Tasting the Last of the Ice Age
We stuffed our mouths with snow
& bark on sleds to the border.
The ice hotel was not forgot.
Sleds kept their ice caps on
& skidded between forest folk—
they waved, they cried, we saw it all.
We live in the hotel beyond estrangement.
It floods sinks swerves—
Ultraviolet auroras on postcards slip
from their raining frames.
The diamond chandeliers
hold prismatic sleepers
between glass sheets.
When staircases come down
we lose distinctions.
Still thrilled, yes, thrilling as ever—
the midnight sun stays on & on.
We do not anyway think of leaving.
Cities nearly all torched.
Pull-apart bodies stagger
into melting ice. One
drinks from a frozen glass
then drinks the glass too,
face at frost removes.
Flakes ache to re-constellate.
This dawn a pair of lovers,
were trapped in an ice alcove, caving,
beneath a smeared Patagonia
cover, and puffer jacket, p.53?
Stone told—“look under me.”
They were already dead.
Hardly anyone notices a tender
chilling bliss. The giant cumulous
are walk-ons for permanence.
All the slow night they are there.
Copyright © 2022 by Susan McCabe. Originally published in Poem-a-Day on September 2, 2022, by the Academy of American Poets.
“This poem is part of a larger sequence of poems about climate change. Its dystopic environment addresses our human desires as often at odds with the natural world and cosmos. While it has a whimsical element, it wants to wake readers up to the consequences of ignoring rising global temperatures.”
—Susan McCabe