The Grammar of It

Let it rain. Let it
rain on the roof, you’re a fish
in the flow of now,

a child in the womb,
a man in prayer’s embrace.
It names the one way

we know the nothing
that pours through the opening
in the beginning,

the mystery of
which begins for us with the
grammar of ‘Let it.’

Author: Tom D'Evelyn

Tom D'Evelyn is a private editor and writing tutor in Cranston RI and, thanks to the web, across the US and in the UK. He can be reached at tom.develyn@comcast.net. D'Evelyn has a PhD in Comparative Literature from UC Berkeley. Before retiring he held positions at The Christian Science Monitor, Harvard University Press, Boston University and Brown University. He ran a literary agency for ten years, publishing books by Leonard Nathan and Arthur Quinn, among others. Before moving to Portland OR he was managing editor at Single Island Press, Portsmouth NH. He blogs at http://tdevelyn.com and other sites.

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