You'd know that when the February air
gets cold enough, much
much colder than zero, a wide halo
of crystals forms around the sun
glistening like a muted rainbow. The sky, too
pales on the coldest days, thins
out into a breakable boneblue.
The buses don't run, fuel thickens
in the lines, but the secretary calls each
family to assure us that the school day
will proceed. You'd know the morning voices
of the married couple who own the local AM
radio station. Her laughing voice tries
to steer him from politics, and she never forgets
a celebrity's birthday. If you lived here
you'd know that the sound of a line of cattle
shuffling across a frozen white field
is like the sound of running water,
a warm sound that makes you stop
in momentary confusion.
You'd know the clipped sound of axe blade
splitting a log of lodgepole,
the precise heft of a perfect
downward swing as you fill
the woodbox. Or the fitting of burls
and knots together
like puzzle pieces in the body of the stove
to make it burn tight and hot. You'd fight
You'd know the clipped sound of axe blade
splitting a log of lodgepole,
the precise heft of a perfect
downward swing as you fill
the woodbox. Or the fitting of burls
and knots together
like puzzle pieces in the body of the stove
to make it burn tight and hot. You'd fight
frozen water lines only to a point
because by now you know that sometimes
it is just too goddamn cold to thaw.
On your morning commute, you'd watch
through your cracked windshield,
the etched ridgeline of the Pioneer Mountains
grow rosy with morning and know that,
for a moment,
you are peeking into some other
wild and desolate world.
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