To Someday Whisper
by Mitchell Nobis
Earthworms the color of oil spills
carry my prayers through tunnels—
some wild
will survive.
My prayers ride wild through a darkness
that has no word, has no light by
which to
contrast itself,
like the dark between galaxies, no definition
without what it’s not. Sinew & mass, sleep.
The deep
earthworm world
somewhere far under the pounding thud
we churn and wrench and build up here.
A wild without
and within.
My prayers slide through soil, fill on minerals & microbes,
alive. Some turn mulch but some of my prayers
huddle into masses,
turn their
tomb into a chrysalis—carry the formless dreams
of what we never became.
The others
I pray
May my prayers tunnel deep & deeper;
may my prayers seep into boulders
buried & left
behind by
glaciers that gouged this land when it
was crumpled together and carved.
My prayers
wait until
glaciers come back for them again.
My prayers wait
for glaciers
after Time.
My prayers wait
to someday slip upward
through the tunnels,
to someday see light again,
to someday whisper
Thank you. I’m sorry. It was beautiful. Thank you.
Mitchell Nobis is a writer and K-12 teacher in Metro Detroit. His poetry has been nominated for things by Whale Road Review, Nurture Literary, and Exposition Review. His collection Beginning to Sense is forthcoming from ELJ Editions (2025). He facilitates the Teachers as Poets group for the National Writing Project, hosts the Wednesday Night Sessions reading series, and co-founded the NAWP reading series. Find him at @MitchNobis (various platforms) or mitchnobis.com.