The Ship Is Always Leaving
Before you disappeared

I keep a sea inside the room
as if grief can be framed,
as if a round window can hold what would not stay.
The ship is always leaving.
That is the first truth.
Its pale sails are full
with a purpose I was never given,
its dark body lifted and lowered
by water that does not care
how long I stand here watching.
It moves toward the bright wound in the sky,
toward that burning place where the clouds open
and everything looks almost forgiven.
But not me.
I am here among the books, the shut pages,
the lamp with its small obedient light,
the pencil left waiting as though I might still have words
that could change the weather.
Foam climbs the wooden edge
like memory refusing its boundary.
The waves throw themselves forward again and again,
white with wanting, white with breaking.
I know something about that.
I know how a heart can keep returning
to the same ruined shore,
dragging its salt behind it.
Even the room feels temporary.
The lantern glows like a tired promise.
The open window at the right shows only more distance,
another slant of silence, another place I cannot follow.
I tell myself I am safe here, inside wood, paper, brass,
inside this careful little world.
But the sea keeps reaching.
The ship keeps going.
And the sun, indifferent and beautiful,
hangs over everything like the last thing you said
before you disappeared into a brightness I could not survive.
About the Creator
Diane Foster
I’m a professional writer, proofreader, and all-round online entrepreneur, UK. I’m married to a rock star who had his long-awaited liver transplant in August 2025.
When not working, you’ll find me with a glass of wine, immersed in poetry.



Comments
There are no comments for this story
Be the first to respond and start the conversation.