With some disdain and a great deal of steel, she begins again. |
I wrote a poem today. I had to do something to distract me from day three of utter silence. It's possible that I am more at fault than he is, but I don't think so. Here's a poem to lighten things up: We Wake We wake to a room of thin, white frost, with bluish toes and cold marble noses, and the breath of sleep lingers, caught on the fingernail chill in the air. Overnight, the drowsy sway of rubber-filmed leaves has ended, reduced to a series of crunches and cracks beyond the bedroom window under the quick steps of industrious squirrels and feral cats in search of breakfast. The world has lost its vernal music, drowned out by the overhead, parting honks of vacating geese and the bumble of ruby-throated hummingbirds as they flit to track the sun. We are charmed by the scorch of colour as it bests the green season, and dazzled by the sheen of hanging apples bobbing cheerfully on their branches in the orchard by the river‘s edge. The air is plump with flavour, rich with the fume of roasted tree limbs and the muddy yawn of tired dirt, and the fields are now emptied of their fruits, but for the swollen, sun-soused pumpkins and tobacco-toothed Indian corn. A shiver quakes us, the fever newly broken, and our hands rifle for a sweater; we are russet and butternut in the glow of the ripened morning light. The days will be shorter now, the scowling, possessive night draping the soft blaze of autumn, but we are consoled in knowing that we may return to the warmth of our bed sooner than we did yesterday without the wearisome bother of judgment. Winter may lay a finger on our neck as we lay sleeping, but for now it remains just that. Ta-da. |