WINTER GRACE

Patricia Fargnoli 
Photo: Mike Mahaffa 


If you have seen the snow 
under the lamppost 
piled up like a white beaver hat 
on the picnic table 
or somewhere slowly falling 
into the brook 
to be swallowed by water, 
then you have seen beauty 
and know it for its transience. 
And if you have gone out in the snow 
for only the pleasure 
of walking barely protected 
from the galaxies, 
the flakes settling on your parka 
like the dust from just-born stars, 
the cold waking you 
as if from long sleeping, 
then you can understand 
how, more often than not, 
truth is found in silence, 
how the natural world comes to you 
if you go out to meet it, 
its icy ditches filled with dead weeds, 
its vacant birdhouses, and dens 
full of the sleeping. 
But this is the slowed down season 
held fast by darkness 
and if no one comes to keep you company 
then keep watch over your own solitude. 
In that stillness, you will learn
with your whole body 
the significance of cold 
and the night, 
which is otherwise always eluding you. 

 “Winter Grace” by Patricia Fargnoli from Hallowed. © Tupelo Press, 2017. 

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