God of Song

My son listens into daylight,
head tilted, eyes tuned 
past the range of  the seen.

What he seeks to see is 
vibratory. A butterfly’s itch. 
The pitch at which a mind

is freed to dart, spark, break
into flight. His gaze rakes space. 
What does his ear see? Beads 

of  breath rising from the body 
of a bee. A whiff of rain batting 
a new green leaf. I watch him— 

tall as a man with cheeks 
soft as plums—coax music 
from pure air: trash bins 

dragged across pavement. 
An ant staggering under 
the weight of a crumb. I’ve 

watched him birth a tune,
held in that rite like a moth
in porchlight. Dispeller

of sorrow. Flame maker at
the holy pyre. All that repeats—
though it might tear out from 

the breast and ravage the air 
on its way to the timid heart in its 
hollow lair—all that repeats 

is sweet. Sand in honey. Gold 
doused with blood. Birth pains 
obeying love’s pulse and tug. 

My water broke weeks early
to his body needing out. Knees 
drawn, and that first long note—

All that repeats and repeats 
to survive. Heart tone. Hunger 
yawp. Fear handled by want 

and love. All that repeats 
and repeats. All that repeats— 
let it be sweet? 

Source: Poetry (May 2026)