Snow Falling
By David Baker
I aimed to
work all weekend. Her teacups tiny shoes like two thimbles.
I had not been well for so long.
By the time I’d wired the backyard, the right tools, a
book of specs
laid out, its diagrams and directions—that I could choose
among such languages—it had started.
First as mist. As cold sheathe. Less as falling than floating
against the gray sub-
lime of pines like a coat of what’s-to-come. A crackling among
high needles more static than
whisper. More shiver than chill. She wanted—who’s
to say then, it’s too
cold, little one, I’m not well, no, not just now—a place
to play in the yard. A slide,
a swing or two. Who can say what passes for health, when
you’ve been so long
fevered. I cut the A-frames to size. Measured. Marked off
spots to drill for the standing platform.
I sawed in a whiteout of sound but for talking to myself.
There were lilacs
willing to open their black buds, all along the slippery walk,
but no; black water in the creek
crusted at the banks. It was like singing, the days, I tell you,
but no, whatever song
there was was frost breaking over the grass. Wind leaning
against dark limbs. I worked the weekend
through. I raised the beams, and screwed them tight, and fixed
a slide so she could
play a swingset a cradle of snow.
A thing I made for her. And now,
it seems, for you, amid the world’s broken and shining things.
Source: Poetry (November 2020)