WINTER JOURNEY

Well, it was just as I thought,

the path

all but obliterated—

We had moved then

from the first to the second stage,

from the dream to the proposition.

And look—

here is the line between,

resembling

this line from which our words emerge;

moonlight breaks through.

Shadows on the snow

cast by pine trees.


Say goodbye to standing up,

my sister said. We were sitting on our favorite bench

outside the common room, having

a glass of gin without ice.

Looked a lot like water, so the nurses

smiled at you as they passed,

pleased with how hydrated you were becoming.

Inside the common room, the advanced cases

were watching television under a sign that said

Welcome to Happy Hour.

If you can’t read, my sister said,

can you be happy?

We were having a fine old time getting old,

everything hunky-dory as the nurses said,

though you could tell

snow was beginning to fall,

not fall exactly, more like weave side to side,

sliding around in the sky—


Now we are home, my mother said;

before, we were at Aunt Posy’s.

And, between, in the car, the Pontiac,

driving from Hewlett to Woodmere.

You children, my mother said, must sleep

as much as possible. Lights

were shining in the trees:

those are the stars, my mother said.

Then I was in my bed. How could the stars be there

when there were no trees?

On the ceiling, silly, that’s where they were.


I must say

I was very tired walking along the road,

very tired— I put my hat on a snowbank.

Even then I was not light enough,

my body a burden to me.

Along the path, there were

things that had died along the way—

lumps of snow,

that’s what they were—

The wind blew. Nights I could see

shadows of the pines, the moon

was that bright.

Every hour or so, my friend turned to wave at me,

or I believed she did, though

the dark obscured her.

Still her presence sustained me:

some of you will know what I mean.