Still Life with Snow
It fell away, that slant of light
that followed us across the North Sea,
across a stable yard, hoofmarks
sunk into the frozen mud. The way the barn
cut the night in two, the hay steaming,
the chickens soft in the roost. I had dreamt
us before we ever came to be, clutching the cold
like a talisman against the bruising of old dreams,
against the inevitable age that would grip us
in its fulsome mouth, a dog in the stable yard
mawing its one mean bone. And what sky was left
was hollowed moon and piecemeal as a memory
of what I thought I could be if only love would
find me, traveling the Arctic of my heart,
gnawing at its white bone.
What Emerges
Autumn has arrived
and its mute foreboding
as if we, wise as horses, could sense
the coming quiet, and grow wild with alarm.
Everyone is weeping. The neighbors scurry
from their cars to their kitchens to boil their tears
in their teapots. The sun dreams of justice,
shrouded in her weavings, and there’s blood in the veins
of all the leaves, the way they keep falling in circles to lie at the base
of the houses. All the angles have begun to emerge-
chimney-stone, forgotten bird-bath, the corner of an old receipt
peeking from beneath a pile of ash. The sky ices over
and claims its impotence,
culling the rosebush before its buds even have time
to blossom and shatter.
Adeline
In our house, we always have
dusty window frames
glass jars of tea,
loose scree on the walkway.
Lately, too, small evidences of her,
sounds of sleep, quiet breathing
soft as moss on stone, the dim roar of the
monitor, a small sock wedged beneath
a door. Agony of any distance,
her life mattering more than much,
even in the next room, I dream of her
behind my eyes, my belly still holding memory,
the sky stripped of cloud,
her perfect breath always in earshot,
a weathervane. No matter. She.
Insistent, a dripping tap, running
in a rust line down to a drain.
In our house, she is near, as she was ever
in my cells, in the woodgrain of floorboards,
cradle of smooth gray walls.
Weaning
No longer cleaving, your shape in black and white
in the infrared light, the monitor box
set on the coffee table as I try to busy myself,
as I try to remember who I was before you were me.
Accustomed to your soft scent each night,
your body alongside mine, so small as to be
only an arm’s-length, your hair, just washed in our bath,
my vigil of putting us both to sleep in each other’s arms.
I’m told that this should be a small grief—
so small, like your tender body, the weight of you
scented with powder, grinning into my mouth, your tears
in my mouth, exclaiming the nearness of my breast
in your half-sleep—grasping it with both hands.
It was your sweat on my hands, your snot on my chest,
your mouth opening wide to engulf me,
that is the way I used to feel about love,
which you’ve revived in me.
Love Poem
Bright wind, a space inside,
empty like an o-shaped
mouth. Too soft, the way the air moves
so easily between us, fingers wide against the sun,
a delicate shell pink at the webbing, moving filament,
moving the white curtains above the bed.
A nearness, without curiosity, without dread,
a long time bending, like wet wood,
the heart’s chiming bell, and yes, after years,
letting each other pass in the hallway.
Your body distantly,
distinctly scented, sheets wrapped
around a thigh,
or water running behind a bathroom door,
the next room holding you captive
with its thin white walls.