Things I Didn't Know I Loved 

Things I Didn't Know I Loved: After Nazim Hikmet

by Linda Pastan



I always knew I loved the sky,

the way it seems solid and insubstantial at the same time;

the way it disappears above us

even as we pursue it in a climbing plane,

like wishes or answers to certain questions--always out of reach;

the way it embodies blue,

even when it is gray.


But I didn't know I loved the clouds,

those shaggy eyebrows glowering

over the face of the sun.

Perhaps I only love the strange shapes clouds can take,

as if they are sketches by an artist

who keeps changing her mind.

Perhaps I love their deceptive softness,

like a bosom I'd like to rest my head against

but never can.


And I know I love the grass, even as I am cutting it as short

as the hair on my grandson's newly barbered head.

I love the way the smell of grass can fill my nostrils

with intimations of youth and lust;

the way it stains my handkerchief with meanings

that never wash out.


Sometimes I love the rain, staccato on the roof,

and always the snow when I am inside looking out

at the blurring around the edges of parked cars

and trees. And I love trees,

in winter when their austere shapes

are like the cutout silhouettes artists sell at fairs

and in May when their branches

are fuzzy with growth, the leaves poking out

like new green horns on a young deer.


But how about the sound of trains,

those drawn-out whistles of longing in the night,

like coyotes made of steam and steel, no color at all,

reminding me of prisoners on chain gangs I've only seen

in movies, defeated men hammering spikes into rails,

the burly guards watching over them?


Those whistles give loneliness and departure a voice.

It is the kind of loneliness I can take in my arms, tasting 

of tears that comfort even as they burn, dampening the pillows 

and all the feathers of all the geese who were plucked to fill

them.


Perhaps I embrace the music of departure--song without lyrics,

so I can learn to love it, though I don't love it now.

For at the end of the story, when sky and clouds and grass,

and even you my love of so many years,

have almost disappeared,

it will be all there is left to love.


Photo Credit: Rainbow Over Forest, Dmitryp.


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