Poetry |

“That Winter,” “Unshed Tears and the Snow” and “Do You Dare?”

That Winter

 

That winter when the night sky was violet, I was sure I would remember it,

and the sight of unbroken snow in the morning, I would remember that too,

and the cat waiting on the step to be let in,

and on clear nights the evening star just over the hemlocks,

and the tree in the young couple’s window lit long after Christmas.

I was sure I would remember those starry white lights,

and the couple’s windows and tree going dark at their bedtime,

while I read by the light of a single lamp.

 

 

*     *     *     *    *

 

 

Unshed Tears and the Snow

 

When I hear great Callas sing

Nell’ora del dolor,

In my hour of sorrow,

heat breaks the dam in my chest

and tears seem to well but don’t

come no matter how much they

tease at the back of my throat.

Then later at the window,

the curtain pushed aside,

I see the street turned white,

and the trees and roofs, and path.

As I kept longing for tears,

snow fell from a windless sky

and night came on with no sound.

 

 

*     *     *     *    *

 

 

Do You Dare?

 

It snows on the leaf, on the branch on the rose,

on marigolds, shriveled as they are.

 

It snows on the threshold, on the window, snow clumped like cotton.

Snow drifts on the street, on the road, deep on the curb strips,

 

greenish whirlpools of snow under the streetlights,

white on the dome of the Greek Church across the way.

 

It snows on the gravestones, on the evil and the good.

In the garden, on the statue, the Buddha’s lips sealed in ice.

 

And cracks between flagstones obliterated, the ground all one thing.

Do you dare call it unity, cold grace, white communion, blessed silence?

 

Then wind carves the drifts so at the foundation of the house

there’s snowless space and a white crest like the crest of a wave.

Contributor
Miriam Levine

Miriam Levine is the author of Saving Daylight, her fifth collection of poetry. Another collection, The Dark Opens, was chosen by Mark Doty for the Autumn House Poetry Prize.  Other books include: Devotion, a memoir; In Paterson, a novel.  Her work has appeared in American Poetry Review, The Kenyon Review, The Paris Review, and Ploughshares.  A fellow of the NEA and a grantee of the Massachusetts Artists Foundation, Levine lives in Florida and New Hampshire.  For more information about her work, please go to miriamlevine.com.

 

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