His head’s a secret train-set in the attic:
quiet, straightforward, always summer.
The cattle in their fields of baize,
the postman on his bike,
the green sponge trees
by the papier-mâché tunnel, the children
forever waving their stiff handkerchiefs
at the trains that are always on time.
Copyright © 2022 by Robin Robertson. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on April 4, 2022, by the Academy of American Poets.
Must I convey at last the news to thee?
Must I now mourn the love that lived in me?
Gone with the autumn, with the dying year.
Gone with the kisses that are yet so near!
Gone with the swallows somewhere o’er the sea!
But with the Spring will he again
Return, will he with me remain?
Must I till then, remembering naught,
Forgetting all that love had brought,
Grope in the shadows of the slain?
Must I forget the day
That took my love away,
And all the happy hours
That reared for him their towers
And crowned him with the flowers
Of all the queens of May?
Must I alone
My once my own,
In my retreat
The new year greet,
And winter meet,
And winds hear moan?
Not yet
Can I
Forget;
But why
One clings
And sings
To things
That die?
This poem is in the public domain. Published in Poem-a-Day on April 9, 2022, by the Academy of American Poets.