Wednesday, January 28, 2009

What To Do the First Morning the Sun Comes Back

by Roseann Lloyd

Find a clean cloth for the kitchen table, the red and blue one

you made that cold winter in Montana. Spread out

your paper and books. Tune the radio to the jazz station.

Look at the bright orange safflowers you found last August—
how well they've held their color next to the black-spotted cat.


Make some egg coffee, in honor of all the people 
above the Arctic Circle. Give thanks to the Sufis,

who figured out how to brew coffee

from the dark, bitter beans. Remark

on the joyfulness of your dishes: black and yellow stars.


Reminisce with your lover about the history of this kitchen

where, between bites of cashew stir fry,

you first kissed each other on the mouth. Now that you're hungry,

toast some leftover cornbread, spread it with real butter,

honey from bees that fed on basswood blossoms.


The window is frosted over, but the sun's casting an eye

over all the books. Open your Spanish book.

The season for sleeping is over.

The pots and pans: quiet now, let them be.


It will be a short day.

Sit in the kitchen as long as you can, reading and writing.

At sundown, rub a smidgen of butter

on the western windowsill

to ask the sun:

Come back again tomorrow.

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