(i.m. Charles Leslie Stevenson, 1909-79)
 This House
 Which represents you, as my bones do, waits,
 all pores open, for the stun of snow. Which will come,
 as it always does, between breaths, between nights
 And has to be welcome. All instinct wants to anticipate
 faceless fields, a white road drawn
 through dependent firs, the soldered glare of lakes.
 Is it wanting you here to want the winter in?
 I breathe you back into your square house and begin
 to live here roundly. This year will be between,
 not in, four seasons. Do you hear already the wet
 rumble of thaw? Stones. sky. Streams. Sun.
 Those might be swallows at the edge of sight
 returning to last year's nest in the crook of the porchlight.
 Complaint
 'Dear god,' they write, 'that was a selfish winter
 to lean so long, unfairly on the spring!'
 Mouths of the flowers unstick themselves and sting
 the bees with irresistible dust. Iris
 allow undignified inspection. Plain waste
 weeds dress up in Queen Anne's lace. Our mist-
 blue sky clouds heavily with clematis.
 'Too much,' they cry, 'too much. Begin again.'
 The Lord, himself a casualty of weather
 falls to earth in large hot drops of rain.
 The dry loam rouses in his scent, and under
 him — moist, sweet, discriminate — the spring.
 Thunder. Lightning. He can do anything.
 Between
 The wet and weight of this half-born english winter
 is not the weather of those fragmentary half-true willows
 that break in the glass of the canal behind our rudder
 as water arrives in our wake — a travelling arrow
 of now, of now, of now. Leaves of the water
 furl back from our prow, and as the pinnate narrow
 seam of where we are drives through the mirror
 of where we have to be, alder and willow
 double crookedly, reverse, assume a power
 to bud out tentatively in gold and yellow,
 so it looks as if what should be end of summer —
 seeds, dead nettles, berries, naked boughs —
 is really the anxious clouding of first spring.
 ...'Real' is what water is imagining.
 Stasis
 Before the leaves change, light transforms these lucid
 speaking trees. The heavy drench of August
 alters, things; its rich and sappy blood
 relaxes where a thirst ago, no rest
 released the roots' wet greed or stemmed their mad
 need to be more. September is the wisest
 time — neither the unbearable burning word
 nor the form of it, cooped in its cold ghost.
 How are they sombre — that unpicked apple, red,
 undisturbed by its fall; calm of those wasp-bored amethyst
 plums on the polished table? Body and head
 easy in amity, a beam between that must,
 unbalanced, quicken or kill, make new or dead
 whatever these voices are that hate the dust.
 The Circle
 It is imagination's white face remembers
 snow, its shape, a fluted shell on shoot
 or flower, its weight, the permanence of winter
 pitched against the sun's absolute root.
 All March is shambles, shards. Yet no amber
 chestnut, indian, burnished by its tent
 cuts to a cleaner centre or keeps summer
 safer in its sleep. Ghost be content.
 You died in March when white air hurt the maples.
 Birches knelt under ice. Roads forgot
 their ways in aisles of frost. There were no petals.
 Face, white face, you are snow in the green hills.
 High stones complete your circle where trees start.
 Granite and ice are colours of the heart.



















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