail. He writes from Burtonsville, Maryland.