Silver Filigree Travers Charron Before the day unbuttons its sky,while morning’s breath still clings to the grass, I find it—a single web,threaded between two branches, a silver filigreetrembling in dew.
Each strand,so thin I dare not blink, holdsthe soft breath of the waking earth.No grand cathedral could matchthis tender architecture—woven by instinct,lit by grace,enduring the weight of a single drop without breaking.
I stop,breath caught, knowing I am the first to come this way.The trail is laced shut,a gate spun in secret hours.
I hesitate,a clumsy giant before a sacred thing.For a moment,I stand—small, unworthy—aching to preserve what I must undo.
“I’m sorry,”I whisper,before the spell is torn.
Behind me,the broken strands sway,gathering dew like tears,and the mute earth folds over the wound.
The web is gone,but the reverence remains—clinging to my skinlike mist,like memory
More from Travers Charron ↓
- @traverscharron on Substack
- His tanka and haiku collection, Glass Shadows, is available now.
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