FROM NOWHERE
I think the sea is a useless teacher,
pitching and falling
no matter the weather, when our lives are rather lakes
unlocking in a constant and bewildering
spring. Listen,
a day comes, when you say what all winter
I’ve been meaning to ask, and a crack booms
and echoes
where ice had seemed solid, scattering ducks
and scaring us half to death. In Vermont,
you dreamed
from the crown of a hill and across a ravine
you saw lights so familiar they might have
been ours
shining back from the future.
And waking, you walked there, to the real
place,
and when you saw only trees, came back bleak
with a foreknowledge we have both come to
believe in.
But this morning, a kind day has descended, from
nowhere,
and making coffee in the usual way,
measuring grounds with the wooden spoon, I remembered, this is how things happen, cup by cup, familiar
gesture
after gesture, what else can we know of safety
or of fruitfulness? We walk with mincing
steps within
a thaw as slow as February, wading through currents
that surprise us with their sudden warmth.
Remember,
last week you woke still whistling for a bird
that had miraculously escaped its cage, and
look, today,
a swallow has come to settle behind this rented rain
gutter,
gripping a twig twice his size in his beak,
staggering
under its weight, so delicately, so precariously, it
seems
from here, holding all he knows in his
mouth.
MARIE HOWE