Threnody

This entry is part 41 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

A cop with a backpack sprayer
poisoning an urban garden—
why should I dream of this?

I carry out a dead houseplant,
but can’t find a snow-free spot
to lay it to rest.

The house finch whose eye disease
prevents him from migrating
warbles on and on.

Evergreens

This entry is part 42 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

Melting snow reveals
the catacombs of rodents.
It’s been a long winter.

Starving deer strip
rhododendrons of their tough,
cold-curled tongues.

Hundred-year-old hemlocks
lose their needles to an insect
thinner than a thread.

Slush

This entry is part 43 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

Slush: the mellifluous sound
the tires make
just before they start spinning.

Soft snow banks
are treacherous as Loreleis,
pulling the unwary driver in.

I steer gingerly with windows down,
listening to the welcome hiss
of leaves and mud.

Out

This entry is part 44 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

Each time I go out,
I interrupt something: a hawk’s meal,
a groundhog’s courtship.

I make an offering
of my gray hair—a fine
nesting material—

toss the cuttings out
onto the snow. The warm wind
blows them right back.

Snowmelt

This entry is part 45 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

The bare ground seems
at first an oversight, then
a growing scandal—

all that anonymity stripped away,
the brown earth caught
without its papers,

and the pines like secret agents
sifting every seditious
whisper of the wind.

Emergence

This entry is part 46 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

A groundhog comes out of her hole
and begins to gather bundles
of dried grass.

Harlequin ladybirds
emerge from the side of the house
with a burning thirst

and dive onto the snow,
where they suck and stumble
and come to a frozen halt.

In place

This entry is part 47 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

Inside a cloud moved
rapidly by the wind,
I catch a whiff of wood smoke.

All the tracks have melted through,
erasures that say only
that something was there—

except for the trees,
still marooned on the same
round islands.

Salt

This entry is part 50 of 91 in the series Toward Noon: 3verses

The highway’s tar
has been bleached by
a winter’s worth of salt,

and in the mid-day sun
it almost shines. I squint
at the shapes on the shoulder—

here the humped corpse
of some salt-lover, there
a fetal curl of flayed tire.