A C OMMON C OLD
A common cold, we say—
common, though it has encircled the globe
seven times now handed traveler to traveler
though it has seen the Wild Goose Pagoda in Xi’an
seen Piero della Francesca’s Madonna del Parto in Monterchi
seen the emptied synagogues of Krasnogruda
seen the since-burned souk of Aleppo
A common cold, we say—
common, though it is infinite and surely immortal
common because it will almost never kill us
and because it is shared among any who agree to or do not agree to
and because it is unaristocratic
reducing to redness both profiled and front-viewed noses
reducing to coughing the once-articulate larynx
reducing to unhappy sleepless turning the pillows of down,
of wool, of straw, of foam, of kapok
A common cold, we say—
common because it is cloudy and changing and dulling
because there are summer colds, winter colds, fall colds,
colds of the spring
because these are always called colds, however they differ
beginning sore-throated
beginning sniffling
beginning a little tired or under the weather
beginning with one single innocuous untitled sneeze
because it is bane of usually eight days’ duration
and two or three boxes of tissues at most
The common cold, we say—
and wonder, when did it join us
when did it saunter into the Darwinian corridors of the human
do manatees catch them do parrots I do not think so
and who named it first, first described it, Imhotep, Asclepius, Zhongjing
and did they wonder, is it happy sharing our lives
as generously as inexhaustibly as it shares its own
virus dividing and changing while Piero’s girl gazes still downward
five centuries still waiting still pondering still undivided
while in front of her someone hunts through her opening pockets for tissues for more than one reason at once
T HIS M ORNING , I W ANTED F OUR L EGS
Nothing on two legs weighs much,
or can.
An elephant, a donkey, even a cookstove—
those legs, a person could stand on.
Two legs pitch you forward.
Two legs tire.
They look for another two legs to be with,
to move one set forward to music
while letting the other move back.
They want to carve into a tree trunk:
2gether 4ever.
Nothing on two legs can bark,
can whinny or chuff.
Tonight, though, everything’s different.
Tonight I want wheels.
O NCE , I
Once, I
was seven Spanish bullocks in a high meadow,
sleepy and nameless.
As-ifness strange to myself, but complete.
Light on the neck-nape
of time
as two wings of one starling,
or lovers so happy
neither needs think of the other.
I N D AYLIGHT , I T URNED ON THE L IGHTS
In daylight, I turned on the lights,
in darkness, I pulled closed the curtains.
And the god of More,
whom nothing surprises, softly agreed—
each day, year after year,
the dead were dead one day more completely.
In the places where morels were found,
I looked for morels.
In the houses where love was found,
I looked for love.
If she is vanished, what then was different?
If he is alive, what now is changed?
The pot offers the metal closest to fire for burning.
The water leaves.
H OW R ARELY I H AVE S TOPPED TO T HANK THE S TEADY E FFORT
A person speaking
pauses, lets in
a little silence-portion with the words.
It is like an hour.
Any hour. This one.
Something happens, much does not.
Or as always, everything happens:
the standing walls keep
standing with their whole attention.
A noisy crow call lowers and lifts its branch,
the
Norah Wilson, Heather Doherty