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A blooming linden scents my nightly walk homeward -- a quiet pleasure. (Oberlin, OH; June 29, 2005)
Four Visions
Spring
Everyone's inside in this April shower but me, in a loge in the cathedral square, where the rain veils door and tower and stair, and goes pat-a-pat, pat-a-pat on the cobbles.
An umbrella bobs around the corner and --- brown-skirted, tall, and plain --- my love peers at me through the rain, and smiles hesitantly --- is she welcome?
She slides onto my lap at my answering smile and lifts her feet from the rain-runneled tile. She kisses me, and in my ear, she murmurs, "'Allo, 'allo, my dear."
Summer
I recline on a hilltop one bright summer's day next to my love, brown and tall, who gazes down on roof and wall of a city of brick not far away.
The smell of cyprus, sharp and broad, the line of her body, the fall of her hair --- and faintly I catch its scent on the air: less pungent than cyprus, but sweeter than grass.
I touch it --- and she does not turn --- but in the way her shoulders lie, I clearly see her crinkling eye, and calm, indulgent smile.
Autumn
Through the doors I can see the sky -- I'll abandon my work and go outside to autumn's color up the mountainside and the terraced garden down below.
On the porch I watch my love laughing at each pull and shove in mock battle with the dog over an old and well chewed log.
The dog gains the stick, proud of his win. My love gives me a sidelong glance and grin: Silly, why so long within On this lovely day? Come play!
Winter
The mountainside is white with snow, The limbs of oak trees grey and stark. The black and silver clouds loom low and wipe the scene of shape and mark.
As I lie on the couch and gaze into the flames I can hear the north wind as it beats at the door. From the kitchen comes rustling, a creak of the floor, then a clinking beside me, a touch on my arm.
My love, in brown, appears beside me, And cuddling close, proffers some tea. She cradles her own and peers through the steam, and secretly smiles, lost in a dream. (Independence, VA; Summer 2005)
Rain
The rain is a curtain, the lightning flashes above, the people cower in shop awnings and subways. This is New York in the rain.
On sixty first street a cop is parked and reading while the rain runs down all the windows of his car all the buildings on the street.
On the 1 downtown I faced a girl hardly mussed: her shoes, a bit damp; her hair, a few strands displaced; her mood, reflecting the rain.
Once again at home I watch the East River bridge below my window vanishing in a distance of thick, silver rain and mist. (New York City; August 10, 2006)