Four poems for a Midwinter Day
for/afterBernadette Mayer (1945-2022)
1.
Love asall transition, flight—a concentrated dash
ofwindowsill, groceries,
childcare ,this reinvention
ofblue. What day is it? Will I be soon? Our elder child
today at school , ouryounger,
here,this lingering cough. Another grey weekday. Aoife drags
herselfin bare feet, blanket wrapped pyjamas. I hold up facts
,a desperation of snowy trees
andtires , white streets. Thistime of plague.
2.
Asong ofBernadette, what hand
acrossthis biographical feature
ofchildren, laundry, library. How
theI yearns. A way to make and making, to
makesense, what have you. Where
youhave gone. This richness, an articulation
ofjournaled time. My love is like
alobster, or a red balloon, the pinnacle
ofwindow pane, this frosted peak.
3.
Acurve, and tension of old masters. Be strong,
weare here for a reason,
orreasons. An accidental
changeof speed. Be strong, Bernadette,
Aoife, Robert Alan. Be memory,mindful , as much
asyour own heart. This turbulence of
suchtextured surfaces. Perhaps
thereis no cure or respite. I wonder: do
thehouse mice underneath thestairs
declare:We have
agood life, here. This poem could have been an email.
4.
Theday, the day, it gets away fromme.
Theday.


