Firewalk
Firewalk
1.
If under the full snow moon
you can keep breathing – I’ll be glad
if I’m alive tomorrow, I said
to myself driving the back roads
in yet another storm. I had never seen
such poverty – Mae stoking her stove
from six in the morning until late at night.
Kind of lonesome, don’t you know, alone,
the wind blowing and everything,she said
when I left.
Some notes from your silver flute,
please, to quiet my heart. Stripped of ourselves,
of who were thought we were, we can walk
on burning coals or so we’ve been told. The sea
does not part for me. I do not track
each gleam of fire. Yet in the least stroke
of my pulse I am passing
from one state to another
2.
If he came, he lungs like blown leaves, would you
take him back? Mae had asked. She had stories
could make us grieve another hundred years. In our old
feudal lives, ladies or slaves, did we need the poor
to be poor so we’d have something to do?
No Mother Teresa of the hinterland, I cannot stay
with the desolate forever. The change I ask
runs so deep I’m mostly speechless.
Today I heard
just north of here, beyond Blue Ridge, Blue Hill
Mountain, the good sisters have returned.
Once more dispensed from my vows
I’m driving 55 against frost heaves,
through narrow lanes of poplar, birch,
past the sea on my left, towards home
and you. There must be, south
southwest, some unspectacular small place
for us to thing, to feel from.