A box made of glass keeps the real world at bay; I feel the glass press in each word I can't say. Like butterflies' wings, Crushed between the glass panes, A mute can't for mercy beg, or cry to ease the pain. The glass passes sound only in, never out — I hear what they say of me, I know the things they shout. This magical glass, no one but I sees. A wizard might break this spell, His magic set me free. What magic is left in a world grown so old? All magic died long ago, so we are often told. My wizard would know where the magic now hides — It passed into silence, where he keeps it yet alive. Like magic, his hands teach my silence to sing, And magically silence lets the butterfly take wing. And I am a hawk! A great, noble tree! The silence is everything, The wizard is the key. I learn how to speak with my body and eyes. I pantomime miracles in the magic silence buys. I'm no longer tied to a world bound in sound — I silently soar away from the bitter, broken ground. As I knew he must, the wizard hands to me his throne. He mimes now to Heaven's halls; I mime to trees, alone. Burnish me bright, before the night comes, And look down from Heaven's height To bless the mimes I've done. Burnish me bright, before the night falls. I shine brighter than the stars. The silence makes me all.