At Dawn

At Dawn


Aproned, the Kansas farmer’s wife wipes out
the flower-dusted bowl, the egg-yolk sun
now breaking out of the fragile misty shell
of morning, cracked on the horizon’s rim.
Somewhere in the city, a sleep-deprived
student will watch the sky-bound desk lamp shine
through her apartment window, breaking up
her fitful sleep on piles of Kant and More.
Six months ago today he saw the same
indifferent eye of god rise up to look down
on him with mocking warmth, the body of
his wife of fifty-one years beside him, cold,
while in a London tenement a girl
will rise and dress in ecstasy to meet
the long-awaited day when from thereon
she’ll never have to wake in bed alone.  
It raises more than warmth: To him a hope,
to her a question, to me today a poem
on the porch. To you, reading this somewhere,
I guess you have until evening to wait and see.

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