"We try to see in the dark; we toss up
our questions and they catch in the trees."
~ Annie Dillard
After rain, the cotton-heavy breasts of clouds;
the redbud, the hawthorn, the fringe tree.
I still hear the one that tapped all morning,
insistent in front of a gate that wouldn't move.
Only the moon pauses, stretches wide
as a palmful of dough. Unmuffled, the owls begin
their two-note chant: who-when?
who-when? I've long understood how distance
is what makes the faraway conspicuous,
the near at hand swizzle into a kind of silence.

