Remembering
how she loved them,
how
she stopped and marvelled
at
their tracery, their canary convolutions,
a
nest of tangled sunlight on the forest floor-
I
send a photograph of this year’s bounty:
trout
lilies in the wood, sepals lifted as in prayer.
She
returns the gift with hellebores: dusky rose,
palest
green and white, arranged inside a curve
of
darkened bowl. Last week’s snow woke them,
dappled
in the cool of mossy places. Such small
adagios.
Spring stirs overtones, sips beginning in
a
whisper of circumference. She awaits its overture:
my
mother knows each harmony by heart.
March Comes In
The
predator month arrives already
hunting.
So late the hour’s early,
March
rakes its claws across the sky,
rending
fissures flashed and strobed.
As
with any nature show, this soundtrack
stretches
out suspense, then booms cacophony:
pouncing,
it rips arteries from necks of cloud,
torrents
geysers drum-rolling on the roof.
Dog
trembles, knows something has awoken
ravenous,
caught his shaking scent. March
waits
outside in downpour, whisker-twitched
and
crouching, ever-ready to Spring…
Early Spring, North Carolina
Soft,
the door of morning
swings,
unfurling silk:
narcissus,
tulips, daffodils.
I
sound out their language,
whisper
tongue to petal, tunic
shed,
I try to conjugate a bud.
My
walk meanders past a stream
that’s
mid-soliloquy, improvising ferns
and
jessamine, small scatterings of snowdrops.
Here,
the taste of daylight,
traced
with dew. There,
the
water’s undulated song.
To
be a witness.
For Robert Hurwitz, musician
You
have modulated now
into
another key, a chord not
diminished
or augmented
but
a different mode, still undiscovered
by
our human mathematics.
You
never said that death would be a part
of
larger composition, but the silence
left
behind; reverberation after a conclusion,
that
sense a spreading skein of light’s
diminuendo
into dark.
Yet
I find, in these gray days
which
follow winter rain, I hear
as
if dotted on the wind,
astringent
notes of finches, defiant flutes
that
perforate the clouds.
I
can still read the notes
you
left inside me: a progression
without
parallel. I, your youngest
daughter,
fifth in family, your almost
resolution.
Now
the air of you nocturnes
my
pulse, and so I sit here,
breath
stretched and strung to bridge
across
your rest. Beneath my skin, I feel you
spreading
out your arms,
as
if waiting for forever
to begin.
Wonderful poems you had me with trout lilies. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for reading them!
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