Odysseuse on the Move

Wednesday, November 16, 2005

More from the Archives

The previous post was the first of a series of poems titled The Three Best Days. The following is the second of the best days.

I want to live in a land
Where it's often the first day
of a three-day snowstorm.

The weather report warns:
a raging blizzard in the prairies
west of here.
Trucks are overturned, cars are buried
under snowdrifts six feet high.
Emergency vehicles only.
Women in labor are whisked to hospitals
by snowmobiles, just in time.
The storm is headed our way.
We flock to the stores:
bottled water, candles,
kerosene for oil lamps,
batteries for flashlights,
milk, bread, and meat,
soup in cans,
apples and candy,
pet food and litter.
Is there anything at home to read?
To the library, to the bookstore.
Pull into the garage
as the first flakes fall.

The strange and lovely silence begins.
Clouds of snow blow past my windows.
Safe from all distractions
I lose myself in elusive ecstasy:
solitude that seldom comes.
I read and dream and sip my tea,
rejoice in the cold and pristine white,
held close in the warmth of my home.

Written years ago by Marguerite Louise

Thursday, November 03, 2005

From the Archives

An excerpt from a longer piece:

I want to live in a land
where it's often the day
after Christmas.

Hallowe'en pumpkins cluster
under Christmas trees;
songs of harvest
are overcome by Jingle Bells.
To insure delivery by Christmas,
mail now to Europe.
Look for clever things to send,
choose the gifts for one and all,
making sure costs are even,
and wrap them tastefully and well.
Thanksgiving dinner looms.
Dodge the children seeing Santa,
drop large coins into big red kettles.
Christmas cards to be mailed,
include a note in every one;
arriving ones must be acknowledged.
Wrap the gifts, tie the ribbons,
decorate the house and tree.
I tire of Christmas before it's here.
The Eve: what isn't done never will be.
My guests please me, and yet
I love best the day after Christmas,
released from labored anxiety
of days and months in preparation,
to celebrate in solitary joy
the miracle of my own children.

Written years ago by Marguerite Louise