To Burn with Grace
On living brightly, giving freely, and fading without fear.

The flame speaks to me tonight in a language
older than words, older than the wind
that brought the first spark to the first darkness.
I sit before it as one sits before a teacher
whose final lesson is silence.
See how it dances, this small sun
I have kindled with my own hands.
It does not ask to burn,
nor does it apologize for the ash it makes
of all I offer. Such is the nature
of what is true and beautiful.
The wood I gathered in summer
when the world was green and endless,
now surrenders itself, each log
becoming light, becoming warmth,
becoming memory. Nothing is lost
that transforms itself so willingly.
The rooms grow warm
from this ancient gift. Soon I will leave
this house where I have lived
my small, precious days. Tomorrow
I will journey to a place where fires
are not needed, or perhaps where
different fires burn.
But tonight belongs to this flame alone.
I have learned from fire what my books
could not teach me. That ending
and beginning are but two names
for the same doorway. That what seems
to perish is only changing form,
as the river changes to cloud,
as cloud becomes rain, as rain
returns again to the river.
The flame grows smaller now.
It does not rage against its fading.
It burns with the same quiet dignity
it held when it blazed highest.
This, too, is a kind of wisdom.
I think of all the fires that came before,
stretching back through generations,
each one tended by hands that knew,
as I know now, that fire is a bridge
between earth and sky, between
what we hold and what we must release.
The last ember glows like a jewel
in the gathering dark. I do not mourn it.
How can I mourn what has given
its entire self to me, asking nothing
but wood and air and the chance
to illuminate one small room
on one cold night?
Let it go gently into ash.
Let the ash become soil.
Let the soil cradle new seeds.
This is the way of things.
This has always been the way.
The flame gutters, grows thin as a thread,
then thinner still. And in that final moment,
just before it disappears entirely,
I see what fire has always been trying to tell us.
That we are here to burn brightly,
to give our warmth freely,
and when our time comes to fade,
to do so with grace,
knowing we have lit the darkness
as we were meant to do.
The hearth grows cold.
The room grows still.
But somewhere in the ashes,
warmth remembers itself,
waiting for morning.
About the Creator
Tim Carmichael
Tim is an Appalachian poet and cookbook author. He writes about rural life, family, and the places he grew up around. His poetry and essays have appeared in Bloodroot and Coal Dust, his latest book.



Comments (4)
Reading through some of the entries for the challenge- this is one that made me stop to read more after the first lines.
So majestic, comforting & uplifting! Go Tim! 💪🏾🙌🏾🥳
I feel this is about understanding, or the realization of one self. A discovery of sorts. Somehow this brings hope to those that feel down or depressed. I know poetry speaks to each person differently, but this is how I see it I like the message and those last lines speak volumes.
Every line here made me stop and feel something real — that’s rare these days. 🌙