Beyond the Bars of Darkness: Finding Freedom in the Night Sky
Sometimes, it’s not sleep we seek when the day ends—it’s connection, truth, and the quiet breaking of invisible chains.
When Day is Over
Lesbia Harford
When day is over
I climb up the stair,
Take off my dark dress,
Pull down my hair,
Open my window
And look at the stars.
Then my heart breaks through
These prison bars
Of space and darkness
And finds what is true,
Up past the stars where
I’m one with you.
Poignant Reflection:
There’s something sacred about the moment when the day folds itself away. In “When Day is Over,” Lesbia Harford invites us into that hushed, intimate hour where all external expectations are stripped off like a dark dress. We climb the stairs not just to a room, but to ourselves. The poem hints at both solitude and connection—at the quiet transformation from separation to unity. The stars, distant and burning, become a bridge beyond space and darkness. It’s as if the soul has waited all day to do what the body couldn’t: rise, reach, and remember its source. In those moments of stillness and sky-gazing, we are no longer confined—we are infinite, and not alone.
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Three Questions to Dive Deeper:
- What rituals or moments in your day help you reconnect with what’s most true in yourself?
- Who—or what—is the “you” the speaker becomes one with? A person? A divine presence? A part of herself?
- What “prison bars” keep you from reaching beyond the ordinary, and what helps you break through them?
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