Lawrence Raab
Watching the beautiful
sticks of trees as they click and sway,
the first green unraveling,
it's easy to imagine I might
remember this day forever.
I say it to myself,
never to others, while the poem
made hoping to preserve it
is changed, then changed again
to fit another order
it happens to discover.
At the end I find myself
in a room by a window, or at the edge
of a field, with the same clear
sky above me wherein later
I will imagine clouds, as if
some movement were required. That,
or a different kind of stillness.
So there must also be
a family circled round
the bedside of someone
who is dying. I place
myself among them.
All of us are waiting
for the little we believe we need
to hold on to and repeat.
But this is not my family
although it is you
who are dying, your words
I am again unable to imagine
as everything continues
sliding together in the light,
that day so easily
changed to this one,
the sky that is so blue, and the clouds
that cross my gaze with such terrible speed.
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