Monday, January 18, 2021

Sunset at the Reservoir (a Covid Poem)



On a January evening,
cut-glass wind stinging,
the gap where a storm
dropped hundred-foot pines
trumpets a pending show.
West toward the reservoir
a stone-littered trail
clambers beside a rushing aqueduct.
The pond, a cellophane scrim of ice
traps sky in its clear container.

Since spring,
endurance measures in increments.
Fourteen days of quarantine,
six weeks since I saw our daughter,
eight months since you passed.
But here, by frozen water,
minutes fade to 
sable brush strokes,
filaments of yellow gold, 
arctic pink to blush
a gradient wash
as the horizon renders
one timeless certainty.
The light is always better
after the sun goes down.

Liza Carens Salerno


8 comments:

  1. wow - I love the colors and descriptions in this poem. I'm there, feeling the cold, seeing the sunset. Your pacing is perfect too for the Covid era - time in increments. Powerful poem packs a punch.

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  2. Love this not only for the vivid images but also for your resilience.

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  3. Lovely, lovely poem.
    And the image.

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  4. Hi Liza - I feel for you ... but you've really captured your thoughts and life as it's been this past year. Wonderful descriptive words ... loved it - thank you for sharing ... stay safe - Hilary

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  5. Liza - what a wonderful rich poem! Thank you so much...

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  6. You have such a mastery of words, Liza. Really. You paint a vivid picture with them.

    And how are YOU? Doing better, I trust. Eight months for you... six for me. Some days, it seems longer; some days, it seems like only yesterday. But we keep on keeping on, reinventing ourselves and our places in the world. We've got this!

    Take care, sweet lady.

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