Weather Patterns
The mailman couldn’t come today—
my walkway’s still encased in ice.
I walked around the mounds of snow
and traveled to the old PO.
I reached across the countertop
and grasped the rubber-banded pile
and figured I would trash it all
until I saw the card from you
dated just a year from now.
The cancers come to lie like thieves.
Beneath the snow they leave their paths.
I pulled my spade out of the snow
and dug it deep to the length of the blade
a spade’s an inverted heart-shaped thing.
For forty years I’ve saved your words
our children children when we met.
Your letters came like sweets to read—
mine sent like secrets to be found.
The mourning dove just pecks the ground
digging at shrouds of ice on ice.
A comfort’s mounding all around.
Please coat the earth, protect its skin.
Beware, lay bare a slice a time.
Just let us write our lives and bind
them for our children’s eyes.
It snows again the snow on snow
the white on white the storm on storm
beneath the blankets of our lives.
Now lay a pillow on our earth
and snuff the breath of hows and whys
we used to figure out our lives
so soon we’ll shovel layers to level
the petrified remains.
—Barbara Trachtenberg
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