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The Gift
I am not a wordsmith’s daughter.
 
 I was not born in breathless song, or wrapped
 in a blanket of words, soothing my new soul.
 
 I was born in daylight, with no storm in sight,
 no beautiful prophecy. A man did not
 stand by my cradle and whisper beautiful phrases
 in my ear.
 And I did not soak them up, was not fed by their
 richness and liveliness.
 
 I spent my days in solitude, mixing
 words with play and laughing as they created
 nonsense after nonsense.
 
 No beauty was in them,
 
 because I was not a wordsmith’s daughter.
 
 I did not breath out words that leapt
 across space and time, or words that
 burned and tore at the heart. I could not place them down
 so they could dance and fly.
 
 I had to coax them gently,
 encouraging them on, and building the flames
 That pushed them forward, forward
 
 always forward.
 
 I was not a wordsmith’s daughter, but I became
 a mother to words.
 
 Fed them bits of me, and let them sleep until
 I placed them on inkwhite paper, where I blew gently
 on their flames, turned them ’round, and watched them
 open up to the new world.
 
 because there was never any gift, never a beautiful
 spell placed on a tiny newborn child.
 There were never prophecies that spoke of greatness, no
 Tales of those who spun words as easily as breathing.
 
 There was never a wordsmith’s daughter,
 no beautiful gift,
 
 but there was always the story
 of a girl who fell in love
 
 with words on pages,
 
 and dreams in her mind,
 
 with stories never told . . .
 
  
 
 and so, she began to
 write.

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