http://www.albany.edu/offcourse 
         http://offcourse.org
         ISSN 1556-4975
		
Published by Ricardo and Isabel Nirenberg since 1998
I found a way of weeping
        while wearing absolutely
        no expression on my face. 
        When someone asked 
        about the tears, I’d reply 
  “It’s an allergy. There’s pollen in the air.” 
      
I was like the day-old kitten 
        that doesn’t call for what it wants but only 
        shapes a silent “meow” with its  small mouth, 
        as I could have explained, but to say 
        aloud “cat” or “cry”
        would have been enough
        to crack the ice and flood the place.
        Later, when my sweetheart died,
I stood, cheeks dry, beside his grave, 
        hearing others say good-bye. When my turn 
        came, instead of sharing memories
        of our time together, I read
        a poem of my own, choosing lines 
        that did not include his name, 
or mention evening walks 
        beside a lake where we heard cries
        of anxious geese 
        whose young were preparing
        for a long, blind flight to a place 
        so far from home that, when  
        I saw the wings recede, 
        recede, I at last      
began to grieve.
        A patient in the room 
        next door howls
        as if she couldn’t stand
        the pain, as if this were
        the end of the whole 
        blue-green world.
But now her cries subside.
        Perhaps she’s died.
        If she’s alive, she’s calm 
        and the world is fine again, 
        after all, with holiday
        lights and Christmas shows
        in town,
and  why bother to warn her
        that the planet has a lot 
        more flaws these days
        than it had before?—It’s way 
        too cold in this place and 
        in that place too hot, not 
        enough water in some rivers but more
        and more along the shore, the bridges out,
        the tunnels gone, the windows leaking 
        in many schools and coral reefs are pale
while blasts of heat burst from the depths
        into the surface seas, of which
        we were given more              
        than enough from the start,         
        as Voltaire  wrote long ago
        in his tale  “Plato’s Dream”—
        about all those wet lakes, 
        venomous snakes, 
        piles more sand
        than people  need,
        those deadly germs,
        not to mention fatal levels   
        of human bêtise.
I was wrong. The woman’s
        still alive, and still protests
        (as the nurses turn her
        to prevent sores in bed).
In pain, the human vocal cords, lips, 
        tongue, palate and teeth together 
        utter “O”s.  How come?
        Is the vowel useful??
I’ve never met anyone who knows.
I wish I still had a brother.
        We were starting to get along better.
        We lived miles from one another.
        Then we grew closer.
We had little in common  
        besides the same mother,
        a burden to him, 
        to me just a bother.
He disliked democrats,  poets,
        and his hippy nephews, my children.
        To his wife such persons were poison.
        She was fond of her husband 
        and even her mother-
        in-law, but of most of us, not at all.  
One day, my brother Bill woke up widowed, 
        and orphaned as well, as he’d long 
        wished to be, free 
        to court Barbara, 
        who heard his life story 
        and said: Given your childhood
  and that of your sister, you both
  deserve to be misanthropes
  but why not try getting along, you two?
        She signed us up for an art class together.
His new wife and I took a shine to each other
        I made a painting of their favorite tree. 
        He made a nice frame,
        hung the work on their stairway.
        He didn’t mind seeing
        something of mine every day.
He would not go so far 
        as to read my poems. 
        That was o.k. with me. He seemed glad 
        I was part of the family
        and yet not a ninny.
Leaving my job in mid-
        Pennsylvania, I came to live 
        a few miles from their place.  
        But by then they were gone.  
        Before I was settled, 
        he took his heart to the hospital
        and never came home.
Soon after losing him, 
        Barbara herself became gravely ill.
        (I had hoped he would leave her to me in his will.)
        She endured a year 
        alone with her illness, 
        grief, and phone calls
        from friends and children (his, hers) 
        but even the woeful spaniel’s moans
        (the dog that’s gone now)
        could not make her well, 
        or keep her at home.
They’re both lost to me
        but they’re somehow together.
I wish I still had a brother.
Midnight.  Outside the window
        there’s just enough light
        to see a moth by.
        I sit at the keyboard and sing
        what the Countess 
        sings when she’s alone
        in the second act.
I’ve never had a high A, 
        so I take it an octave lower 
        than she,
imitating the slow cavatina—oom,
        pah, pah, ornament, oom, 
        pah, trill, until she
        pauses and cries Oh,
  bring back my treasure!
        Her hanky 
        falls into the garden,
        collapses
        like a parachute.
She has invited the God of Love
        to let her die
        but he finds it impossible
        from this moment on. 
Author Sarah White has moved from New York City to a kindly retirement village in Western MA where she continues to write and paint. Come visit her there.