A WALK THROUGH CENTRAL PARK
The breeze gently lowers you, lowers
me to the ground, lifts us up, grass stains on our knees
and lips. There’s something about
this place that makes me want to
invent our lives. It occurs to me
that everyone here, from the old woman
feeding crumbs to pigeons to the little girl
roller skating backwards to the horror
of her mother, is surviving this moment,
preparing even now for the next,
their strenuous hearts as unshaken
as the future. I tell you a subdued version
of what occurred to me. You tell me
you were thinking the exact same thing.
We pass a man in a heavy sweater
sitting cross-legged on a bench, staring
at nothing as if at a web strung between
two pillars of air. “Listen,” you think. “Listen,”
I think, “tomorrow it’ll be cold again, and tonight
I’ll enter your body: what I am in all weather.”
We’ve thought of how sunlight falls to the pavement
like rain, gathers in the gutters, slides toward the grates.
But today we think of how sunlight falls without
disturbing the grass. Though we’re wary
of our imagination that claims sunlight
was once tangible and unreal, we think of how
everything is so much better now and forever.
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DOUGLAS NORDFORS is a native of Seattle, and lives in Charlottesville, Virginia. Since 1987, he has published poems in journals such as The Iowa Review, Quarterly West, Poetry Northwest, and Poet Lore. His recent work has appeared in Burnside Review, The Louisville Review, Matter, OccuPoetry, Tipton Poetry Journal, and others. His two books of poetry are Auras (2008) and The Fate Motif (2013).
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Read more by Douglas Nordfors:
Two poems in Pamplemousse
A poem in Matter
A poem in West Texas Literary Review