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Absence, Opera, Beans, Dreams
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Adam Kirsch from "Invasions" (Ivan R. Dee, paperback, $14.95)
Pre-War
In mid-November wind off the
Mountain
An American flag, left behind by the previous owners,
Stutters on the pole.
Fall loosens its grip:
Dead seed and leaf skitter across the grass,
Smoke ghosts up the chimney.
I hear the mid-morning news
As I watch the mid-morning sun
Wash from the needles of the pines,
Our first dust of snow.
The weather tests the weak spots in the sill,
Stoops our stride, thickens our shirts,
Has come to nest.
Cornelius Eady from "Hardheaded Weather" (Putnam, $25.95)
Far Away
She ran faster than tears
ran straight ahead
no boundary was in front of her
no one chased her
no one was racing against her
luminous space waited
to take her in its embrace
Julia Hartwig translated from the Polish by John and Bogdana Carpenter from "In Praise of the Unfinished" (Knopf, $25)
Self-Portrait
I wish I was twenty and in love with life
and still full of beans.
Onward, old legs!
There are the long, pale dunes; on the other side
the roses are blooming and finding their labor
no adversity to the spirit.
Upward, old legs! There are the roses, and there is the sea
shining like a song, like a body
I want to touch
though I'm not twenty
and won't be again but ah! seventy. And still
in love with life. And still
full of beans.
Mary Oliver from "Red Bird" (Beacon, $23)
To Hold
So we're dust. In the meantime, my wife and I
make the bed. Holding opposite edges of the sheet,
we raise it, billowing, then pull it tight,
measuring by eye as it falls into alignment
between us. We tug, fold, tuck. And if I'm lucky,
she'll remember a recent dream and tell me.
One day we'll lie down and not get up.
One day, all we guard will be surrendered.
Until then, we'll go on learning to recognize
what we love, and what it takes
to tend what isn't for our having.
So often, fear has led me
to abandon what I know I must relinquish
in time. But for the moment,
I'll listen to her dream,
and she to mine, our mutual hearing calling
more and more detail into the light
of a joint and fragile keeping.
Li-Young Lee fro m "Behind My Eyes" (Norton, $24.95)
Executive Shoeshine
It may go on snowing forever,
but meanwhile, how he's basking
in the sun of his own multitasking!
He's perched erect on his throne
looking down on the airport food court,
as the silver snail of a cell phone
earpiece hooked to his ear
hangs on his every word.
No way to cut him short
until the runways are cleared
and they've finished out there de-icing
the right wing, then the left wing
of all those planes before his.
Could he strike us a deal with the weather?
The man hunched below him polishes
one wingtip, then the other.
Mary Jo Salter from "A Phone Call to the Future" (Knopf, $26.95)




