In the Cold Country
We came so trustingly, for love, but these   
 Lowlands, flatlands, near beneath the sea   
 Point with their cautionary bones of sand   
 To exorcize, submerge us; we stay free   
 Only as mermaids glittering in the waves:   
 Mermaids of the imagination, young   
 A spring ago, who know our loveliness   
 Banished, like fireflies at winter’s breath,   
 Because none saw; these vines about our necks   
 We placed in welcome once, but now as wreath   
 Against the scalpel cold; still cold creeps in   
 To grow like ivy over our chilling bodies   
 Into our blood. Now in our diamond dress   
 We wive only the sequins of the sea.   
 The lowlands have rejected us. They lie   
 Athwart the whispering waters like a scar   
 On a mirage of glass; the dooming land,   
 Where nothing can take root but frost, has won.   
 And what of warmth and what of joy? They are   
 Sequestered elsewhere, southward, where the sun   
 Speaks. For all our mermaid vigilance   
 And balance, all goes under; underneath   
 The land’s gray wave we falter and fall back   
 To hibernate within the caves of death.
Copyright Credit: Barbara Howes, “In the Cold Country” from In the Cold Country. Copyright 1954 by Barbara Howes. Reprinted with the permission of Grove/Atlantic, Inc.
Source: Poetry (February 1949)


