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Like the Wind the Rains Ride In On

Everything That Ever Was
by Tracy K. Smith, from Life on Mars, winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for poetry
 
Like a wide wake, rippling
Infinitely into the distance, everything
 
That ever was still is, somewhere,
Floating near the surface, nursing
Its hunger for you and me
 
And the now we’ve named
And made a place of.

Like groundswell sometimes
It surges up, claiming a little piece
Of where we stand.
 
Like the wind the rains ride in on,
It sweeps across the leaves,
 
Pushing in past the windows
We didn’t slam quickly enough.
Dark water it will take days to drain.
 
It surprised us last night in my sleep.
Brought food, a gift. Stood squarely
 
There between us, while your eyes
Danced toward mine, and my hands
Sat working a thread in my lap.
 
Up close, it was so thin. And when finally
You reached for me, it backed away,
 
Bereft, but not vanquished. Today,
Whatever it was seems slight, a trail
Of cloud rising up like smoke.

And the trees that watch as I write
Sway in the breeze, as if all that stirs

Under the soil is a little tickle of knowledge
The great blind roots will tease through
And push eventually past.

 


 

See also:

Smith, T. K. (2012, April 7). Why poetry is essential to democracy. The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved from http://on.wsj.com/HSPWzd