In January
after Ibn Sahl
The yard has sopped into its green-grizzled self its new year whiteness.
A dog stirs the noon-blue dark with a running shadow and dirt smells cold and doggy
As though the one thing never seen were its frozen coupling with the air that brings the flowers of grasses.
And a leafless beech stands wrinkled, gray and sexless—all bone and loosened sinew—in silver glory
And the sun falls on all one side of it in a running glance, a licking gaze, an eye-kiss
And ancient silver struck by gold emerges mossy, pinkly lichened where the sun fondles it
And starlings of anthracite march into the east with rapid jerky steps pecking at their shadows