FOR FRAN

She packs the flower beds with leaves,

Rags, dampened papers, ties with twine

The lemon tree, but winter carves

Its features on the uprooted stem.

I see the true vein in her neck

And where the smaller ones have broken

Blueing the skin, and where the dark

Cold lines of weariness have eaten

Out through the winding of the bone.

On the hard ground where Adam strayed,

Where nothing but his wants remain,

What do we do to those we need,

To those whose need of us endures

Even the knowledge of what we are?

I turn to her whose future bears

The promise of the appalling air,

My living wife, Frances Levine,

Mother of Theodore, John, and Mark,

Out of whatever we have been

We will make something for the dark.