John Haines
In the quiet house
a lamp is burning
where the book of autumn
lies open on a table.
There is tea with milk
in heavy mugs,
brown raisin cake, and thoughts
that stir the heart
with the promises of death.
We sit without words,
gazing past the limit
of fire, into the towering
darkness...
There are silences so deep
you can hear
the journeys of the soul,
enormous footsteps
downward in a freezing earth.
Showing posts with label John Haines. Show all posts
Showing posts with label John Haines. Show all posts
Friday, October 30, 2009
Sunday, November 9, 2008
Ancestor of the Hunting Heart
John Haines (1983)
There is a distance in the heart
and I know it well—
a somberness of winter branches,
dry stubble scarred with frost,
late of the sunburnt field.
Neither field, nor furrow,
nor woodlot patched with fences,
but something wilder: a distance
never cropped or plowed,
only by fire and the blade of the wind.
The distance is closer than
the broomswept hearth—
that time of year when leaves
cling to the bootsole,
are tracked indoors,
lie yellow on the kitchen floor.
Snow is a part of the distance,
cold ponds, and ice
that rings the cattle-trough.
Trees that are black at morning
are in the evening gray.
The distance lies between them,
a seed-strewn whiteness
through which the hunter comes.
Before him in the ashen snow-litter
of the village street
an old man makes his way,
bowed with sack and stick.
A child is pulling a sled.
The rest are camped indoors,
their damped fires smoking
in the early dusk.
There is a distance in the heart
and I know it well—
a somberness of winter branches,
dry stubble scarred with frost,
late of the sunburnt field.
Neither field, nor furrow,
nor woodlot patched with fences,
but something wilder: a distance
never cropped or plowed,
only by fire and the blade of the wind.
The distance is closer than
the broomswept hearth—
that time of year when leaves
cling to the bootsole,
are tracked indoors,
lie yellow on the kitchen floor.
Snow is a part of the distance,
cold ponds, and ice
that rings the cattle-trough.
Trees that are black at morning
are in the evening gray.
The distance lies between them,
a seed-strewn whiteness
through which the hunter comes.
Before him in the ashen snow-litter
of the village street
an old man makes his way,
bowed with sack and stick.
A child is pulling a sled.
The rest are camped indoors,
their damped fires smoking
in the early dusk.
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