…it seemed to me that there need not be
relic, remnant, margin, residue, memento,
bequest, memory, thought, track, or trace,
if only the darkness could be perfect
and permanent.
Marilynne Robinson
Housekeeping
This is the way it works for her:
first the seed and then the sowing of the seed:
the split husk and then the shove
up through peat (or vermiculite
if it’s rumored to come on dry)
and the vines reach sky-
ward if they’ve been given a climb
or scutt among the turned up
stones and last year’s fish bones
and if they've been trained to lean
against the pole--
against the pole--
and up they go and out no matter the press
of the sky or choke of the root.
And she’s among them every day, a nurse between
the beds, an ear for each new plume
and a pocket notebook to keep it
and a sharp pencil to mark all the agree
or disagreements. And once summer
has wrung out it’s wardrobe on the neck
of everyone, what’s got plump or even not
with blush or glow will come undone
like pins in the bun at the base of her
scapula after the dance: it’s all kept
tense until that first finger then two up
through into the dark to loose the teased
security and one by one the locks fall…it’s like this:
come early or late, Autumn is the rush of it
all: the plums and wheelbarrows
in another country are her apples
and bushel baskets and ladders she’ll climb
into, a canopy of finding and each to her cheek
she’ll ease into a linen bag and to descend
two rungs at a time and walk a mile and a mile
and a mile in her kitchen between sink
and knife and paring, pot and water
and simmering to put it all up. It makes me
wonder:
under the surface of a winter lake, when in spring
the green is its own mud brown beneath, and through
the next three seasonS the surface can only show
the sky the high track of everything passing by
while the bottom settles it once and for all, a thick
grip only it can need come winter because all its top-
side green is decay, so to save it the lake, from the edges
in, begins its own slow closing, a cold cold colder still
than closing until the whole surface is snow and what’s frozen
beneath it, and I imagine, it’s here that I see how a soul
floats in a body without getting completely free.
It’s like a season of three: the growing up and out
of the dark the climb and creep, the reach of a hand
and then to save it all from that decay the madness of
sugar
salt
vinegar
pickle
all ladled after their grate and slice their marriage
into the glass row of winter infantry and the boil
to seal them shut to cap them and seal them, their
briny life stilled in their light. Isn’t it like this
in the winter lake? Isn’t it like this in the living
body? Something of irreplaceable value sealed
shut? And shelf after shelf of labor to see? And freezing
February morning, the reach for it, the tap
on the seal, to see it stayed, and then, decision made,
the sweet under the rubber pry, the ssssssspt!