Before the Rains Had Come
By Kim Stafford
The design committee for making the world
 had stalled with the problem of drought.
 “We have the sea over here, the desert
 over there—how many roads do we need,
 how many trucks, how many miles of pipe?”
 At the back of the great hall stood the daughter
 of the doorman, who had brought him supper.
 She pulled him down to whisper in his ear
 her dream of the mystery of mist. “My child,”
 he whispered, “that makes no sense at all.”
Source: Poetry (March 2021)


