Memory of Driving after a Snowstorm
Poem 17, June 17
Memory of Driving after a Snowstorm
I was thinking about you.
Particularly I was remembering
how you looked one night
when you answered the door.
It was not the pajamas you wore
that caught my eyes in the revealing light
from the ceiling. I drove trembling,
not from cold, rather from that memory of you,
& that is all I was thinking about until I glance
to my left. I thought I would love to have a farm
like the snow-covered one in the valley, a farmhouse
nestled far back, a barn not far away.
Having spent my youth, day after day,
milking Holstein and Ayrshire, seldom in the house
until late at night, I wondered why no internal alarm
went off. I thought how, if I had another chance
to watch red soil roll fescue into a plow’s furrow,
would I appreciate it as much now as I did then?
I remembered the scent of timothy & red clover rising
up to my nose as the sickle sang through,
& how mornings as I drove thirty cows, the dew
glistened on webs across the meadow. It is as surprising
to me now as those moments were when
quail or meadow lark would fly up, whistling arrow,
& leave me breathless the way you did on the night
& the moment darkness surrendered to the light.