Black block letters proclaim this message on a church marquee. Yes. I search for prayers in every corner of this sphere. In the stairwell, my mother finds a praying mantis: a found poem, a found prayer. I think of grasshoppers and crickets, wings and strings. Of my music teacher and the indentation in her thumb from decades of cello devotion. I pray for my brain to preserve “Le cygne” eternally. I dream of performing that swan song, even though my cello lives in a state I haven’t been to in a year. When I wake, my fingers are flying across imaginary strings. Crickets strum their invocations in the backyard back home, where snapdragons still rise from prayer-tilled soil. As a child, I puppeteered their petal jaws. They spoke to the sky.
Anabella Schofield is a poet and children’s book author from California. She loves to craft wonder-filled works, especially in collaboration with her twin sister.
I feel bathed in light after setting my eyes and heart on this poem. Thank you.