Monday, November 21, 2011

Tuesday Poem: Nesting


(collage by Michael Bristow)

(I've posted this before, but it seemed so appropriate for today, for right now -- )

Nesting

--for Mark Benchley Anderson
September 28, 1956 - November 21, 2003

July

You called me out for a sparrow
fallen from the Douglas fir,
the nest invisible in the endless web
of branch upon branch reeling above us.
And what comfort was I,
your earth-bound wife, nine months
pregnant, barely moving?

You lifted it into the warm cradle of your hands
and for a long moment we didn’t speak.
The child inside me shifted and turned —
a certain impatience, I suppose, to get on with things.
And then so gently you balanced the bird
on a low bough, out of reach of cats.
We knew it would not survive the night.

January

The City Light crew
has trimmed the upper branches,
sheared off most of one side
to keep us safe, they say, from a collision
of evergreen and wire. Now it stands
lop-sided, north-heavy.

In wind I fret over gusting limbs,
a shattering of glass and timber —
I keep watch over our sleeping children,
yet they wake and cry
to the rhododendron’s rasping
against storm windows.
My bones shiver
under cover, safe
from careening branches, from small birds
dropping into darkness.

©T.Clear

6 comments:

  1. Bittersweet. Beautiful tribute. xxxooo to you and your boys.

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  2. Beautiful. Chilling. A real honest-to-god poem. I think I'd seen this before & thought it was first rate then as well. Best wishes to you on a sad anniversary.

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  3. So beautiful -- I'm silent here, speechless.

    Blessings to you on this day.

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  4. Dynamite poem, T., and a lovely remembrance. Thanks for reminding us.

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  5. I agree, a lovely poem. The floating feather in Mike's collage is a nice connection. Reminds me also of "Regrets" that you posted a couple years back. 2003 doesn't seem very long ago...Thanks.

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  6. T, I admire the way you find words that honour and give shape to every important thing. This is such a powerful and tender poem. Love to you in your remembering, C x

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