Listen,

this is what the wind sounds like in hanging

vines, when it is too dark to see across the road

and there are no stars, a blind sound leading


nowhere.  Even lightning bursts faintly 

here, the porch swept and the wood piled.  

It is a believable stagnancy, the door shut 


on the woodstove, the brooked flames.  

I made a promise not to sleep before midnight, to wait 

and see what feet brush the porch, 


to ask the leaves or the stagnant water

to move.  On a half-dark porch, you are 

sitting at the other edge of this


continent writing about lightning that might

strike: a man who kissed you in the kitchen

and said nothing.  A half-storm is always 


about to begin here.  I’ve had enough of this kind 

of touch.  The night is dead when you want it 

to say anything.