Monday, December 7, 2009

And Would-Be Poet



Sometimes I think all lawyers fancy themselves writers. In honor of this weekend's lovely snowfall, here is proof I am not unique:



Thirteen Ways of Looking at Snow

i.
Nothing sounds in the silence
Of the woods
Except each step
Balancing on the surface ice
Before breaking through
To snow.

ii.
Some creatures prefer the snow.
I have seen them in the woods:
The owl and wolf,
Garbed in white,
Long after the butterflies
Have flown for Mexico.

iii.
In the early days
Suffused with joy at the first snow and all else that was
New and clean, she lay down before him
And swept an angel in the drifts.

iv.
When the snow reaches
Nearly to your knees
You will know the leeks
Are strong and sweet.

v.
Wrap yourself in white, if you will,
But you must know
Pristine and fragile as the virgin snow,
It cannot survive your touch.

vi.
Build her a house on the plain:
Build it square and strong.
Build it to withstand the snows.

vii.
A man with a woman
Is one.
A woman and the snow
Are one.

viii.
No living thing has touched
The snows on the far slope
Not even a blackbird.

ix.
At its edges, the field is brown.
But some snow remains
Not just as patches
In the center of the field
But also piled against the woodpile,
Too deep to fire the hearth.

x.
Do you see? She is
Like a single flake of snow
Dissolving to droplets on a glove,
Then darkening the spot just
Long enough to be remarked upon
Before disappearing.

xi.
They opposed her wish to move North,
Saying, “At the solstice the sun will never rise.”
They could not understand
It, seems, that the moon
Reflected on the snow shines
More brilliantly than the stars.

xii.
I find I have no words
That will describe for you
The azure cellophane blues of the Yucatan sea.
They say the Eskimos have thirty-seven words for snow.
How many words for white?

xiii.
I will melt
With the snow silently
Into Spring.

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