Heat Goes Out Walking in the Cold
Heat Goes Out Walking in the Cold K. A. Hays It seems possible, and I've been told, that even the dying, who don't mean to, stow at the ribs yellow mint, at the liver the waft of split tomatoes, and April's peas wire and tendril up, unruly, at the backs of the eyes. The old story: Decembers, fiddleheads unwind in a cat's worn foot pads -- and far in a man's deaf ear tug the brown wade and gold peeping of May ponds. Hard to believe, most days, that under the ice-tilted walks, plantain aches yellowly, hums in August air. Or that even in the spine of a mother who grieves for her child wakes dame's rocket, unwilled, gangly, soon a sapling with the tough ears of elephants. That's the sapling the dead blaze into, summer walking in winter. Yes. In wind-wracked limbs, green wick, thaw the core. |