Is there so much love in the world that we can afford to discriminate against any kind of love? – Father Mychal Judge
It's September.
 Life tilts towards equinox,
 ushers us towards nightfall.
 When girders fold like paper,
 when glass evaporates,
 and the road cracks its jaws,
 whose hands still clasp?
 What voice calling, faint,
 through choking dust
 finds the right ear?
 When it gets dark,
 consider what still holds –
 the way gum loves a bus seat,
 cat fur a funeral suit,
 how rhizomes weave
 blind webs to cradle earth.
 Against what odds do atoms
 conspire to keep us afloat
 in a world where
 the surfaces we trust
 betray us again and again?
 And against what odds
 do we meet here,
 with our thin skins
 and fragile bones,
 to ask each other this?
Commissioned by the Consulate General of Ireland in New York in honour of Father Mychal Judge and all first responders, on the 20th anniversary of 9/11









    