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IN THE HOUSE OF THE CHILD

If you hear the chatter of water
beneath the ice-capped stream, if you hear
the creaking oak lightning took away,

it's because nothing's been discarded here,
though the cabinets have been emptied out,
and the closet's scent is purely cedar.

Long after a son's renounced his mother's dream
of him, long after he's settled in the city
with her duplicate or opposite, he comes back

to mother her, to memorize a sight, to clear a place.
Spoons click in their tray. The table must be set.
A candle's lit for dinner. The trail of light

from then to now is snow the storm
condenses on the window sill. The house
remembered gives no shelter from the winter.

But it seems to me there's too much light
at four a.m. Too much frost. Too much of her
when her nightgown with its crown of lace

flutters on the frozen clothesline,
when furniture's shifted from the fireplace
to suggest sufficient warmth and space.

I never think of her.
Never, or almost never, and always when
I first wake up, when the bedroom door's ajar.
Palmreading