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The Wardrobe’s Best Dressed: Holy Sparks by Diana Woodcock


This selection, chosen by guest editor Kirsten Kowalewski, is from Holy Sparks by Diana Woodcock (Paraclete Press 2023).

Envisioning Mercy

Mercy shall not be for man alone,
but shall go beyond and embrace the whole world.

~ Swami Vivekananda

The elephant with severe arthritis
is forced to perform,
its owner blind to her pain,
deaf to her moans.

Feel for a human pulse
within the phenomenal world’s
workings. Stand
at the still point of darkness:

observe Earth hanging
by a thread. Gandhi once said
you can judge a society’s morality
by how it treats its animals.

Once, I swayed for nearly half a day
on an elephant’s shoulders.
Arrived sunset, Karen village
deep in Thailand’s jungle.

When the harness was removed,
and I saw the raw groove
rubbed by the friction of it against hide,
I cried. There were tears, as well,

in the old elephant’s eyes.
Lying awake that night
on the floor of my host’s hut,
I wondered what the elephant was up

to, tied just outside the door,
taken so many years before
from her family. Lonely,
               solitary.

If I could have,
I would have taken her
into my arms and rocked her
all night long, wiping the tears

from her eyes, the ooze
from her weeping side’s
wound. If she was up to it,
I would have stolen her away,

ushered her back to the scene
of the crime, searched high and low
till we could find her family.
Feel for a human pulse.

Stand at the still point
of darkness. Imagine
what lies beyond pain
and starkness. Dare ask

the question yet again,
What will you gain,
though you rule the world,
if you lose your soul?

Diana Woodcock has authored seven chapbooks and six poetry collections, most recently Heaven Underfoot (2022 Codhill Press Pauline Uchmanowicz Poetry Award), Holy Sparks (2020 Paraclete Press Poetry Award finalist), and Facing Aridity (2020 Prism Prize for Climate Literature finalist). A three-time Pushcart Prize nominee and Best of the Net nominee, she received the 2011 Vernice Quebodeaux Pathways Poetry Prize for Women for her debut collection, Swaying on the Elephant’s Shoulders. Currently teaching at VCUarts Qatar, she holds a PhD in Creative Writing from Lancaster University, where she researched poetry’s role in the search for an environmental ethic.


Kirsten Kowalewski has a master’s degree in library science and a specialist’s certificate in school media services for grades K-12. She reads widely. and is the editor for horror and dark fiction review website Monster Librarian. This is her third time curating for The Wardrobe.

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