
In my rinse-and-repeat pattern of this long winter, driving back from Dartmouth in the late morning, sunlight sprawling over the brown fields, the tree limbers along the interstate beginning the season’s cutting, I notice the Connecticut River has thawed. Unmutable sign the back of this mighty winter has cracked.
Home, my yard half-buried yet in twig-strewn snow, the ash buckets mark their winter resting place, a chaos of cinders that touch the edge of the quartz-pebbled rose garden my youngest and I made, years ago.
Later, a friend stops by with good cheer and belated and welcome Christmas presents. The sun is yet bright. We walk, slowly, slowly, on the short stretch of dead-end road before my house. I point to a robin perched in a pin cherry. She spies last summer’s hornet nest spun into the lilacs, a nest on the neighbor’s windowsill.
We were once neighbors ourselves. In mud season, we walked with our little kids up and down our back road, taking our time as the kids searched for frog eggs in the roadside ditches and tender green folds pushing up through matted brown leaves in the forest: the first spring beauties and trout lilies, bloodroot. Now, during my last hospitalization, her son repaired my daughter’s car, stayed for dinner and conversation.
Too snowy and wet to sit down, I lean against my car’s bumper. A robin chirps in the neighbors’ sugar maple, an expanse of curved trunk and branch and twig. Such a meager peep peep this rust-bellied hand-sized creature makes, prying winter away, thrusting our world towards nest building, egg laying, song.
“Against Panic” by Molly Fisk
You recall those times, I know you do, when the sun
lifted its weight over a small rise to warm your face,
when a parched day finally broke open, real rain
sluicing down the sidewalk, rattling city maples
and you so sure the end was here, life a house of cards
tipped over, falling, hope’s last breath extinguished
in a bitter wind. Oh, friend, search your memory again —
beauty and relief are still there, only sleeping.
What a wonderful poem. Thank you for that. And thank goodness for spring. I’m so done with winter.
This has been SUCH a long winter…
I really love this poem. Thanks Brett!
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We’ve been gifted a beautiful and perfect spring thus far. We can close our eyes and feel its outcome: sunny summer days, cheerful wildflowers, peaceful lakes, flourishing gardens. Pause for a moment, touch your heart, and feel the outcome of your greatest desires. The Universe will provide. 💗
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Welcome home Brett. May spring renew your immune system
and bring you sunshine and flowers and more.
I echo these wonderful words ❤️🙏
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Thank you. Thank goodness to see the first flowers emerging. I remember the Woodbury School always had the first crocuses.
Amen. 😊🪻☕
Indeed.
Yes indeed. There is an undeniable joy that comes with spring. So much life quickening to take hold.
A perfect poem, on so many levels. Thank you, as always for opening my eyes & heart with poetry. All the best to you for a springtime of healing.
So glad you liked this poem!