2304: Ekphrastic Poem

Boy and the Candle

he bends above the hour

as if darkness were something fragile
that could be opened by hand.

the candle is not large,

yet gathers the whole room
to itself —

a small white throat of fire.

and the boy, eyelid and cheekbone,

leans close enough
to borrow its breathing.

light climbs his face
like thought:

tender, uncertain, necessary.

around him,
the dark does not retreat.

it listens.

even silence has a pulse —

blue at the wick,
gold in his skin.


This is an ekphrastic poem written for dVerse Poets based on a painting by Gerard Sekoto, Boy and the Candle (1943). ©Misky 2006-2026.

4 responses to “2304: Ekphrastic Poem”

  1. A beautiful ekphrastic poem, Marilyn, that captures the delicate colours in the painting, especially in ‘blue at the wick, gold in his skin’. I love the thought of the boy leaning close enough to ‘borrow its breathing’ and the simile ‘light climbs his face like thought’.

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    1. Thank you, Kim! I do love writing an ekphrastic poem. 🥰

      Liked by 1 person

      1. You’re welcome, Marilyn. Me too.

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  2. I love your take on the painting you create the perfect atmosphere- this line is stunning

    ‘a small white throat of fire’ 🙌

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