Passage III
cold birds
 still sing
 a bright sun
 chill air
 snow entombing
 precocious crocuses
 tricked
 by a spring
 now
 falsened
                                      ❏
 cherry trees ...
 Good Friday ...
 —treatise: on the use of trees
                                      ❏
 a flyblown carcass
 in the underbrush below
 the cypress in the cemetery
 : the dead above
 : the dead below
                                      ❏
 like a Fantin-Latour
 the clutch of flowers
 in your hand
 and apple frothing the air
                                      ❏
 the life you're not leading
 the blood you're not bleeding
 the knot you're not kneading
 the mouth you're not feeding
 the earth you're not seeding
                                      ❏
 they're grooming the lawns
                for the graduates
                                and the proud parents
 and meanwhile the yellowthroat sings
                unconcerned—
 cherries just gone by their faded blossoms
                              thick against the
                              insurgent leaves
                offer the very figure
                               of spring melancholy
                o I missed
 when they were fully in bloom
                & the season
                & the time for the
                               perfect spring
                               haiku
                to hail another winter
                               survived
 where among the redbud blooms exploding
               along the thin branches
                              is my death written
                                       ❏
 earth conspiring
 against me
 have a child
 to load
 the earth
 with vines
 with lives
 with signs songs & cries
                                       ❏
 insistent crow
 cardinal whoop
 peepers booming open the night
               stabbing life into your heart
               the odious air
               reverberant
                                        ❏
 that was no song
 but an alarm call
                                        ❏
 the rhythmic thunk of the basketball
                 thwacking the tarmac
                 at the little park a
                                block over
                 . . . boys . . . calls . . .
 and the rain holding off—
                a May nor'easter
 deferring the fullest spring
                we might have had but leaving
                               the lilacs to extend
                               their delicate
                                                thrusting
                                 into the air
                  the boys birds and blossoms share
                                        ❏
 say that a heron perched
                immobile
                until
                alert the head
                turns
                                        ❏
 the weather is far more violent
 here and present
 or so it seems days
 one's attention is open
 to the cloudthrottled air
 lit by a near-equinoctial
 sun—the nights
 too extend to a farther
 horizon the stars legible
 in this particular sky
 to those able and wishing
 to scry, too many years
 looking inward thinning
                  the lexicon of the visible
                  world its oracular
                  reality sounding
                  itself all along
                  these maples
                  that stone
                  that garden fountain
                  the mists rolling in
                  over the mountains
                  disguising the sky
                  the world
                  gone slate
                  its greens drained
                  as that fountain
                  before the first frost
                  the rain is passing
                  and the lilacs
                  the thunder
                  the day but what
                  have you held
                  beheld beset
                  as you are
                  by yourself
                                        ❏
                 signing
                 my best
                 beset
                 instead
                 reveals
                 itself the key
                 an extra e
                 lone vowel
                 tiny howl
                 I did not do
                 what my hands did
                                       ❏
                  wavelap and lakeslap lick
                                 the ear; the air carries
                                                stripes in the
                                 low precincts of sky—
                  a mower blares somewhere
                                  above A and
                                                shuts off a
                                  shock of
                                                silence
                   into which the wave-
                                  slaps surge
                                       ❏
 to enter the water
 in Mayan
 to die
                                       ❏
 over there the gray
                 gathering
                                sheath meant
                                                rain
 but our private sun
                continues to sign-
 post a clear day at least
                for us.
 an earthquake
                in China
                               means
                precisely what
                               to me
                wondered Adam Smith—
 the world disappearing
                the instant my tooth aches: Sartre
 my skin some days
                               extends
               as wide as the sea
 and the waves of the world
                roll through, equable
                               terrible
 but I am living this narrow
                life and no other
                except yours I imagine
                               some days we're graced
                                               or grazed by a shared bullet
                                      ❏
 today no thrush silvered the air
                 in the woods
 the wind blowing hard
                 against the bike
 passing a stretch of field
                 where tractors for miles around
                                come to die
 the iron congregation rusting
                faithful as the grass,
 the cows at Saywards Farm seemed
                 too confined
 why aren't they grazing in the field and why
                 are their calves
                                wired in—
 late last night
                 after the sunset
                 I did not see
 the lake took on that babyish blue
                 I so love and I saw
 a sole balloon aloft lifting over Vergennes
                 puffing by Camel's Hump
 and heading east—
                 we have harnessed the air
                                for our pleasure
                                our leisure a rhyme
                 with the weather
                                clearing as if the
                                skies cared
                                or could
                                      ❏
 radios and weathervanes
 conduct the air
 disperse manes
                                      ❏
 mountains deforested
                 by distance
 Hokusai shapes cut
                 against the
                 sky the clouds
                               address just
                               so
 and through the same air
                               the radio pours
                 its usual brew of cheer & death
                 what wonder little schizo
                               you reel so
                 in the fractured world
 the sky bends to my way
                 and to yours and to home
                 sweet home
                                      ❏
 my soul marching through
 the open fifths of its salvation
 shapenotes shaping
 me home
                                      ❏
 not the sun but the sun
                 in the river
 not the moon
                 but the lake-swallowed moon
 the stars cracking open the black paved road
                 where immortals strode
Copyright Credit: Maureen McLane, "Passage III" from World Enough. Copyright © 2010 by Maureen McLane. Used by permission of Farrar, Straus & Giroux, LLC, http://us.macmillan.com/fsg. All rights reserved.
Caution: Users are warned that this work is protected under copyright laws and downloading is strictly prohibited. The right to reproduce or transfer the work via any medium must be secured with Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC.
Caution: Users are warned that this work is protected under copyright laws and downloading is strictly prohibited. The right to reproduce or transfer the work via any medium must be secured with Farrar, Straus and Giroux, LLC.
Source: World Enough (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010)


