| Beverly Burch USA
BBurch96@aol.com

| Beverly Burch has poetry recently or forthcoming in
Poetry International, Red Rock Review, Sojourner,
Many Mountains Moving, Santa Clara Review, and
Spillway. In addition, Beverly has also published two collections
of non-fiction, On Intimate Terms (University of Illinois
Press) and Other Women (Columbia University Press). |
Perimenopausal Lovers
Sleeping in Mid-winter
One is flung out across the luxurious field
of their bed, riding down dark hills
of oblivion toward the night universe.
She coughs like a bear headed towards winter.
The other enters quietly, retrieves
bedtime things and tiptoes downstairs
to the guest room. She settles into her own
den of tissues and cough drops, water bottle
and pills on the nightstand, and soon falls over
the edge into a midnight landscape
where all lost love is retrievable.
One gets up to the bathroom, the other stirs.
One tosses in night sweats, so the other has chills.
They’ve moved into a shared terrain so vast
they do not recognize each other even as they meet.
In the morning they will only ask,
How did you sleep? and only get, Good. I feel
better.
Not plumbing the deep blue song spinning through
the silent spaces of their life together.
publication credit:
Many Mountains Moving, vol. 4, no. 1
Reflections at Gualala Point
—for Susan Burch
Six days together, bolted with light—
a sun of extravagant brilliance
for that fog-bound coast, and you
so intent, burning to stay alive.
Two months later I’m here without you,
everything still kindled, even the fog,
a purplish flush blooming over water.
Yesterday by the hidden pool
I sat where we sat, a curved cypress limb,
heard you saying your luck
wasn’t hard, not like some others.
On the beach I swear you rose again
from the waves, gleaming
in that white nylon running suit,
gauzy Venus calling forever into the wind,
arms lifted, sleeves opening like wings,
reflecting the shimmer, sun on water.
I went back to the tiny chapel,
its strange design squat like a mushroom,
stained glass windows shaped to the landscape.
When we were there, you felt some presence.
It might have been your own—
just off, just the near future.
It’s still there—
as if you learned to release yourself,
infinitely thinned, pellucid, transparently embodied
in the air, the water, the earth here.
As if you’ve become wave and particle,
transmitting. It might also be me,
through sheer longing
receiving signs of you everywhere.
publication credit:
Santa Clara Review, vol.87, no.2
It’s Your Body I Miss Now
You were so private,
hiding the body’s changes like a guilty child
knowing you had done a bad thing,
growing old.
In the end you surrendered
and I washed your flesh like precious porcelain,
as if you were not my mother,
but I was shocked too.
Afterward we held hands, I stroked your arm,
we talked as before.
Your skin always so lovely,
a fine soft silk, exquisitely sensitive,
could not bear even a label
at your neckline, an unfinished seam.
The needles, tapes, tubes turned it to storm clouds.
One afternoon, a dark September rain outside,
I sat by your bed, my arm
lying next to yours, and saw what I haven’t seen for
years,
how young I still am.
What you needed—you needed to be gathered up, held.
Instead, twice I crept into your bed,
curled around you as you slept—
in April when I thought we’d keep you,
in September as you were leaving.
Five nights ago you visited my dreams.
I was frightened. We didn’t speak but I touched
your arm and it was warm.
That’s how it was at the end.
Each time I returned, we talked again, necessary words.
But only through your body did I find you.
It must have always been how
we knew each other.
publication credit:
Calyx, vol.19., no.2
Kayaking Close to Shore
Three times the call of the kingfisher
rattles over us as she veers in flight from the forest,
suspends herself mid-air like a creature stricken with
infinity.
Then she drops, a blue rocket into the frigid
waters of Puget Sound.
We drift around the cove, never far
from the wooded shoreline. We’ve been warned:
Don’t venture out, water this cold’s fatal to a
four-year-old.
Parenthood curtails us again—nothing to explore
in a terrain of safety.
But our cove is a revelation
of the patient world. From this angle, west to east,
the island’s knobby ridge is a beaked head, and its flanks
of fir and redwood form a winged creature
rising off the ocean floor.
On our slow paddle we taste ribbons
of kelp—tart, salty lettuce—and blow the hard bulbs
like great horns. The gravelled beach slips from
indigo to green,
sea urchins lilt on the tidal floor. And there’s the
kingfisher,
who’s been elusive all summer.
Back from Hawaii
Last week we warmed ourselves in predictable sun.
It rained daily, but light spilled through clouds,
and the sky pieced itself together, blue with indigo.
On the Big Island, volcanic and primitive, wild orchids,
hibiscus open shamelessly wide. In Oakland,
it’s bleak January, cold I’d bear more easily if not
for Hawaii. Island life goes on. How can it
be,
while we’re lost in winter? A mystery. And
that
your feelings differ so essentially from mine.
© All Copyright, 2001, Beverly
Burch.
All Rights Reserved. Printed By Permission.
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