I Need a Place to Go in My Own Direction
Snow devils like dervishes dance across stubble, and the wind bends scattered gold grasses fragile as angels against onsets of deeper cold.
In April, Persephone spills in hordes dumb buds that cannot know their flower or the deaths they’ve lived, as even we can’t know, in our own sad generations.
At home, I hear the quick click of a young girl’s heels dancing up the block. Her head bowed into the wind, she is ripening into sorrow.
The not-knowing of flower and girl and leaves is nakedness within the real, where words can’t go, where words go only by subtraction, as if, should I stop saying feathers, my window sparrow would show them.
So I subtract from the day the pathos of naked branches clutching their last few leaves, and of the milky muted sky. I erase the shy "I am" a sparrow sings against the great day, sings with no expectation.
This world’s so solid I can’t touch it. Outside my window, the sparrow speaks anyhow, and pecks at winter buds, satisfied with the good that’s given, at home in its skin. Then the sparrow vanishes as if it were nothing.
Bert Stern is Milligan Professor Emeritus of English and lives in Somerville, MA.
|