Tuesday 24 March 2020

Their Fire


Albert Bierstadt

 

Their Fire


Their fire was small. They fed it only enough
To keep them through the night and to keep them
Together and unafraid
Lying between it and the face of the cliff
Where, at the foot under a hanging stone,
They had made their shelter
For a time, as others had in years so distant
Now, they seemed as thick and soft as the stillness
Standing around their sleep
In which the animals also slept (the beavers
And otters whose doors were deep under the water,
Squirrels in their hollows)
Or walked in the sleep of others (the gray foxes,
The martens and black bears, silent, listening).
Had they too wondered,
Those other makers of fire, how long to linger
In this same place, how many living seasons
It would keep them warm,
Would hold them together at a single hearthstone
While the round year turned the sky, thickened the clouds
Or thinned then, turning
The snow and the rain as it turned the wind, turned leaves
And turned the color of their hair like ermine's fur
And turned the earth?
They held their hands out to that restless fire
As if to shield it, to calm it, and they turned
Their faces to its light.


David Wagoner




I wanted to ignore the circumstances and just have poems. But poetry comes out of what we’re living. And what we’re living is so strange that it’s hard to know what to say or do. But it does feel like each family unit (sometimes that means 1, because 1 is a potential family, and comes from a family, whether blood or water, however fractured or subtracted from) is sitting by its fire, ruminating over the past, wondering about the future. We are self-absorbed at this moment, so I like how this poem brings nature back into the scene. I’m so glad to see for myself the cherry trees blossoming, or the Northern Flickers as they drum loudly on any metal available – the season is Spring and it is expanding and blossoming. It reminds me that we will too. I keep my loved ones close, and turn my face to the light. Warm my hands at the fire. What tomorrow brings is tomorrow’s problem. We’re "together now, and unafraid".

 





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