Where There Is Music
Artwork by Emiliano del Valle, age 15, Texas
If there is light, filtering through the snowy branches,
Then surely there is music. Follow it through to the awning.
Everything here has been waiting for you since your ancestors
Broke the quiet dawn over fire, revealing that element
That makes things heavy in the presence of light;
Because where there are people, float barley and laughter,
The surety of one’s hand in yours, elbows on concrete floors,
The glow of lanterns on the river and fried sweetness on the flame,
A noose forgotten in a basket, a couple of shackles laying broken,
A shadow pushed back by the sheer weight of the human condition.
Some people are born whole. Others, lifting out of shadow,
Tip chin on string, pressing lips to brass, voices laid on air,
Breathe in winter and sing out spring.
Some things must be made. Others, are lying in wait
In the space between octaves, hidden in the chords.
If it is not the light, then it is the darkness,
Thick on the lungs and stifling the throat.
Even in the gloaming, on the cusp of twilight,
Teetering between dusk and gold, I can find my way
To my voice, grasping blindly for what was mine before I knew name and reason.
Our faces, opening up in the cataclysm of dim and din,
Are the only real deciding factor for music,
Because there is a blanket of snow sparkling with the promise of spring,
And if that isn’t music, then surely that’s the same as freedom,
And if this isn’t light, then surely it’s the path towards it.
Cléa-Rose Deschanel-Pathman is a 15-year-old French-Sri Lankan student from Houston, Texas. You can find her playing the trumpet in jazz band or debating in a Model United Nations conference — or, better yet, playing with her cats and listening to Hozier. With a love for writing from a young age, short stories and poems and unfinished books covering her Google drive from digital head to toe, you would have better luck finding her typing down her latest inspiration.