Silver Seam: Lessons from Two Winters

Stanza 1  
I walked two winters with a quiet mouth,  
the days folded thin and softened at the edge.  
In hush I found a lantern, small and south,  
its scripture-light a slow and steady pledge.

Stanza 2  
I kept my voice like coins beneath my tongue,  
and watched the small cruelties lengthen, spread.  
Regret sits with me now at every sun:  
I should have spoken sooner, called for stead.

Stanza 3  
Silence taught me how loneliness tastes cold;  
it taught me how the world can look the same.  
Yet from that hush a different music rolled—  
a faith that bends to mercy, not to blame.
Stanza 4  
I learn to read the lines that once were dim,  
to let the verses light the path I tread.  
Each wound becomes a map, each lesson hymn;  
the hurt is soil where gentler wisdom’s fed.

Stanza 5  
I will not be the silence I once kept;  
I will be voice and hand before the fall.  
I gather courage now where sorrow slept,  
and offer warmth so others hear the call.

Stanza 6  
My sorrow has a silver seam that shows  
a thin bright thread that mends what once was torn.  
Through it I see the shape of what I owe:  
to stand, to speak, to shelter those forlorn.
Stanza 7  
So let this light be more than consolation—  
a promise shaped by scripture, slow and sure.  
I carry what I learned as proclamation,  
that mercy grows and makes the wounded pure.

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